Book 4. (1 results) Nomads of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
24
47
He professed a cruel hatred of Turia and Turians, and yet he had, considering the normal practices of the Wagon Peoples, not noted for their mercy to helpless foes, treated the unarmed citizens of the city with unique indulgence, permitting them, on the whole, to keep their lives and freedom, though only as refugees beyond the walls.
He professed a cruel hatred of Turia and Turians, and yet he had, considering the normal practices of the Wagon Peoples, not noted for their mercy to helpless foes, treated the unarmed citizens of the city with unique indulgence, permitting them, on the whole, to keep their lives and freedom, though only as refugees beyond the walls.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 24, Sentence #47)
Book 4. (7 results) Nomads of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
24
44
I nodded curtly and turned and left the room, dismissed.
24
45
Long ago I had learned not to press the Tuchuk when he did not wish to speak.
24
46
But as I left I wondered at his comparative lenience.
24
47
He professed a cruel hatred of Turia and Turians, and yet he had, considering the normal practices of the Wagon Peoples, not noted for their mercy to helpless foes, treated the unarmed citizens of the city with unique indulgence, permitting them, on the whole, to keep their lives and freedom, though only as refugees beyond the walls.
24
48
The clearest exception to this, of course, lay in the case of the more beautiful of the city's women, who were treated by Gorean custom, as portions of the booty.
24
49
I spent what free time I could in the vicinity of Saphrar's compound.
24
50
The structures about the compound had been fortified by Tuchuks, and walls of stone and wood had been thrown into the streets and openings between the buildings, thus enclosing the compound.
I nodded curtly and turned and left the room, dismissed.
Long ago I had learned not to press the Tuchuk when he did not wish to speak.
But as I left I wondered at his comparative lenience.
He professed a cruel hatred of Turia and Turians, and yet he had, considering the normal practices of the Wagon Peoples, not noted for their mercy to helpless foes, treated the unarmed citizens of the city with unique indulgence, permitting them, on the whole, to keep their lives and freedom, though only as refugees beyond the walls.
The clearest exception to this, of course, lay in the case of the more beautiful of the city's women, who were treated by Gorean custom, as portions of the booty.
I spent what free time I could in the vicinity of Saphrar's compound.
The structures about the compound had been fortified by Tuchuks, and walls of stone and wood had been thrown into the streets and openings between the buildings, thus enclosing the compound.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 24)