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"sa-tarna "

Book 34. (1 results) Plunder of Gor (Individual Quote)

For the most part, however, sa-tarna, harvested and threshed, was brought in by peasants, milled, and carried away by peasants. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 11, Sentence #60)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
11 60 For the most part, however, sa-tarna, harvested and threshed, was brought in by peasants, milled, and carried away by peasants.

Book 34. (7 results) Plunder of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
11 57 Surely I was familiar with this sort of thing from Earth.
11 58 What male is not likely to be favorably inclined toward a product that he associates with a beautiful woman? I thought myself obviously superior to them.
11 59 It seemed to me madness that they should be silked, and I was chained to a pole.
11 60 For the most part, however, sa-tarna, harvested and threshed, was brought in by peasants, milled, and carried away by peasants.
11 61 The fee for the milling was in tarsk-bits, but, most commonly, it was taken in kind, a portion of the flour going to the miller, who might then market it as his own.
11 62 From where we worked I could see the lofty aqueduct by means of which water was brought to Torcadino from the distant Voltai range, hundreds of pasangs away.
11 63 Once, I had heard, enemy forces had entered the city by means of that aqueduct.
Surely I was familiar with this sort of thing from Earth. What male is not likely to be favorably inclined toward a product that he associates with a beautiful woman? I thought myself obviously superior to them. It seemed to me madness that they should be silked, and I was chained to a pole. For the most part, however, sa-tarna, harvested and threshed, was brought in by peasants, milled, and carried away by peasants. The fee for the milling was in tarsk-bits, but, most commonly, it was taken in kind, a portion of the flour going to the miller, who might then market it as his own. From where we worked I could see the lofty aqueduct by means of which water was brought to Torcadino from the distant Voltai range, hundreds of pasangs away. Once, I had heard, enemy forces had entered the city by means of that aqueduct. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 11)