Book 3. (1 results) Priest-Kings of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
98
Last Spear must remain standing, and if the beast still lives, receive its charge with only his drawn sword.
Last Spear must remain standing, and if the beast still lives, receive its charge with only his drawn sword.
- (Priest-Kings of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #98)
Book 3. (7 results) Priest-Kings of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
95
Once Last Spear casts his weapon he may not throw himself to the ground.
2
96
If he should, and any of his comrades survive, they will slay him.
2
97
But this seldom occurs, for the Gorean hunters fear cowardice more than the claws and fangs of larls.
2
98
Last Spear must remain standing, and if the beast still lives, receive its charge with only his drawn sword.
2
99
He does not hurl himself to the ground in order that he will remain conspicuously in the larl's field of vision and thus be the object of its wounded, maddened onslaught.
2
100
It is thus that, should the spears miss their mark, he sacrifices his life for his companions who will, while the larl attacks him, make good their escape.
2
101
This may seem cruel but in the long run it tends to be conservative of human life; it is better, as the Goreans say, for one man to die than many.
Once Last Spear casts his weapon he may not throw himself to the ground.
If he should, and any of his comrades survive, they will slay him.
But this seldom occurs, for the Gorean hunters fear cowardice more than the claws and fangs of larls.
Last Spear must remain standing, and if the beast still lives, receive its charge with only his drawn sword.
He does not hurl himself to the ground in order that he will remain conspicuously in the larl's field of vision and thus be the object of its wounded, maddened onslaught.
It is thus that, should the spears miss their mark, he sacrifices his life for his companions who will, while the larl attacks him, make good their escape.
This may seem cruel but in the long run it tends to be conservative of human life; it is better, as the Goreans say, for one man to die than many.
- (Priest-Kings of Gor, Chapter 2)