Book 13. (7 results) Explorers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
6
182
She, kneeling, complied.
6
183
"Yes, Master," she said.
6
184
The line which Shoka now tied around her crossed wrists was already strung through a large, metal, gold-painted ring, one of two, which were mounted in the huge wooden ears of the kailiauk head which, high above the water, surmounted the prow.
6
185
We had lain to after more closely approaching the port of Schendi in the evening of the preceding day, the day in which we had seen the fleet of the black slavers of Schendi.
6
186
We could see the shore now, with its sands and, behind the sand, the dense, green vegetation, junglelike, broken by occasional clearings for fields and villages.
6
187
Schendi itself lay farther to the south, about the outjutting of a small peninsula, Point Schendi.
6
188
The waters here were richly brown, primarily from the outflowing of the Nyoka, emptying from Lake Ushindi, some two hundred pasangs upriver.
She, kneeling, complied.
"Yes, Master," she said.
The line which Shoka now tied around her crossed wrists was already strung through a large, metal, gold-painted ring, one of two, which were mounted in the huge wooden ears of the kailiauk head which, high above the water, surmounted the prow.
We had lain to after more closely approaching the port of Schendi in the evening of the preceding day, the day in which we had seen the fleet of the black slavers of Schendi.
We could see the shore now, with its sands and, behind the sand, the dense, green vegetation, junglelike, broken by occasional clearings for fields and villages.
Schendi itself lay farther to the south, about the outjutting of a small peninsula, Point Schendi.
The waters here were richly brown, primarily from the outflowing of the Nyoka, emptying from Lake Ushindi, some two hundred pasangs upriver.
- (Explorers of Gor, Chapter )