Book 5. (1 results) Assassin of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
241
As soon as Mip entered the cot he picked a tarn goad from a hook on the wall over a small table with a lamp and papers on it.
As soon as Mip entered the cot he picked a tarn goad from a hook on the wall over a small table with a lamp and papers on it.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 13, Sentence #241)
Book 5. (7 results) Assassin of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
238
The perches were actually a gigantic, curving framework of tem-wood four stories high, and following the circular wall of the cylinder.
13
239
Many of the perches were empty, but there were more than a hundred birds in the room; each was now chained to its area of the perch; but each, I knew, at least once in every two days, was exercised; sometimes, when men do not wander freely in the cot, and the portals of the cot, opening to the sky, are closed, some of the birds are permitted the freedom of the cot; water for the birds is fed from tubes into canisters mounted on triangular platforms near the perches, but there is also, in the center of the cot, in the floor, a cistern which may be used when the birds are free.
13
240
Food for the tarns, which is meat, for that is their diet, is thrust on hooks and hauled by chain and windlass to the various perches; it might be of interest to note that, when any of the birds are free, meat is never placed on the hooks or on the floor below; the racing tarn is a valuable bird and the Tarn Keepers do not wish to have them destroy one another fighting over a verr thigh.
13
241
As soon as Mip entered the cot he picked a tarn goad from a hook on the wall over a small table with a lamp and papers on it.
13
242
He then took a second goad, from a hook nearby, and handed it to me.
13
243
I accepted it.
13
244
Few dare to walk in a tarncot without a goad.
The perches were actually a gigantic, curving framework of tem-wood four stories high, and following the circular wall of the cylinder.
Many of the perches were empty, but there were more than a hundred birds in the room; each was now chained to its area of the perch; but each, I knew, at least once in every two days, was exercised; sometimes, when men do not wander freely in the cot, and the portals of the cot, opening to the sky, are closed, some of the birds are permitted the freedom of the cot; water for the birds is fed from tubes into canisters mounted on triangular platforms near the perches, but there is also, in the center of the cot, in the floor, a cistern which may be used when the birds are free.
Food for the tarns, which is meat, for that is their diet, is thrust on hooks and hauled by chain and windlass to the various perches; it might be of interest to note that, when any of the birds are free, meat is never placed on the hooks or on the floor below; the racing tarn is a valuable bird and the Tarn Keepers do not wish to have them destroy one another fighting over a verr thigh.
As soon as Mip entered the cot he picked a tarn goad from a hook on the wall over a small table with a lamp and papers on it.
He then took a second goad, from a hook nearby, and handed it to me.
I accepted it.
Few dare to walk in a tarncot without a goad.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 13)