Book 20. (1 results) Players of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
483
Secondly, I did not think it likely that messages which were to be transmitted to the Priest-Kings, or among their agents, would be likely to be in a kaissa cipher.
Secondly, I did not think it likely that messages which were to be transmitted to the Priest-Kings, or among their agents, would be likely to be in a Kaissa cipher.
- (Players of Gor, Chapter 12, Sentence #483)
Book 20. (7 results) Players of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
480
These materials, presumably, would exist in Brundisium, and of course, in Ar, if indeed that were the intended destination of the messages.
12
481
I was now prepared to believe that it was likely they were not messages intended for Priest-Kings.
12
482
First, Flaminius, it seemed, who was to have received the messages from the Lady Yanina, had apparently intended to deliver them not to the Sardar, but to some party in Ar.
12
483
Secondly, I did not think it likely that messages which were to be transmitted to the Priest-Kings, or among their agents, would be likely to be in a kaissa cipher.
12
484
Such ciphers seemed too intrinsically, or idiosyncratically, Gorean for Priest-Kings.
12
485
Priest-Kings, as far as I knew, were not familiar with, and did not play, what Goreans often speak of simply as "the Game".
12
486
This suggested to me then that the messages might be transmissions of a sort which might occur among the agents of Kurii.
These materials, presumably, would exist in Brundisium, and of course, in Ar, if indeed that were the intended destination of the messages.
I was now prepared to believe that it was likely they were not messages intended for Priest-Kings.
First, Flaminius, it seemed, who was to have received the messages from the Lady Yanina, had apparently intended to deliver them not to the Sardar, but to some party in Ar.
Secondly, I did not think it likely that messages which were to be transmitted to the Priest-Kings, or among their agents, would be likely to be in a kaissa cipher.
Such ciphers seemed too intrinsically, or idiosyncratically, Gorean for Priest-Kings.
Priest-Kings, as far as I knew, were not familiar with, and did not play, what Goreans often speak of simply as "the Game".
This suggested to me then that the messages might be transmissions of a sort which might occur among the agents of Kurii.
- (Players of Gor, Chapter 12)