Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
25
3
Cabot had returned to the villa which had been earlier assigned to him, from which he had fetched a tunic, some supplies, and a pouch, into which he had thrust the strings of rubies given to him earlier, before the trial of Lord Pyrrhus, in which his testimony had been so ineffective.
Cabot had returned to the villa which had been earlier assigned to him, from which he had fetched a tunic, some supplies, and a pouch, into which he had thrust the strings of rubies given to him earlier, before the trial of Lord Pyrrhus, in which his testimony had been so ineffective.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 25, Sentence #3)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
24
275
She looked back, once, at Cabot, and then was jerked forward on her rope, by hastening Grendel.
25
1
The Stray "Hold!" commanded Cabot, and the two smaller Kurii, lesser Kurii, scavenger Kurii, not even worthy of the ships, stopped.
25
2
These were such as roamed about, patrolling areas for strayed, or flighted, animals, tarsks, humans, and such.
25
3
Cabot had returned to the villa which had been earlier assigned to him, from which he had fetched a tunic, some supplies, and a pouch, into which he had thrust the strings of rubies given to him earlier, before the trial of Lord Pyrrhus, in which his testimony had been so ineffective.
25
4
If these two Kurii had been apprised of his escape, they did not register that the human before them was he of whose escape they had heard.
25
5
He did not seem a fugitive, and he was not collared, and so not a pet, and he was clothed, thus, presumably, a human ally, perhaps one of the men of Peisistratus, of whom they had heard.
25
6
Too, humans look much alike to most Kurii.
She looked back, once, at Cabot, and then was jerked forward on her rope, by hastening Grendel.
The Stray "Hold!" commanded Cabot, and the two smaller Kurii, lesser Kurii, scavenger Kurii, not even worthy of the ships, stopped.
These were such as roamed about, patrolling areas for strayed, or flighted, animals, tarsks, humans, and such.
Cabot had returned to the villa which had been earlier assigned to him, from which he had fetched a tunic, some supplies, and a pouch, into which he had thrust the strings of rubies given to him earlier, before the trial of Lord Pyrrhus, in which his testimony had been so ineffective.
If these two Kurii had been apprised of his escape, they did not register that the human before them was he of whose escape they had heard.
He did not seem a fugitive, and he was not collared, and so not a pet, and he was clothed, thus, presumably, a human ally, perhaps one of the men of Peisistratus, of whom they had heard.
Too, humans look much alike to most Kurii.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 25)