• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"ahn " "girl "

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
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.
14 189 In the hood, too, of course, the prisoner does not know who might strike or abuse him.
14 190 He is alone in the hood, with his confusion, his ignorance, his unfocused misery, his anguish, helpless.
14 191 The second major function of the hood is to conceal from the prisoner his location, where he is and where he is being taken.
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. In the hood, too, of course, the prisoner does not know who might strike or abuse him. He is alone in the hood, with his confusion, his ignorance, his unfocused misery, his anguish, helpless. The second major function of the hood is to conceal from the prisoner his location, where he is and where he is being taken. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter )