Book 4. (1 results) Nomads of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
8
Their ears began to lay back against the sides of their triangular heads; their long, serpentine bodies trembled; I saw claws emerge from their paws, retract, emerge again and then retract; they lifted their heads, sweeping them from side to side, and then thrust their snouts to the ground and began to whimper excitedly; I knew they would first follow the scent to the curtained enclosure within which last night we had observed the dance.
Their ears began to lay back against the sides of their triangular heads; their long, serpentine bodies trembled; I saw claws emerge from their paws, retract, emerge again and then retract; they lifted their heads, sweeping them from side to side, and then thrust their snouts to the ground and began to whimper excitedly; I knew they would first follow the scent to the curtained enclosure within which last night we had observed the dance.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 13, Sentence #8)
Book 4. (7 results) Nomads of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
5
"I shall keep them leashed," he responded grimly.
13
6
With misgivings I observed the two, six-legged, sinuous, tawny hunting sleen on their chain leashes.
13
7
Kamchak was holding Elizabeth's bedding—a rep-cloth blanket—for them to smell.
13
8
Their ears began to lay back against the sides of their triangular heads; their long, serpentine bodies trembled; I saw claws emerge from their paws, retract, emerge again and then retract; they lifted their heads, sweeping them from side to side, and then thrust their snouts to the ground and began to whimper excitedly; I knew they would first follow the scent to the curtained enclosure within which last night we had observed the dance.
13
9
"She would have hidden among the wagons last night," Kamchak said.
13
10
"I know," I said, "—the herd sleen".
13
11
They would have torn the girl to pieces on the prairie in the light of the three Gorean moons.
"I shall keep them leashed," he responded grimly.
With misgivings I observed the two, six-legged, sinuous, tawny hunting sleen on their chain leashes.
Kamchak was holding Elizabeth's bedding—a rep-cloth blanket—for them to smell.
Their ears began to lay back against the sides of their triangular heads; their long, serpentine bodies trembled; I saw claws emerge from their paws, retract, emerge again and then retract; they lifted their heads, sweeping them from side to side, and then thrust their snouts to the ground and began to whimper excitedly; I knew they would first follow the scent to the curtained enclosure within which last night we had observed the dance.
"She would have hidden among the wagons last night," Kamchak said.
"I know," I said, "—the herd sleen".
They would have torn the girl to pieces on the prairie in the light of the three Gorean moons.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 13)