Book 4. (1 results) Nomads of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
23
97
Shortly after dawn we discovered the Paravaci forming in their Thousands away from the herd, preparing to strike the wagons from the north, pressing through, slaying all living things they might encounter, save women, slave or free.
Shortly after dawn we discovered the Paravaci forming in their Thousands away from the herd, preparing to strike the wagons from the north, pressing through, slaying all living things they might encounter, save women, slave or free.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 23, Sentence #97)
Book 4. (7 results) Nomads of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
23
94
Not a man of either Thousand moved.
23
95
We set pickets and took what rest we could, in the open, the kaiila saddled and tethered at hand.
23
96
In the morning, before dawn, we awakened and fed on dried bosk meat, sucking the dew from the prairie grass.
23
97
Shortly after dawn we discovered the Paravaci forming in their Thousands away from the herd, preparing to strike the wagons from the north, pressing through, slaying all living things they might encounter, save women, slave or free.
23
98
The latter would be driven before the warriors through the wagons, both slave girls and freewomen stripped and bound together in groups, providing shields against arrows and lance charges on kaiilaback for the men advancing behind them.
23
99
Harold and I determined to appear to meet the Paravaci in the open—before the wagons—and then, when they charged, to withdraw among the wagons, and close the wagons on their attacking front, halting the charge, then at almost point-blank range hopefully taking heavy toll of their forces by our archers.
23
100
It would be, of course, only a matter of time before our barricade would be forced or outflanked, perhaps from five pasangs distant, in an undefended sector.
Not a man of either Thousand moved.
We set pickets and took what rest we could, in the open, the kaiila saddled and tethered at hand.
In the morning, before dawn, we awakened and fed on dried bosk meat, sucking the dew from the prairie grass.
Shortly after dawn we discovered the Paravaci forming in their Thousands away from the herd, preparing to strike the wagons from the north, pressing through, slaying all living things they might encounter, save women, slave or free.
The latter would be driven before the warriors through the wagons, both slave girls and free women stripped and bound together in groups, providing shields against arrows and lance charges on kaiilaback for the men advancing behind them.
Harold and I determined to appear to meet the Paravaci in the open—before the wagons—and then, when they charged, to withdraw among the wagons, and close the wagons on their attacking front, halting the charge, then at almost point-blank range hopefully taking heavy toll of their forces by our archers.
It would be, of course, only a matter of time before our barricade would be forced or outflanked, perhaps from five pasangs distant, in an undefended sector.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 23)