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"desires "

Book 21. (1 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Individual Quote)

Sometimes a passing army desires merely to amplify its forces, or replace losses, particularly among the lighter arms, such as bowmen, slingers and javelin men. - (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 3, Sentence #178)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
3 178 Sometimes a passing army desires merely to amplify its forces, or replace losses, particularly among the lighter arms, such as bowmen, slingers and javelin men.

Book 21. (7 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
3 175 It was quite unusual, incidentally, for such men as Raymond and Conrad to be recruiting now, in Se'Kara.
3 176 It was really a time in which most soldiers on Gor would be thinking about the pleasures of winter quarters or a return to their own villages and towns.
3 177 There are usually diverse explanations, depending on the situation, for the type of forced recruiting to which men in some of the villages had been subjected.
3 178 Sometimes a passing army desires merely to amplify its forces, or replace losses, particularly among the lighter arms, such as bowmen, slingers and javelin men.
3 179 Sometimes the recruiting is done more for the purposes of obtaining a labor force, for siegeworks and entrenching camps, than for actual combat.
3 180 Sometimes the mercenary captains, whose negotiated, signed contracts call for the furnishing of certain numbers of armed men for their various employers, have little choice but to impress some reluctant fellows, that their obligatory quotas may be met.
3 181 More than one fellow has sworn an oath of allegiance with a sword at his throat.
It was quite unusual, incidentally, for such men as Raymond and Conrad to be recruiting now, in Se'Kara. It was really a time in which most soldiers on Gor would be thinking about the pleasures of winter quarters or a return to their own villages and towns. There are usually diverse explanations, depending on the situation, for the type of forced recruiting to which men in some of the villages had been subjected. Sometimes a passing army desires merely to amplify its forces, or replace losses, particularly among the lighter arms, such as bowmen, slingers and javelin men. Sometimes the recruiting is done more for the purposes of obtaining a labor force, for siegeworks and entrenching camps, than for actual combat. Sometimes the mercenary captains, whose negotiated, signed contracts call for the furnishing of certain numbers of armed men for their various employers, have little choice but to impress some reluctant fellows, that their obligatory quotas may be met. More than one fellow has sworn an oath of allegiance with a sword at his throat. - (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 3)