Book 5. (7 results) Assassin of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
16
It had been a long, hard winter for me and I think I, as well as the common citizens of Ar, rejoiced in the coming of En'Kara.
16
17
The girls had finished their training during the Twelfth Passage Hand.
16
18
Little then remained for them except to review their lessons, eat and sleep well, and be in prime condition for their sale in the late summer, during the Fifth Passage Hand, on the Love Feast.
16
19
On the first day of the Waiting Hand, the last five days of the old year, the portals of Ar, including even that of the House of Cernus, had been painted white, and in many of the low-caste homes had been sealed with pitch, not to be opened until the first day of En'Kara.
16
20
Almost all doors, including that of the House of Cernus, had nailed to them some branches of the Brak Bush, the leaves of which, when chewed, have a purgative effect.
16
21
It is thought that the pitch and the branches of the Brak Bush discourage the entry of bad luck into the houses of the citizens.
16
22
During the days of the Waiting Hand the streets are almost deserted, and in the Houses there is much fasting, and little conversation, and no song.
It had been a long, hard winter for me and I think I, as well as the common citizens of Ar, rejoiced in the coming of En'Kara.
The girls had finished their training during the Twelfth Passage Hand.
Little then remained for them except to review their lessons, eat and sleep well, and be in prime condition for their sale in the late summer, during the Fifth Passage Hand, on the Love Feast.
On the first day of the Waiting Hand, the last five days of the old year, the portals of Ar, including even that of the House of Cernus, had been painted white, and in many of the low-caste homes had been sealed with pitch, not to be opened until the first day of En'Kara.
Almost all doors, including that of the House of Cernus, had nailed to them some branches of the Brak Bush, the leaves of which, when chewed, have a purgative effect.
It is thought that the pitch and the branches of the Brak Bush discourage the entry of bad luck into the houses of the citizens.
During the days of the Waiting Hand the streets are almost deserted, and in the Houses there is much fasting, and little conversation, and no song.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter )