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

And, I fear, for those who are attracted to such things, outcomes are similarly clear in the games of steel. - (Quarry of Gor, Chapter 29, Sentence #10)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
29 10 And, I fear, for those who are attracted to such things, outcomes are similarly clear in the games of steel.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
29 7 Who cares if a Centius of Cos or a Scormus of Ar can push tiny pieces of wood about on a hundred-squared, red-and-yellow board better than ten hundred thousand others? Is it really so superior to the planting of suls and the harvesting of Tur-Pah, the fishing for eels or parsit, the shaping and smoothing of boards or the weaving and sewing of canvas? Who is the greatest of singers, or the finest master of line and color? Who is to say it? Yet in some games the matter is not so subjective.
29 8 In kaissa a game is won, lost, or drawn, and it is clear which is the case.
29 9 It is not a matter of saying; it is a matter of seeing.
29 10 And, I fear, for those who are attracted to such things, outcomes are similarly clear in the games of steel.
29 11 Each city has its first swordsman.
29 12 Some, misguided youths or itinerant killers, will venture from city to city, from village to village, to seek out one whose reputation they covet and would own.
29 13 One need only feign insult, and blades leap forth from sheaths.
Who cares if a Centius of Cos or a Scormus of Ar can push tiny pieces of wood about on a hundred-squared, red-and-yellow board better than ten hundred thousand others? Is it really so superior to the planting of suls and the harvesting of Tur-Pah, the fishing for eels or parsit, the shaping and smoothing of boards or the weaving and sewing of canvas? Who is the greatest of singers, or the finest master of line and color? Who is to say it? Yet in some games the matter is not so subjective. In kaissa a game is won, lost, or drawn, and it is clear which is the case. It is not a matter of saying; it is a matter of seeing. And, I fear, for those who are attracted to such things, outcomes are similarly clear in the games of steel. Each city has its first swordsman. Some, misguided youths or itinerant killers, will venture from city to city, from village to village, to seek out one whose reputation they covet and would own. One need only feign insult, and blades leap forth from sheaths. - (Quarry of Gor, Chapter 29)