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"priest " "kings "

Book 2. (7 results) Outlaw of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
25 158 If this miserable fate were to be hers, the imperious Dorna the Proud, stripped and sweating, her back exposed to the ox whip, would learn in harness that a peasant is a hard master.
25 159 But I put from my mind these thoughts as to what might be the fate of Dorna the Proud.
25 160 I had other things with which to occupy my mind.
25 161 Indeed, I myself had business to attend to—an account to settle—only my affairs would lead me to the Sardar Mountains, for the business to which I must attend was with the priest-kings of Gor.
26 1 A Letter from Tarl Cabot Inscribed in the City of Tharna, the Twenty-Third Day of En'Kara in the Fourth Year of the Reign of Lara, Tatrix, of Tharna, the Year 10,117 from the Founding of Ar.
26 2 Tal to the men of Earth— In these past days in Tharna I have taken the time to write this story.
26 3 Now that it is told I must begin my journey to the Sardar Mountains.
If this miserable fate were to be hers, the imperious Dorna the Proud, stripped and sweating, her back exposed to the ox whip, would learn in harness that a peasant is a hard master. But I put from my mind these thoughts as to what might be the fate of Dorna the Proud. I had other things with which to occupy my mind. Indeed, I myself had business to attend to—an account to settle—only my affairs would lead me to the Sardar Mountains, for the business to which I must attend was with the priest-kings of Gor. A Letter from Tarl Cabot Inscribed in the City of Tharna, the Twenty-Third Day of En'Kara in the Fourth Year of the Reign of Lara, Tatrix, of Tharna, the Year 10,117 from the Founding of Ar. Tal to the men of Earth— In these past days in Tharna I have taken the time to write this story. Now that it is told I must begin my journey to the Sardar Mountains. - (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter )