• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"discipline "

Book 13. (1 results) Explorers of Gor (Individual Quote)

The ship must be neat but livable; there must be order but not rigidity; the ship must be one on which men are comfortable but it must also be one on which, because of its arrangements and discipline, the efficient performance of duty is encouraged. - (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #203)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 203 The ship must be neat but livable; there must be order but not rigidity; the ship must be one on which men are comfortable but it must also be one on which, because of its arrangements and discipline, the efficient performance of duty is encouraged.

Book 13. (7 results) Explorers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 200 The golden metal rings, too, had been repainted.
6 201 The Palms of Schendi would enter Schendi, her home port, in style.
6 202 At sea, of course, a sensible compromise must be struck between a ship which is constantly ready, so to speak, for inspection, and one which is loose.
6 203 The ship must be neat but livable; there must be order but not rigidity; the ship must be one on which men are comfortable but it must also be one on which, because of its arrangements and discipline, the efficient performance of duty is encouraged.
6 204 Ulafi, it seemed to me, struck this sort of balance well with his men and ship.
6 205 I thought him a good captain, somewhat begrudgingly because he was of the merchants.
6 206 It was hard to fault him.
The golden metal rings, too, had been repainted. The Palms of Schendi would enter Schendi, her home port, in style. At sea, of course, a sensible compromise must be struck between a ship which is constantly ready, so to speak, for inspection, and one which is loose. The ship must be neat but livable; there must be order but not rigidity; the ship must be one on which men are comfortable but it must also be one on which, because of its arrangements and discipline, the efficient performance of duty is encouraged. Ulafi, it seemed to me, struck this sort of balance well with his men and ship. I thought him a good captain, somewhat begrudgingly because he was of the merchants. It was hard to fault him. - (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 6)