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Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)

Too, sometimes such animals may be found calmly standing about, or grazing, while the fiercest of fighting surges about them. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 17, Sentence #118)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
17 118 Too, sometimes such animals may be found calmly standing about, or grazing, while the fiercest of fighting surges about them.

Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
17 115 But if eye contact is made, then there is not unoften a fight to the death.
17 116 Also, I have seen two pairs of men fighting, those of each pair side by side, as though fellows, and yet they are enemies, and each engages another foe.
17 117 The riderless tharlarion or kaiila, like the riderless horse in battles of Earth, can sometimes be seen whirling about, obeying the trumpet calls for charging, and retreating, and such, just as though his master were still in the saddle.
17 118 Too, sometimes such animals may be found calmly standing about, or grazing, while the fiercest of fighting surges about them.
17 119 I have seen, too, wounded men being carried to the rear, their bearers unmolested, through clashing ranks, and other fellows pausing to loot a body, blades flashing about them.
17 120 Sometimes, too, in a moment's lull, one notices little things, to which one has perhaps hitherto paid scant attention, the movements of an ant, how rain water irregularly stains a rock, moving and spreading, depending on the texture of its surface.
17 121 I remember one fellow telling me about a man who had died near him, in a field.
But if eye contact is made, then there is not unoften a fight to the death. Also, I have seen two pairs of men fighting, those of each pair side by side, as though fellows, and yet they are enemies, and each engages another foe. The riderless tharlarion or kaiila, like the riderless horse in battles of Earth, can sometimes be seen whirling about, obeying the trumpet calls for charging, and retreating, and such, just as though his master were still in the saddle. Too, sometimes such animals may be found calmly standing about, or grazing, while the fiercest of fighting surges about them. I have seen, too, wounded men being carried to the rear, their bearers unmolested, through clashing ranks, and other fellows pausing to loot a body, blades flashing about them. Sometimes, too, in a moment's lull, one notices little things, to which one has perhaps hitherto paid scant attention, the movements of an ant, how rain water irregularly stains a rock, moving and spreading, depending on the texture of its surface. I remember one fellow telling me about a man who had died near him, in a field. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 17)