Book 29. (1 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
289
As tuchuk cavalry we would close as little as possible.
As Tuchuk cavalry we would close as little as possible.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 16, Sentence #289)
Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
286
Then I was aflight and to the head of our formation, and issued orders, and the first and second centuries wheeled away, each to flank one side of the coming swarm.
16
287
It would not be met head on, but, in moments, after it had plowed past, like a torrent between banks, it would be afflicted from the sides, and then, the centuries dividing, now into flights, from behind and above, as well.
16
288
In the meantime let the rushing swarm spend its bolts and quarrels on the roofs of sheds and barracks.
16
289
As tuchuk cavalry we would close as little as possible.
16
290
Our tarns carried less weight, this increasing agility and speed, and we might thus choose our moments of engagement, to strike when, and as, and where, we wished, and to withdraw as we might please, with little fear of being overtaken.
16
291
A hundred maneuvers we had planned and practiced on the field of the sky, feints and encirclements, and sallies and lures, massings and dividings, but these maneuvers were untested in battle, and our men were for the most part new to the saddle.
16
292
The alarm bars were ringing.
Then I was aflight and to the head of our formation, and issued orders, and the first and second centuries wheeled away, each to flank one side of the coming swarm.
It would not be met head on, but, in moments, after it had plowed past, like a torrent between banks, it would be afflicted from the sides, and then, the centuries dividing, now into flights, from behind and above, as well.
In the meantime let the rushing swarm spend its bolts and quarrels on the roofs of sheds and barracks.
As tuchuk cavalry we would close as little as possible.
Our tarns carried less weight, this increasing agility and speed, and we might thus choose our moments of engagement, to strike when, and as, and where, we wished, and to withdraw as we might please, with little fear of being overtaken.
A hundred maneuvers we had planned and practiced on the field of the sky, feints and encirclements, and sallies and lures, massings and dividings, but these maneuvers were untested in battle, and our men were for the most part new to the saddle.
The alarm bars were ringing.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 16)