Book 17. (1 results) Savages of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
10
I looked up at the stars, and the three moons of Gor.
I looked up at the stars, and the three moons of Gor.
- (Savages of Gor, Chapter 13, Sentence #10)
Book 17. (7 results) Savages of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
7
I then lay back on my blankets, on the grass.
13
8
I put my hands under the back of my head, on the folded saddle blanket beneath my head.
13
9
The kaiila saddle and the kaiila quirt lay to one side.
13
10
I looked up at the stars, and the three moons of Gor.
13
11
It is difficult to convey the majesty of a Gorean night in the Barrens, because of the vastness of the sky and the depth of the blackness, and the contrasting brightness of the stars.
13
12
The large extents of wilderness on the surface of Gor and the absence of large-scale artificial illuminations, of course, permit starlit nights, almost anywhere, to manifest themselves with a splendor that would be almost breath-taking to one accustomed to the drab, half-gray, polluted, semi-illuminated, dim, nocturnal atmospheres of Earth.
13
13
In the Barrens, however, and in places such as the Tahari, probably because of the relative levelness of the terrain, horizon to horizon, these effects seem even more accentuated, even more stupendous, more spectacular, more unbelievable and astounding.
I then lay back on my blankets, on the grass.
I put my hands under the back of my head, on the folded saddle blanket beneath my head.
The kaiila saddle and the kaiila quirt lay to one side.
I looked up at the stars, and the three moons of Gor.
It is difficult to convey the majesty of a Gorean night in the Barrens, because of the vastness of the sky and the depth of the blackness, and the contrasting brightness of the stars.
The large extents of wilderness on the surface of Gor and the absence of large-scale artificial illuminations, of course, permit starlit nights, almost anywhere, to manifest themselves with a splendor that would be almost breath-taking to one accustomed to the drab, half-gray, polluted, semi-illuminated, dim, nocturnal atmospheres of Earth.
In the Barrens, however, and in places such as the Tahari, probably because of the relative levelness of the terrain, horizon to horizon, these effects seem even more accentuated, even more stupendous, more spectacular, more unbelievable and astounding.
- (Savages of Gor, Chapter 13)