• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"mercenary "

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

As Lysander had been subordinate to Torgus in his mercenary troop, I thought it best to keep him second here. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 16, Sentence #189)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
16 189 As Lysander had been subordinate to Torgus in his mercenary troop, I thought it best to keep him second here.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
16 186 I did not think it meet to inquire into his past.
16 187 In such cases there is not unoften a killing, and sometimes a woman, most often a slave, sometimes a seductive, manipulative, conniving slave who would, for her perceived advantage, or sense of power, set masters against one another.
16 188 There is a saying that a man conquers with the sword, the slave with a kiss.
16 189 As Lysander had been subordinate to Torgus in his mercenary troop, I thought it best to keep him second here.
16 190 As the leader of a century, of course, he was equivalent.
16 191 In dealing with men an able commander must be sensitive, as well as he can, to the possible consequences of his decisions and appointments, consequences which may affect the efficiency of his force, and to what might be thought of as the realities of the heart, such things as perceptions of propriety, possibly surmised slights, perceived unwarranted preferments, questions of honor, and the almost inevitable conflicts amongst vanities.
16 192 These things do not dictate command, but they influence it.
I did not think it meet to inquire into his past. In such cases there is not unoften a killing, and sometimes a woman, most often a slave, sometimes a seductive, manipulative, conniving slave who would, for her perceived advantage, or sense of power, set masters against one another. There is a saying that a man conquers with the sword, the slave with a kiss. As Lysander had been subordinate to Torgus in his mercenary troop, I thought it best to keep him second here. As the leader of a century, of course, he was equivalent. In dealing with men an able commander must be sensitive, as well as he can, to the possible consequences of his decisions and appointments, consequences which may affect the efficiency of his force, and to what might be thought of as the realities of the heart, such things as perceptions of propriety, possibly surmised slights, perceived unwarranted preferments, questions of honor, and the almost inevitable conflicts amongst vanities. These things do not dictate command, but they influence it. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 16)