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"serves "

Book 10. (1 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Individual Quote)

It serves four major functions. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 14, Sentence #185)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 185 It serves four major functions.

Book 10. (7 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 182 There were several men behind me.
14 183 This slave hood does not come fitted with a gag device.
14 184 It is not a particularly cruel hood, like many, but utilitarian, and merciful.
14 185 It serves four major functions.
14 186 It facilitates the control of the prisoner.
14 187 A hooded prisoner, even if not bound, is almost totally helpless.
14 188 He cannot see to escape; he can not see to attack; he cannot be sure, usually, even of the number and position of his captors, whether they face him, or are attentive, or such; sometimes a hooded prisoner, even unbound, is told simply to kneel, and that if he moves, he will be slain; some captors, to their amusement, leave such prisoners, returning Ahn later, to find them in the same place; the prisoner, of course, does not know if they have merely moved a hundred feet away or so, to rest or make camp; all he knows is that if he does move a foot from his place he may feel a scimitar pass suddenly through his body.
There were several men behind me. This slave hood does not come fitted with a gag device. It is not a particularly cruel hood, like many, but utilitarian, and merciful. It serves four major functions. It facilitates the control of the prisoner. A hooded prisoner, even if not bound, is almost totally helpless. He cannot see to escape; he can not see to attack; he cannot be sure, usually, even of the number and position of his captors, whether they face him, or are attentive, or such; sometimes a hooded prisoner, even unbound, is told simply to kneel, and that if he moves, he will be slain; some captors, to their amusement, leave such prisoners, returning Ahn later, to find them in the same place; the prisoner, of course, does not know if they have merely moved a hundred feet away or so, to rest or make camp; all he knows is that if he does move a foot from his place he may feel a scimitar pass suddenly through his body. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 14)