Book 33. (7 results) Rebels of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
15
Its beak can tear a head from a body and its talons can tear loose the backbone of a larl.
10
16
I once saw one in Torvaldsland disembowel a Kur, before the ax half severed its head and the Kur began to feed, one paw thrusting its intestines back into its body, holding them in place.
10
17
Whereas a human being is not the common prey of a wild tarn, the usual objects of its interests being verr and tabuk, the tarn can be dangerous to humans, particularly if a nest is approached.
10
18
The tarn commonly kills in hunting by breaking the back of its prey, but it can seize a verr and bear it aloft, to drop it to its death, after which it feeds, or carry it to its nest, where fledglings fight for the meat, the swiftest and most aggressive surviving, often at the expense of its siblings.
10
19
The domestic tarn, on the other hand, like the domestic sleen, is bred for at least the partial tolerance of humans.
10
20
It does not require live game.
10
21
There are different varieties of domestic tarns, some bred for war, some for racing, and some for draft purposes, the haulage of tarn baskets, which may contain cargo or passengers, or, in the case of slaves, slave cargo.
Its beak can tear a head from a body and its talons can tear loose the backbone of a larl.
I once saw one in Torvaldsland disembowel a Kur, before the ax half severed its head and the Kur began to feed, one paw thrusting its intestines back into its body, holding them in place.
Whereas a human being is not the common prey of a wild tarn, the usual objects of its interests being verr and tabuk, the tarn can be dangerous to humans, particularly if a nest is approached.
The tarn commonly kills in hunting by breaking the back of its prey, but it can seize a verr and bear it aloft, to drop it to its death, after which it feeds, or carry it to its nest, where fledglings fight for the meat, the swiftest and most aggressive surviving, often at the expense of its siblings.
The domestic tarn, on the other hand, like the domestic sleen, is bred for at least the partial tolerance of humans.
It does not require live game.
There are different varieties of domestic tarns, some bred for war, some for racing, and some for draft purposes, the haulage of tarn baskets, which may contain cargo or passengers, or, in the case of slaves, slave cargo.
- (Rebels of Gor, Chapter )