• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"martial " "law "

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
74 16 * * * * The festival would last several days.
74 17 Much of the music was lost on Cabot, as he could hear little of it, and what he heard was little to his liking.
74 18 The martial dances were more fascinating, particularly the convolutions of Kurii, which were hitherto unknown to him.
74 19 He was familiar with martial dances from Gor, of course, which are used not simply for public displays, and such, but in the training of infantry, the turns, advances, withdrawals, the liftings and lowerings of spears, the rhythmic clash of blades on shields, the stamping of feet, the glittering of light on helmets, and spears.
74 20 On level ground nothing could stand against the weight of a thousand spears, of different lengths, bristling before the advance, rushed forward with the weight of a thousand running, screaming men behind them.
74 21 On rough ground other formations were more effective, smaller, coordinated groups of men, groups which, to the movements of standards, the blasts of horns, could break apart from other groups, rejoin, slip to the rear, be replaced with fresh groups, and so on.
74 22 Such groups, for example, might be tactically divided, to accommodate themselves to the exigencies of terrain and battle, and then seamlessly rejoin, as though by magic, when desired.
* * * * The festival would last several days. Much of the music was lost on Cabot, as he could hear little of it, and what he heard was little to his liking. The martial dances were more fascinating, particularly the convolutions of Kurii, which were hitherto unknown to him. He was familiar with martial dances from Gor, of course, which are used not simply for public displays, and such, but in the training of infantry, the turns, advances, withdrawals, the liftings and lowerings of spears, the rhythmic clash of blades on shields, the stamping of feet, the glittering of light on helmets, and spears. On level ground nothing could stand against the weight of a thousand spears, of different lengths, bristling before the advance, rushed forward with the weight of a thousand running, screaming men behind them. On rough ground other formations were more effective, smaller, coordinated groups of men, groups which, to the movements of standards, the blasts of horns, could break apart from other groups, rejoin, slip to the rear, be replaced with fresh groups, and so on. Such groups, for example, might be tactically divided, to accommodate themselves to the exigencies of terrain and battle, and then seamlessly rejoin, as though by magic, when desired. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter )