• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"judge "

Book 29. (1 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Individual Quote)

If my archers could judge, lead, and strike such targets, smaller than a man's body, I had little doubt they could manage the more likely targets. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 16, Sentence #113)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
16 113 If my archers could judge, lead, and strike such targets, smaller than a man's body, I had little doubt they could manage the more likely targets.

Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
16 110 In this respect, obviously, the smooth flight of the tarn, particularly in its soaring, wings-spread approach, is far superior to the gallop of the racing kaiila.
16 111 I had neglected to avail myself of Lord Nishida's suggestion for tarn-to-tarn archery practice, in which bound prisoners, aflight on leashed tarns, would serve as targets.
16 112 I had substituted, instead, flighted targets, small, wooden disks, slung on ropes, carried beneath carrier tarns.
16 113 If my archers could judge, lead, and strike such targets, smaller than a man's body, I had little doubt they could manage the more likely targets.
16 114 Too, there is a great difference between executing helpless prisoners and facing an unencumbered foe who has every intention of killing you.
16 115 If one is familiar only with the sham of combat one might well panic in a different situation, when no charade is involved.
16 116 Too, I was hoping to train warriors, not butchers.
In this respect, obviously, the smooth flight of the tarn, particularly in its soaring, wings-spread approach, is far superior to the gallop of the racing kaiila. I had neglected to avail myself of Lord Nishida's suggestion for tarn-to-tarn archery practice, in which bound prisoners, aflight on leashed tarns, would serve as targets. I had substituted, instead, flighted targets, small, wooden disks, slung on ropes, carried beneath carrier tarns. If my archers could judge, lead, and strike such targets, smaller than a man's body, I had little doubt they could manage the more likely targets. Too, there is a great difference between executing helpless prisoners and facing an unencumbered foe who has every intention of killing you. If one is familiar only with the sham of combat one might well panic in a different situation, when no charade is involved. Too, I was hoping to train warriors, not butchers. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 16)