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"ahn " "girl "

Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
18 119 One notes in this, in passing, the superiority of the sleen and Kur life forms to the human.
18 120 But then these superiorities are obvious to all neutral observers.
18 121 And one need not, one supposes, remark further on the greater strength of the Kur, nor the massiveness of its jaws, the penetrability of its fangs, the capacity of its claws, particularly on the hind feet, to disembowel prey, and so on.
18 122 Accordingly, Cabot was not disposed to flee until, desperate and exhausted, perhaps after some ahn, his muscles aching, his body shuddering, his lungs gasping for air, he would lie vulnerable and helpless in the path of his pursuers.
18 123 He would prefer to deal with them, or be dealt with by them, while he was in a state of strength and acuity.
18 124 Had his pursuers been unwary and unsuspecting men, or such beasts of another sort, he might have circled about and attempted, undetected, from the rear, to eliminate them one by one, certainly were they in single file and suitably separated.
18 125 This is a common strategy with an unwary and unsuspecting line, but it is unlikely of success with, say, Warriors, or Assassins, as they are alert to, and familiar with, such procedures, often resorting to them themselves.
One notes in this, in passing, the superiority of the sleen and Kur life forms to the human. But then these superiorities are obvious to all neutral observers. And one need not, one supposes, remark further on the greater strength of the Kur, nor the massiveness of its jaws, the penetrability of its fangs, the capacity of its claws, particularly on the hind feet, to disembowel prey, and so on. Accordingly, Cabot was not disposed to flee until, desperate and exhausted, perhaps after some ahn, his muscles aching, his body shuddering, his lungs gasping for air, he would lie vulnerable and helpless in the path of his pursuers. He would prefer to deal with them, or be dealt with by them, while he was in a state of strength and acuity. Had his pursuers been unwary and unsuspecting men, or such beasts of another sort, he might have circled about and attempted, undetected, from the rear, to eliminate them one by one, certainly were they in single file and suitably separated. This is a common strategy with an unwary and unsuspecting line, but it is unlikely of success with, say, Warriors, or Assassins, as they are alert to, and familiar with, such procedures, often resorting to them themselves. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter )