• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"kaissa "

Book 35. (1 results) Quarry of Gor (Individual Quote)

Too, some come and, for the price of a drink, linger, to talk with friends or hear the news; some come and play kaissa, or stones, cards, or dice. - (Quarry of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #43)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 43 Too, some come and, for the price of a drink, linger, to talk with friends or hear the news; some come and play kaissa, or stones, cards, or dice.

Book 35. (7 results) Quarry of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 40 A goblet of paga is commonly a tarsk-bit, and the girl, if wished, comes with the price of the drink.
10 41 Not all men, of course, come to a paga tavern for paga and the girls.
10 42 Suppers may also be ordered, the prices of which vary with the nature and quantity of the provender.
10 43 Too, some come and, for the price of a drink, linger, to talk with friends or hear the news; some come and play kaissa, or stones, cards, or dice.
10 44 In some of the relatively removed, more private sections there are tables in whose surface, inlaid.
10 45 are found the hundred squares of the kaissa board.
10 46 In the tavern merchants may conduct business over a drink; mariners may regale rapt auditors with accounts of fabulous voyages; slavers may confer on sales and projected raids; at another table, a scribe may sit, ready to write or read letters.
A goblet of paga is commonly a tarsk-bit, and the girl, if wished, comes with the price of the drink. Not all men, of course, come to a paga tavern for paga and the girls. Suppers may also be ordered, the prices of which vary with the nature and quantity of the provender. Too, some come and, for the price of a drink, linger, to talk with friends or hear the news; some come and play kaissa, or stones, cards, or dice. In some of the relatively removed, more private sections there are tables in whose surface, inlaid. are found the hundred squares of the kaissa board. In the tavern merchants may conduct business over a drink; mariners may regale rapt auditors with accounts of fabulous voyages; slavers may confer on sales and projected raids; at another table, a scribe may sit, ready to write or read letters. - (Quarry of Gor, Chapter 10)