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"kaissa "

Book 33. (1 results) Rebels of Gor (Individual Quote)

But then, might they not as well have wagered on a game of kaissa or tharlarion racing at Venna? What were the parameters of this game, if game it was? Could a number of Pani warriors, brought to continental Gor, somehow find their way back to the embattled homeland? Perhaps, if the unprecedented voyage could be accomplished. - (Rebels of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #25)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 25 But then, might they not as well have wagered on a game of kaissa or tharlarion racing at Venna? What were the parameters of this game, if game it was? Could a number of Pani warriors, brought to continental Gor, somehow find their way back to the embattled homeland? Perhaps, if the unprecedented voyage could be accomplished.

Book 33. (7 results) Rebels of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 22 I feared the outcome of this dire contest was slated to take place far from known Gor, indeed, at the "World's End," between two Pani contingents.
6 23 I suspected the armaments involved were to be primitive, neither technologically nor industrially advanced.
6 24 One supposed both the sophisticated weaponry of Kurii and the engines of Priest-Kings were to be abjured.
6 25 But then, might they not as well have wagered on a game of kaissa or tharlarion racing at Venna? What were the parameters of this game, if game it was? Could a number of Pani warriors, brought to continental Gor, somehow find their way back to the embattled homeland? Perhaps, if the unprecedented voyage could be accomplished.
6 26 But for that one would need a ship, a large, unusual ship, perhaps a ship such as that of Tersites.
6 27 Might they not, too, perhaps by the recruitment of mercenaries, assuming the requisite voyage could be made, manage to achieve a military balance with the numerically larger forces of Lord Yamada? Perhaps, particularly if a new arm were incorporated into their arsenal, an unprecedented arm, unprecedented for the World's End, perhaps that of the trained war tarn.
6 28 Much of this, of course, was speculative on my part, but there seemed an alarming plausibility in these untoward speculations.
I feared the outcome of this dire contest was slated to take place far from known Gor, indeed, at the "World's End," between two Pani contingents. I suspected the armaments involved were to be primitive, neither technologically nor industrially advanced. One supposed both the sophisticated weaponry of Kurii and the engines of Priest-Kings were to be abjured. But then, might they not as well have wagered on a game of kaissa or tharlarion racing at Venna? What were the parameters of this game, if game it was? Could a number of Pani warriors, brought to continental Gor, somehow find their way back to the embattled homeland? Perhaps, if the unprecedented voyage could be accomplished. But for that one would need a ship, a large, unusual ship, perhaps a ship such as that of Tersites. Might they not, too, perhaps by the recruitment of mercenaries, assuming the requisite voyage could be made, manage to achieve a military balance with the numerically larger forces of Lord Yamada? Perhaps, particularly if a new arm were incorporated into their arsenal, an unprecedented arm, unprecedented for the World's End, perhaps that of the trained war tarn. Much of this, of course, was speculative on my part, but there seemed an alarming plausibility in these untoward speculations. - (Rebels of Gor, Chapter 6)