Book 10. (1 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
4
110
From time to time, he dismounted, gathering shed kaiila hair and thrusting it in bags at his saddle.
From time to time, he dismounted, gathering shed kaiila hair and thrusting it in bags at his saddle.
- (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 4, Sentence #110)
Book 10. (7 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
4
107
I saw the end of the caravan, more than a pasang away.
4
108
It wound, slowly, gracefully, through the hills.
4
109
At its very end came a man on a single kaiila.
4
110
From time to time, he dismounted, gathering shed kaiila hair and thrusting it in bags at his saddle.
4
111
The kaiila, unlike the verr and hurt, is never sheared.
4
112
When it sheds its hair, however, the hair may be gathered, and, depending on the hair, various cloths can be made from it.
4
113
There is a soft, fine hair, the most prized, which grows on the belly of the animal; there is an undercoating of hair, soft but coarser, which is used for most cloth; and there are the long, outer hairs.
I saw the end of the caravan, more than a pasang away.
It wound, slowly, gracefully, through the hills.
At its very end came a man on a single kaiila.
From time to time, he dismounted, gathering shed kaiila hair and thrusting it in bags at his saddle.
The kaiila, unlike the verr and hurt, is never sheared.
When it sheds its hair, however, the hair may be gathered, and, depending on the hair, various cloths can be made from it.
There is a soft, fine hair, the most prized, which grows on the belly of the animal; there is an undercoating of hair, soft but coarser, which is used for most cloth; and there are the long, outer hairs.
- (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 4)