Book 12. (1 results) Beasts of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
320
The world's end was said to lie beyond Cos and Tyros, at the end of thassa, at the world's edge.
The world's end was said to lie beyond Cos and Tyros, at the end of Thassa, at the world's edge.
- (Beasts of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #320)
Book 12. (7 results) Beasts of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
317
"Here is an explicit message".
2
318
"It seems so," I said.
2
319
We did not know where lay the world's end, but we knew where it must be sought.
2
320
The world's end was said to lie beyond Cos and Tyros, at the end of thassa, at the world's edge.
2
321
No man had sailed to the world's end and returned.
2
322
It was not known what had occurred there.
2
323
Some said that thassa was endless, and there was no world's end, only the green waters extending forever, gleaming, beckoning the mariner and hero onward, onward until men, one by one, had perished and the lonely ships, their steering oars lashed in place, pursued the voyage in silence, until the timbers rotted and one day, perhaps centuries later, the brave wood, warm in the sun, sank beneath the sea.
"Here is an explicit message".
"It seems so," I said.
We did not know where lay the world's end, but we knew where it must be sought.
The world's end was said to lie beyond Cos and Tyros, at the end of thassa, at the world's edge.
No man had sailed to the world's end and returned.
It was not known what had occurred there.
Some said that thassa was endless, and there was no world's end, only the green waters extending forever, gleaming, beckoning the mariner and hero onward, onward until men, one by one, had perished and the lonely ships, their steering oars lashed in place, pursued the voyage in silence, until the timbers rotted and one day, perhaps centuries later, the brave wood, warm in the sun, sank beneath the sea.
- (Beasts of Gor, Chapter 2)