Book 18. (1 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
34
444
It is removed from the case, or cover, also, of course, when it is sunned, set forth to draw in power and medicine from the yellow, life-giving, blazing star of two worlds, Sol or Tor-tu-Gor, Light Upon the homestone.
It is removed from the case, or cover, also, of course, when it is sunned, set forth to draw in power and medicine from the yellow, life-giving, blazing star of two worlds, Sol or Tor-tu-Gor, Light Upon the Home Stone.
- (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 34, Sentence #444)
Book 18. (7 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
34
441
I felt the warm sun on my back.
34
442
Never before had I seen the shield of Kahintokapa outside of its shield cover, even when I had first seen him, long ago, with Canka and the members of the All Comrades, near the site of the battle of the wagon train, near, too, where the mercenaries had fought, and Alfred had escaped with a contingent of some three to four hundred men.
34
443
It is not uncommon for a warrior to keep his shield in its case or cover when not fighting.
34
444
It is removed from the case, or cover, also, of course, when it is sunned, set forth to draw in power and medicine from the yellow, life-giving, blazing star of two worlds, Sol or Tor-tu-Gor, Light Upon the homestone.
34
445
I stood for a long time on that late-summer day, looking at the shield, hanging on the shield tripod.
34
446
It turned, slightly, in the breeze, back and forth.
34
447
I took care, in deference to the feelings of the red savages, not to let my shadow fall across it, while it was being sunned.
I felt the warm sun on my back.
Never before had I seen the shield of Kahintokapa outside of its shield cover, even when I had first seen him, long ago, with Canka and the members of the All Comrades, near the site of the battle of the wagon train, near, too, where the mercenaries had fought, and Alfred had escaped with a contingent of some three to four hundred men.
It is not uncommon for a warrior to keep his shield in its case or cover when not fighting.
It is removed from the case, or cover, also, of course, when it is sunned, set forth to draw in power and medicine from the yellow, life-giving, blazing star of two worlds, Sol or Tor-tu-Gor, Light Upon the home stone.
I stood for a long time on that late-summer day, looking at the shield, hanging on the shield tripod.
It turned, slightly, in the breeze, back and forth.
I took care, in deference to the feelings of the red savages, not to let my shadow fall across it, while it was being sunned.
- (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 34)