Book 10. (1 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
9
The protection tax helps to defray the cost of maintaining soldiers, who, nominally, at any rate, police the desert.
The protection tax helps to defray the cost of maintaining soldiers, who, nominally, at any rate, police the desert.
- (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #9)
Book 10. (7 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
6
Rather, with the control of watering points at the oasis, it is unnecessary.
10
7
To these points must come caravans.
10
8
At the oases, it is common for the local pashas to exact a protection tax from caravans, if they are of a certain length, normally of fifty kaiila or more.
10
9
The protection tax helps to defray the cost of maintaining soldiers, who, nominally, at any rate, police the desert.
10
10
It is not unusual for the genealogy of most of the pashas sovereign in the various oases to contain a heritage of raiders.
10
11
Most of those in the Tahari who sit upon the rugs of office are those who are the descendants of men who ruled, in ruder days, scimitar in hand, from the high, red leather of the kaiila saddle.
10
12
The forms change but, in the Tahari, as elsewhere, order, justice and law rest ultimately upon the determination of men, and steel.
Rather, with the control of watering points at the oasis, it is unnecessary.
To these points must come caravans.
At the oases, it is common for the local pashas to exact a protection tax from caravans, if they are of a certain length, normally of fifty kaiila or more.
The protection tax helps to defray the cost of maintaining soldiers, who, nominally, at any rate, police the desert.
It is not unusual for the genealogy of most of the pashas sovereign in the various oases to contain a heritage of raiders.
Most of those in the Tahari who sit upon the rugs of office are those who are the descendants of men who ruled, in ruder days, scimitar in hand, from the high, red leather of the kaiila saddle.
The forms change but, in the Tahari, as elsewhere, order, justice and law rest ultimately upon the determination of men, and steel.
- (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 10)