Book 9. (7 results) Marauders of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
136
Why the conjunction of bands is spoken of as a "March" is also unclear.
17
137
This may refer to a military march, of course, but, I suspect, the term being apparently ancient, that it may also refer to migrations in the remote history of the Kurii, on their own world, putatively no longer existent or viable.
17
138
There is some indirect evidence that this may be the case, because twelve "Marches" is referred to not as a Division or Army, or some such unit, but rather as a "people".
17
139
A people would be commanded by a "Blood" of the people.
17
140
Such a commander is said to stand "outside the rings".
17
141
I do not fully understand the meaning of this expression.
17
142
The Kurii, as I may have mentioned, consist of several "peoples".
Why the conjunction of bands is spoken of as a "March" is also unclear.
This may refer to a military march, of course, but, I suspect, the term being apparently ancient, that it may also refer to migrations in the remote history of the Kurii, on their own world, putatively no longer existent or viable.
There is some indirect evidence that this may be the case, because twelve "Marches" is referred to not as a Division or Army, or some such unit, but rather as a "people".
A people would be commanded by a "Blood" of the people.
Such a commander is said to stand "outside the rings".
I do not fully understand the meaning of this expression.
The Kurii, as I may have mentioned, consist of several "peoples".
- (Marauders of Gor, Chapter )