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"thassa "

Book 8. (1 results) Hunters of Gor (Individual Quote)

The men of Tyros, I knew, familiar with islands and the sweeps of gleaming Thassa, were inexperienced in the forest. - (Hunters of Gor, Chapter 15, Sentence #97)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
15 97 The men of Tyros, I knew, familiar with islands and the sweeps of gleaming thassa, were inexperienced in the forest.

Book 8. (7 results) Hunters of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
15 94 They were the first of our catches.
15 95 How furious they were, proud panther girls, to be led into captivity, helplessly, by a mere slave girl.
15 96 But in time, I conjectured, they, too, would be slave girls, and piteously begging other slaves for secrets on how better to serve men.
15 97 The men of Tyros, I knew, familiar with islands and the sweeps of gleaming thassa, were inexperienced in the forest.
15 98 The panther girls were their guides, their hunters, their scouts, their shields.
15 99 If I could make it so that the panther girls feared to leave the camp, and, in the marches, would insist on remaining near the long slave chain, putatively protected by their numbers, the men of Tyros would be, for many practical purposes, deprived of the services of their otherwise dangerously effective allies.
15 100 Most importantly, I supposed, they would lose the services of their huntresses and guards.
They were the first of our catches. How furious they were, proud panther girls, to be led into captivity, helplessly, by a mere slave girl. But in time, I conjectured, they, too, would be slave girls, and piteously begging other slaves for secrets on how better to serve men. The men of Tyros, I knew, familiar with islands and the sweeps of gleaming thassa, were inexperienced in the forest. The panther girls were their guides, their hunters, their scouts, their shields. If I could make it so that the panther girls feared to leave the camp, and, in the marches, would insist on remaining near the long slave chain, putatively protected by their numbers, the men of Tyros would be, for many practical purposes, deprived of the services of their otherwise dangerously effective allies. Most importantly, I supposed, they would lose the services of their huntresses and guards. - (Hunters of Gor, Chapter 15)