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"cities " "dust "

Book 18. (7 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
54 295 On the way back to my lodge I passed a bargaining place, an open area serving for trading and exchanges, not unusual in an intertribal camp.
54 296 There I saw Seibar, who had once been Pumpkin, of the Waniyanpi, trading, in sign, with a dust-Leg warrior.
54 297 Seibar was offering a netted sack of maize.
54 298 The dust Leg was bidding sheaves of dried kailiauk meat.
54 299 No longer must those who had been Waniyanpi content themselves with the consumption of their own produce and deliver surpluses without recompense into the hands of masters.
54 300 The community was now, in effect, a small freehold in the Barrens, and yet, strictly, in the letter of the law, stood to the Kaiila as a leased tenancy.
54 301 Not a square hort would the Kaiila surrender, truly, of their tribal lands.
On the way back to my lodge I passed a bargaining place, an open area serving for trading and exchanges, not unusual in an intertribal camp. There I saw Seibar, who had once been Pumpkin, of the Waniyanpi, trading, in sign, with a dust-Leg warrior. Seibar was offering a netted sack of maize. The dust Leg was bidding sheaves of dried kailiauk meat. No longer must those who had been Waniyanpi content themselves with the consumption of their own produce and deliver surpluses without recompense into the hands of masters. The community was now, in effect, a small freehold in the Barrens, and yet, strictly, in the letter of the law, stood to the Kaiila as a leased tenancy. Not a square hort would the Kaiila surrender, truly, of their tribal lands. - (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter )