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"moons "

Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)

Sometimes they are put on the bridges late at night, in the light of the moons, and when a marauding tarnsman makes his strike, the city's tarnsmen may take flight and close in upon him. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 18, Sentence #178)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
18 178 Sometimes they are put on the bridges late at night, in the light of the moons, and when a marauding tarnsman makes his strike, the city's tarnsmen may take flight and close in upon him.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
18 175 Where men are concerned, females make the best bait beasts.
18 176 The application of the "lure girl" is familiar in many locales.
18 177 One of the few times a female slave is permitted to don the garments of a free woman without being slain is when she is used in such a role.
18 178 Sometimes they are put on the bridges late at night, in the light of the moons, and when a marauding tarnsman makes his strike, the city's tarnsmen may take flight and close in upon him.
18 179 A common stratagem is for a group of seeming maidens to be noted sporting outside a city's walls, perhaps tossing a ball about, or such, and laughing, and chatting, with one another.
18 180 When foreign tarnsmen, intent on plying chain luck, descend to acquire this seemingly vulnerable trove of loveliness, they are surprised, for numerous guardsmen emerge suddenly from concealed pits and encircle them.
18 181 Free women, incidentally, are almost never used in such a role.
Where men are concerned, females make the best bait beasts. The application of the "lure girl" is familiar in many locales. One of the few times a female slave is permitted to don the garments of a free woman without being slain is when she is used in such a role. Sometimes they are put on the bridges late at night, in the light of the moons, and when a marauding tarnsman makes his strike, the city's tarnsmen may take flight and close in upon him. A common stratagem is for a group of seeming maidens to be noted sporting outside a city's walls, perhaps tossing a ball about, or such, and laughing, and chatting, with one another. When foreign tarnsmen, intent on plying chain luck, descend to acquire this seemingly vulnerable trove of loveliness, they are surprised, for numerous guardsmen emerge suddenly from concealed pits and encircle them. Free women, incidentally, are almost never used in such a role. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 18)