Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
29
It is no wonder that they are kept slaves.
17
30
What else is to be done with them? They are good now for nothing else.
17
31
They have been spoiled for freedom.
17
32
And what man does not want one at his feet? Lord Nishida had informed me that these tarnsmen had been recruited in more than two dozen cities.
17
33
Although the numbers were prodigious, considered merely as military units, these riders, I supposed, would be less a cavalry than a conglomerate or horde.
17
34
They would be, I supposed, little used to riding together, and would presumably lack familiar, common signals and maneuvers.
17
35
They would expect, in numbers, if in nothing else, to overwhelm and destroy a smaller force.
It is no wonder that they are kept slaves.
What else is to be done with them? They are good now for nothing else.
They have been spoiled for freedom.
And what man does not want one at his feet? Lord Nishida had informed me that these tarnsmen had been recruited in more than two dozen cities.
Although the numbers were prodigious, considered merely as military units, these riders, I supposed, would be less a cavalry than a conglomerate or horde.
They would be, I supposed, little used to riding together, and would presumably lack familiar, common signals and maneuvers.
They would expect, in numbers, if in nothing else, to overwhelm and destroy a smaller force.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter )