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"sa-tarna "

Book 1. (1 results) Tarnsman of Gor (Individual Quote)

The Older Tarl and I may have drunk too much of that fermented brew concocted with fiendish skill from the yellow grain, Sa-Tarna, and called Pagar-Sa-Tarna, Pleasure of the Life-Daughter, but almost always "paga" for short. - (Tarnsman of Gor, Chapter 4, Sentence #118)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
4 118 The Older Tarl and I may have drunk too much of that fermented brew concocted with fiendish skill from the yellow grain, sa-tarna, and called Pagar-sa-tarna, Pleasure of the Life-Daughter, but almost always "paga" for short.

Book 1. (7 results) Tarnsman of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
4 115 I could remember something of the night before, but not much.
4 116 The Older Tarl and I had made a round of taverns in the various cylinders, and I recall toddling precariously, singing obscene camp lyrics, along different narrow bridges, about a yard wide without rails, and the earth somewhere below—how far I had no idea at the time.
4 117 If we were on the high bridges, it would have been more than a thousand feet away.
4 118 The Older Tarl and I may have drunk too much of that fermented brew concocted with fiendish skill from the yellow grain, sa-tarna, and called Pagar-sa-tarna, Pleasure of the Life-Daughter, but almost always "paga" for short.
4 119 I doubted that I would ever touch the stuff again.
4 120 I remembered, too, the girls in the last tavern, if it was a tavern, lascivious in their dancing silks, pleasure slaves bred like animals for passion.
4 121 If there were natural slaves and natural free men, as the Older Tarl had insisted, those girls were natural slaves.
I could remember something of the night before, but not much. The Older Tarl and I had made a round of taverns in the various cylinders, and I recall toddling precariously, singing obscene camp lyrics, along different narrow bridges, about a yard wide without rails, and the earth somewhere below—how far I had no idea at the time. If we were on the high bridges, it would have been more than a thousand feet away. The Older Tarl and I may have drunk too much of that fermented brew concocted with fiendish skill from the yellow grain, sa-tarna, and called Pagar-sa-tarna, Pleasure of the Life-Daughter, but almost always "paga" for short. I doubted that I would ever touch the stuff again. I remembered, too, the girls in the last tavern, if it was a tavern, lascivious in their dancing silks, pleasure slaves bred like animals for passion. If there were natural slaves and natural free men, as the Older Tarl had insisted, those girls were natural slaves. - (Tarnsman of Gor, Chapter 4)