• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"games "

Book 6. (1 results) Raiders of Gor (Individual Quote)

The smaller children played together, the boys playing games with small nets and reed marsh spears, the girls with rence dolls, or some of the older ones sporting with throwing sticks, competing against one another. - (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 5, Sentence #85)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
5 85 The smaller children played together, the boys playing games with small nets and reed marsh spears, the girls with rence dolls, or some of the older ones sporting with throwing sticks, competing against one another.

Book 6. (7 results) Raiders of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
5 82 The younger men and women formed opposite lines, shouting and jeering at one another delightedly.
5 83 And sometimes one or the other boy, or girl, would rush to the opposite line to strike at someone, laughing, and run back to the other line.
5 84 Objects were thrown at the opposite line, as well as jocose abuse.
5 85 The smaller children played together, the boys playing games with small nets and reed marsh spears, the girls with rence dolls, or some of the older ones sporting with throwing sticks, competing against one another.
5 86 After the council had broken up, one of the men who had been seated there came to regard me.
5 87 It was he who wore the headband of the pearls of Vosk sorp about his forehead, who had been unable to bend the bow.
5 88 Strangely, to my mind, he carried over his left shoulder a large, white, silken scarf.
The younger men and women formed opposite lines, shouting and jeering at one another delightedly. And sometimes one or the other boy, or girl, would rush to the opposite line to strike at someone, laughing, and run back to the other line. Objects were thrown at the opposite line, as well as jocose abuse. The smaller children played together, the boys playing games with small nets and reed marsh spears, the girls with rence dolls, or some of the older ones sporting with throwing sticks, competing against one another. After the council had broken up, one of the men who had been seated there came to regard me. It was he who wore the headband of the pearls of Vosk sorp about his forehead, who had been unable to bend the bow. Strangely, to my mind, he carried over his left shoulder a large, white, silken scarf. - (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 5)