Book 10. (7 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
192
It produces disorientation, a sense of dependence on the captor.
14
193
In the case of the march to Klima, of course, the hood serves to conceal the route from the prisoners of the chain.
14
194
Thus, even if they thought they might live for a time in the desert, in trying to flee, they would have little idea of even the direction to take in their flight.
14
195
The chance of their finding their way back to the kasbah of the salt Ubar, and thence, say, to Red Rock, would be small, even if they were not hooded; hooded, on the Klima march, of course, the chance, unhooded, of finding their way back at a later time would be negligible.
14
196
This disorientation tends to keep men at Klima; fewer of them, thus, die in the desert.
14
197
The second two functions of the slave hood, relative to the march to Klima, were specific to the march.
14
198
Mercifully, the hood tended to protect the head from the sun; one does not go bareheaded in the desert; secondly, the darkness of the hood, when the salt crusts were reached, prevented blindness, from the reflection of the Tahari sun off the layered, bleak, white surfaces.
It produces disorientation, a sense of dependence on the captor.
In the case of the march to Klima, of course, the hood serves to conceal the route from the prisoners of the chain.
Thus, even if they thought they might live for a time in the desert, in trying to flee, they would have little idea of even the direction to take in their flight.
The chance of their finding their way back to the kasbah of the salt Ubar, and thence, say, to Red Rock, would be small, even if they were not hooded; hooded, on the Klima march, of course, the chance, unhooded, of finding their way back at a later time would be negligible.
This disorientation tends to keep men at Klima; fewer of them, thus, die in the desert.
The second two functions of the slave hood, relative to the march to Klima, were specific to the march.
Mercifully, the hood tended to protect the head from the sun; one does not go bareheaded in the desert; secondly, the darkness of the hood, when the salt crusts were reached, prevented blindness, from the reflection of the Tahari sun off the layered, bleak, white surfaces.
- (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter )