Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
20
9
The testimony of Peisistratus, taken through translators, had made it clear that Lord Pyrrhus had intended to take the human, Tarl Cabot, hunting in the sport cylinder, which seemed upon the surface, if tasteless considering some of the game available, at least sufficiently innocent.
The testimony of Peisistratus, taken through translators, had made it clear that Lord Pyrrhus had intended to take the human, Tarl Cabot, hunting in the sport cylinder, which seemed upon the surface, if tasteless considering some of the game available, at least sufficiently innocent.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 20, Sentence #9)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
20
6
The jury was a thousand Kurii, ranged on tiers.
20
7
Lord Pyrrhus, chained by limbs and neck, and fastened in a cement pit, had spoken in his own defense, but his defense, articulate and bellicose, did little more than confirm his guilt.
20
8
He did protest his innocence of treason, and his insistence that he had never acted otherwise than in the best interests of the species and the world.
20
9
The testimony of Peisistratus, taken through translators, had made it clear that Lord Pyrrhus had intended to take the human, Tarl Cabot, hunting in the sport cylinder, which seemed upon the surface, if tasteless considering some of the game available, at least sufficiently innocent.
20
10
Other testimony had made it clear that Lord Pyrrhus had returned from the sport cylinder without Tarl Cabot, and that, later, a hunting party of eight Kurii, three of whom were womb brothers, and two of whom were egg brothers, to Lord Pyrrhus had entered the sport world with sleen, and had been arrested in the midst of an attempt upon the life of Tarl Cabot, esteemed ally of Agamemnon.
20
11
"You are the human, Tarl Cabot?" inquired the translator of the chief prosecutor.
20
12
"I am," said Cabot.
The jury was a thousand Kurii, ranged on tiers.
Lord Pyrrhus, chained by limbs and neck, and fastened in a cement pit, had spoken in his own defense, but his defense, articulate and bellicose, did little more than confirm his guilt.
He did protest his innocence of treason, and his insistence that he had never acted otherwise than in the best interests of the species and the world.
The testimony of Peisistratus, taken through translators, had made it clear that Lord Pyrrhus had intended to take the human, Tarl Cabot, hunting in the sport cylinder, which seemed upon the surface, if tasteless considering some of the game available, at least sufficiently innocent.
Other testimony had made it clear that Lord Pyrrhus had returned from the sport cylinder without Tarl Cabot, and that, later, a hunting party of eight Kurii, three of whom were womb brothers, and two of whom were egg brothers, to Lord Pyrrhus had entered the sport world with sleen, and had been arrested in the midst of an attempt upon the life of Tarl Cabot, esteemed ally of Agamemnon.
"You are the human, Tarl Cabot?" inquired the translator of the chief prosecutor.
"I am," said Cabot.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 20)