Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
4
55
Most of the wagons, coaches, fee carts, and such were gone.
4
56
No longer were the schedules, within and outside of the city, being kept.
4
57
Tharlarion, and such transportation, were now said to be worth their weight in gold.
4
58
I had heard that certain rich men had exchanged as many as fifteen high slaves, choice "flowers" from their pleasure gardens, trained even to Curulean quality, for a single tharlarion and wagon.
4
59
But I did not know, even then, how far they might get, what with the need of such conveyances, brigands on the road, advance scouts of Cos, and such.
4
60
Some, I had heard, had been turned back even by guardsmen of Ar, outside the city.
4
61
That seemed hard to understand.
Most of the wagons, coaches, fee carts, and such were gone.
No longer were the schedules, within and outside of the city, being kept.
Tharlarion, and such transportation, were now said to be worth their weight in gold.
I had heard that certain rich men had exchanged as many as fifteen high slaves, choice "flowers" from their pleasure gardens, trained even to Curulean quality, for a single tharlarion and wagon.
But I did not know, even then, how far they might get, what with the need of such conveyances, brigands on the road, advance scouts of Cos, and such.
Some, I had heard, had been turned back even by guardsmen of Ar, outside the city.
That seemed hard to understand.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter )