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"papers "

Book 20. (1 results) Players of Gor (Individual Quote)

I had thrust these papers in my pouch. - (Players of Gor, Chapter 21, Sentence #100)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 100 I had thrust these papers in my pouch.

Book 20. (7 results) Players of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 97 These, however, depending on the slants and hooks, indicating direction, would indicate variations in letter alignments, for example, "Begin diagonally in the upper-left-hand corner," and such.
21 98 Those keys on which the entire board appeared usually possessed complex, or even random, alignments, of letters, and several nulls, as well as the expected multiples.
21 99 A Gorean "zero" was apparently used to indicate nulls.
21 100 I had thrust these papers in my pouch.
21 101 The hastily opened coffer, which had seemed so momentous, and inaccessible, before, of course, had been only a diversion.
21 102 The true concealment of the papers, one assuredly calculated to deceive those individuals who might have some just notion of their value, one worthy of Belnar's brilliance, was to have them lying about, almost casually, mixed in, and seemingly belonging with, papers of no great importance.
21 103 This subterfuge, was, so to speak, the disguise of unexpected obviousness.
These, however, depending on the slants and hooks, indicating direction, would indicate variations in letter alignments, for example, "Begin diagonally in the upper-left-hand corner," and such. Those keys on which the entire board appeared usually possessed complex, or even random, alignments, of letters, and several nulls, as well as the expected multiples. A Gorean "zero" was apparently used to indicate nulls. I had thrust these papers in my pouch. The hastily opened coffer, which had seemed so momentous, and inaccessible, before, of course, had been only a diversion. The true concealment of the papers, one assuredly calculated to deceive those individuals who might have some just notion of their value, one worthy of Belnar's brilliance, was to have them lying about, almost casually, mixed in, and seemingly belonging with, papers of no great importance. This subterfuge, was, so to speak, the disguise of unexpected obviousness. - (Players of Gor, Chapter 21)