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"law " "gor "

Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 180 I thought I knew well what sort of wagon it was.
6 181 It was the sort of wagon whose contents are of so little value that it must yield the road in either direction to any vehicle that might care to pass it.
6 182 It was a squarish wagon.
6 183 It was drawn by a single tharlarion, a broad tharlarion, one of gor's quadrupedal draft lizards.
6 184 It was covered by a canopy, mounted on a high, squarish frame, of blue-and-yellow silk.
6 185 "Lady Sheila is much too innocent, and her sensibilities are far too delicate," said he, "to inquire as to what sort of wagon that is".
6 186 "No," I said, "what?" I would pretend to an innocent ignorance.
I thought I knew well what sort of wagon it was. It was the sort of wagon whose contents are of so little value that it must yield the road in either direction to any vehicle that might care to pass it. It was a squarish wagon. It was drawn by a single tharlarion, a broad tharlarion, one of gor's quadrupedal draft lizards. It was covered by a canopy, mounted on a high, squarish frame, of blue-and-yellow silk. "Lady Sheila is much too innocent, and her sensibilities are far too delicate," said he, "to inquire as to what sort of wagon that is". "No," I said, "what?" I would pretend to an innocent ignorance. - (Kajira of Gor, Chapter )