• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"children "

Book 4. (1 results) Nomads of Gor (Individual Quote)

Among the wagons the tarnsmen would have found only slaves, women and children, but not a wagon had been burned or looted. - (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 14, Sentence #55)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 55 Among the wagons the tarnsmen would have found only slaves, women and children, but not a wagon had been burned or looted.

Book 4. (7 results) Nomads of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 52 The nearest tarn cavalries as far as I knew were to be found in distant Ar.
14 53 Surely great Ar was not at war with the Tuchuks of the southern plains.
14 54 They must be mercenaries! Kamchak did not return to his own wagon but now raced his kaiila, followed by a hundred men, toward the high ground on which stood the standard of the four bosk horns, on which stood the huge wagon of Kutaituchik, called Ubar of the Tuchuks.
14 55 Among the wagons the tarnsmen would have found only slaves, women and children, but not a wagon had been burned or looted.
14 56 We heard a new thunder of wings and looking overhead saw the tarnsmen, like a black storm, drum beating and tarns screaming, streak by overhead.
14 57 A few arrows from those who followed us looped weakly up after them, falling then among the wagons.
14 58 The sewn, painted boskhides that had covered the domed framework over the vast wagon of Kutaituchik hung slashed and rent from the joined tem-wood poles of the framework.
The nearest tarn cavalries as far as I knew were to be found in distant Ar. Surely great Ar was not at war with the Tuchuks of the southern plains. They must be mercenaries! Kamchak did not return to his own wagon but now raced his kaiila, followed by a hundred men, toward the high ground on which stood the standard of the four bosk horns, on which stood the huge wagon of Kutaituchik, called Ubar of the Tuchuks. Among the wagons the tarnsmen would have found only slaves, women and children, but not a wagon had been burned or looted. We heard a new thunder of wings and looking overhead saw the tarnsmen, like a black storm, drum beating and tarns screaming, streak by overhead. A few arrows from those who followed us looped weakly up after them, falling then among the wagons. The sewn, painted boskhides that had covered the domed framework over the vast wagon of Kutaituchik hung slashed and rent from the joined tem-wood poles of the framework. - (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 14)