Book 22. (1 results) Dancer of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
25
200
It was ornamented with bosses, and engraved with mythological scenes, the conquest, and the rape and enslavement of Amazons by satyrs.
It was ornamented with bosses, and engraved with mythological scenes, the conquest, and the rape and enslavement of Amazons by satyrs.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 25, Sentence #200)
Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
25
197
Quickly I rose to my knees and performed obeisance.
25
198
I then rose to my feet, and, head down, humbly, frightened, hurried to the back portions of the tent.
25
199
There I saw the shield which Tela had been polishing, a small, round silver shield, more of a buckler, really, than a shield.
25
200
It was ornamented with bosses, and engraved with mythological scenes, the conquest, and the rape and enslavement of Amazons by satyrs.
25
201
In Gorean mythology it is said that there was once a war between men and women and that the women lost, and that the Priest-Kings, not wishing the women to be killed, made them beautiful, but as the price of this gift decreed that they, and their daughters, to the end of time, would be the slaves of men.
25
202
The shield, so small, so beautiful, was perhaps more an artifact for display, I think, than a device of war.
25
203
Still I did not doubt that Aulus could handle weapons.
Quickly I rose to my knees and performed obeisance.
I then rose to my feet, and, head down, humbly, frightened, hurried to the back portions of the tent.
There I saw the shield which Tela had been polishing, a small, round silver shield, more of a buckler, really, than a shield.
It was ornamented with bosses, and engraved with mythological scenes, the conquest, and the rape and enslavement of Amazons by satyrs.
In Gorean mythology it is said that there was once a war between men and women and that the women lost, and that the Priest-Kings, not wishing the women to be killed, made them beautiful, but as the price of this gift decreed that they, and their daughters, to the end of time, would be the slaves of men.
The shield, so small, so beautiful, was perhaps more an artifact for display, I think, than a device of war.
Still I did not doubt that Aulus could handle weapons.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 25)