Book 1. (1 results) Tarnsman of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
5
147
The night before, I had ridden over fields of grain, silvery yellow beneath me in the light of the three moons.
The night before, I had ridden over fields of grain, silvery yellow beneath me in the light of the three moons.
- (Tarnsman of Gor, Chapter 5, Sentence #147)
Book 1. (7 results) Tarnsman of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
5
144
At first even the countryside was depressing, for the men of Ar, as a military policy, had devastated an area of some two or three hundred pasangs on their borders, cutting down fruit trees, filling wells, and salting the fertile areas.
5
145
Ar had, for most practical purposes, surrounded itself with an invisible wall, a bleached region, forbidding and almost impassable to those on foot.
5
146
I was more pleased on the second day and made camp in a grassy veldt, dotted with the Ka-la-na trees.
5
147
The night before, I had ridden over fields of grain, silvery yellow beneath me in the light of the three moons.
5
148
I kept my course by the luminescent dial of my Gor compass, the needle of which pointed always to the Sardar Mountain Range, home of the Priest-Kings.
5
149
Sometimes I guided my tarn by the stars, the same fixed stars I had seen from another angle above my head in the mountains of New Hampshire.
5
150
The third day's camp was made in the swamp forest that borders the city of Ar on the north.
At first even the countryside was depressing, for the men of Ar, as a military policy, had devastated an area of some two or three hundred pasangs on their borders, cutting down fruit trees, filling wells, and salting the fertile areas.
Ar had, for most practical purposes, surrounded itself with an invisible wall, a bleached region, forbidding and almost impassable to those on foot.
I was more pleased on the second day and made camp in a grassy veldt, dotted with the Ka-la-na trees.
The night before, I had ridden over fields of grain, silvery yellow beneath me in the light of the three moons.
I kept my course by the luminescent dial of my Gor compass, the needle of which pointed always to the Sardar Mountain Range, home of the Priest-Kings.
Sometimes I guided my tarn by the stars, the same fixed stars I had seen from another angle above my head in the mountains of New Hampshire.
The third day's camp was made in the swamp forest that borders the city of Ar on the north.
- (Tarnsman of Gor, Chapter 5)