Book 19. (1 results) Kajira of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
33
426
Can we not imagine the possibility, where so much money is at stake, that a woman closely resembling the Tatrix, as this woman, for example, might be selected as a quarry in a fraudulent hunt.
Can we not imagine the possibility, where so much money is at stake, that a woman closely resembling the Tatrix, as this woman, for example, might be selected as a quarry in a fraudulent hunt.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 33, Sentence #426)
Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
33
423
We give the sleen something which, supposedly, bears the scent of the Tatrix, and then the sleen follows that scent, no differently than it might the scent of a wild tarsk or a yellow-pelted tabuk.
33
424
The crucial matter then is whether the sleen is set upon the proper scent or not.
33
425
Now fifteen hundred gold pieces is a great deal of money.
33
426
Can we not imagine the possibility, where so much money is at stake, that a woman closely resembling the Tatrix, as this woman, for example, might be selected as a quarry in a fraudulent hunt.
33
427
It would not be difficult then, in one fashion or another, to set sleen upon her trail.
33
428
A scrap of clothing would do, a bit of bedding, even the scent of a footprint.
33
429
The innocent woman is then captured and, later, presented in a place such as this, the reward then being claimed".
We give the sleen something which, supposedly, bears the scent of the Tatrix, and then the sleen follows that scent, no differently than it might the scent of a wild tarsk or a yellow-pelted tabuk.
The crucial matter then is whether the sleen is set upon the proper scent or not.
Now fifteen hundred gold pieces is a great deal of money.
Can we not imagine the possibility, where so much money is at stake, that a woman closely resembling the Tatrix, as this woman, for example, might be selected as a quarry in a fraudulent hunt.
It would not be difficult then, in one fashion or another, to set sleen upon her trail.
A scrap of clothing would do, a bit of bedding, even the scent of a footprint.
The innocent woman is then captured and, later, presented in a place such as this, the reward then being claimed".
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 33)