Book 29. (1 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
5
494
Now they must acknowledge her misdeeds, and celebrate her redemption by her friends and allies, the benign forces of Cos, Tyros, and their allies.
Now they must acknowledge her misdeeds, and celebrate her redemption by her friends and allies, the benign forces of Cos, Tyros, and their allies.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 5, Sentence #494)
Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
5
491
In this fashion it was proclaimed that Ar had been liberated and a new day had come about, one of harmony, peace, and amicability.
5
492
Meanwhile the citizens of Ar were to believe their loss was a gain, their defeat a victory.
5
493
They must atone now for the erstwhile glory of Ar, regret her former might, influence, and power.
5
494
Now they must acknowledge her misdeeds, and celebrate her redemption by her friends and allies, the benign forces of Cos, Tyros, and their allies.
5
495
And many sang, and congratulated themselves on their newly found virtue, while dismantling their walls to the scornful music of flute girls.
5
496
Meanwhile, of course, the invaders tightened their controls and, for months, either randomly, as it pleased them, or systematically, in accord with the directives of the polemarkos, began to loot Ar of its wealth, its silver and gold, its jewelries and gems, its medical elixirs, its ointments and scents, its pagas and wines, its manufactures, its beasts, its slaves, and, in many cases, its free women, some put in paga taverns and brothels, others stripped and coffled, to be led to foreign markets, and some even, after transport from Brundisium, to Cos and Tyros themselves.
5
497
To be sure, all had not gone as smoothly as it might have for the invaders because, eventually, sporadic acts of resistance occurred.
In this fashion it was proclaimed that Ar had been liberated and a new day had come about, one of harmony, peace, and amicability.
Meanwhile the citizens of Ar were to believe their loss was a gain, their defeat a victory.
They must atone now for the erstwhile glory of Ar, regret her former might, influence, and power.
Now they must acknowledge her misdeeds, and celebrate her redemption by her friends and allies, the benign forces of Cos, Tyros, and their allies.
And many sang, and congratulated themselves on their newly found virtue, while dismantling their walls to the scornful music of flute girls.
Meanwhile, of course, the invaders tightened their controls and, for months, either randomly, as it pleased them, or systematically, in accord with the directives of the polemarkos, began to loot Ar of its wealth, its silver and gold, its jewelries and gems, its medical elixirs, its ointments and scents, its pagas and wines, its manufactures, its beasts, its slaves, and, in many cases, its free women, some put in paga taverns and brothels, others stripped and coffled, to be led to foreign markets, and some even, after transport from Brundisium, to Cos and Tyros themselves.
To be sure, all had not gone as smoothly as it might have for the invaders because, eventually, sporadic acts of resistance occurred.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 5)