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"tuchuk "

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

I knew the armament and tactics of such forces well, having been trained in them, and I had designed my forces, following the Tuchuk model, to deal with massive infantry and earth-shaking tharlarion charges, now adapted to flight, to deal with them. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 17, Sentence #5)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
17 5 I knew the armament and tactics of such forces well, having been trained in them, and I had designed my forces, following the tuchuk model, to deal with massive infantry and earth-shaking tharlarion charges, now adapted to flight, to deal with them.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
17 2 The heavy shields and mighty spears borne by them would alone far outweigh the armament and accouterments of my men.
17 3 Too, the tarns of some were encumbered by armor, and the beak and talons were still shod with steel, turning their mounts into little more than massive, lumbering aerial tanks.
17 4 Their missile weapons were the short quarrels and the stout, metal bolts of the stirrup and crank-and-ratchet crossbows.
17 5 I knew the armament and tactics of such forces well, having been trained in them, and I had designed my forces, following the tuchuk model, to deal with massive infantry and earth-shaking tharlarion charges, now adapted to flight, to deal with them.
17 6 The infantrymen of the sky would be effective, I conjectured, only against forces similarly equipped, and trained.
17 7 Indeed, the common Gorean warrior tended to hold the bow, even the peasant bow, in contempt, as weapons unworthy of the hand of a warrior, whose proper weapons were the shield, spear, and sword.
17 8 His reliance on the crossbow was more a concession to the difficulty of closure in the sky than a respect for its military potential.
The heavy shields and mighty spears borne by them would alone far outweigh the armament and accouterments of my men. Too, the tarns of some were encumbered by armor, and the beak and talons were still shod with steel, turning their mounts into little more than massive, lumbering aerial tanks. Their missile weapons were the short quarrels and the stout, metal bolts of the stirrup and crank-and-ratchet crossbows. I knew the armament and tactics of such forces well, having been trained in them, and I had designed my forces, following the tuchuk model, to deal with massive infantry and earth-shaking tharlarion charges, now adapted to flight, to deal with them. The infantrymen of the sky would be effective, I conjectured, only against forces similarly equipped, and trained. Indeed, the common Gorean warrior tended to hold the bow, even the peasant bow, in contempt, as weapons unworthy of the hand of a warrior, whose proper weapons were the shield, spear, and sword. His reliance on the crossbow was more a concession to the difficulty of closure in the sky than a respect for its military potential. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 17)