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

"We will now add to the games," called out Decius Albus, "as being of special interest, two kajirae, one who failed to well serve the House of a Hundred Corridors, a house that is reluctant to accept embarrassment or failure, and one that attests the good faith, the good will, the generosity, the bounty of my house. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 61, Sentence #82)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
61 82 "We will now add to the games," called out Decius Albus, "as being of special interest, two kajirae, one who failed to well serve the House of a Hundred Corridors, a house that is reluctant to accept embarrassment or failure, and one that attests the good faith, the good will, the generosity, the bounty of my house.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
61 79 Angrily Surtak cast down the ax.
61 80 "Excellent, excellent!" called Decius Albus.
61 81 "Wisdom prevails!" Lord Grendel made no move to retrieve the discarded ax.
61 82 "We will now add to the games," called out Decius Albus, "as being of special interest, two kajirae, one who failed to well serve the House of a Hundred Corridors, a house that is reluctant to accept embarrassment or failure, and one that attests the good faith, the good will, the generosity, the bounty of my house.
61 83 My house does not stint on the provender of its festive boards, nor on the richness of its gifts to its retainers.
61 84 So, too, we do not stint on the quality of our sponsored games.
61 85 In the arena we put upon the sand only the finest of fighters, in the tarn races only the swiftest of tarns, and so, too, here, we do not stint on the quality of our prey animals.
Angrily Surtak cast down the ax. "Excellent, excellent!" called Decius Albus. "Wisdom prevails!" Lord Grendel made no move to retrieve the discarded ax. "We will now add to the games," called out Decius Albus, "as being of special interest, two kajirae, one who failed to well serve the House of a Hundred Corridors, a house that is reluctant to accept embarrassment or failure, and one that attests the good faith, the good will, the generosity, the bounty of my house. My house does not stint on the provender of its festive boards, nor on the richness of its gifts to its retainers. So, too, we do not stint on the quality of our sponsored games. In the arena we put upon the sand only the finest of fighters, in the tarn races only the swiftest of tarns, and so, too, here, we do not stint on the quality of our prey animals. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 61)