Book 20. (1 results) Players of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
319
Several of the other animals began to press eagerly toward the sound, some even crawling and scrambling over the backs of others.
Several of the other animals began to press eagerly toward the sound, some even crawling and scrambling over the backs of others.
- (Players of Gor, Chapter 14, Sentence #319)
Book 20. (7 results) Players of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
316
Another animal in the circle ringing Nim Nim now took up that angry, hideous, ear-splitting squeal, then another, and another.
14
317
They began to quiver uncontrollably; their eyes bulged in their sockets; their fur erected, with a crackle of static electricity; their ears laid back, flattened, against the sides of their heads.
14
318
Every animal in that vast pack was now oriented toward that location, that sound.
14
319
Several of the other animals began to press eagerly toward the sound, some even crawling and scrambling over the backs of others.
14
320
Every animal in that circle about Nim Nim had now taken up that horrifying squeal.
14
321
It, too, was now being taken up by the entire pack.
14
322
It reverberated in the area, striking against the nearby cliffs, the stones and outcroppings, rebounding, resounding, again and again in that natural bowl, torturing the ear, tearing and shocking the air, seeming as though it must affright and terrify even the clouds themselves, which seemed to flee before it, perhaps even the sky, and a world.
Another animal in the circle ringing Nim Nim now took up that angry, hideous, ear-splitting squeal, then another, and another.
They began to quiver uncontrollably; their eyes bulged in their sockets; their fur erected, with a crackle of static electricity; their ears laid back, flattened, against the sides of their heads.
Every animal in that vast pack was now oriented toward that location, that sound.
Several of the other animals began to press eagerly toward the sound, some even crawling and scrambling over the backs of others.
Every animal in that circle about Nim Nim had now taken up that horrifying squeal.
It, too, was now being taken up by the entire pack.
It reverberated in the area, striking against the nearby cliffs, the stones and outcroppings, rebounding, resounding, again and again in that natural bowl, torturing the ear, tearing and shocking the air, seeming as though it must affright and terrify even the clouds themselves, which seemed to flee before it, perhaps even the sky, and a world.
- (Players of Gor, Chapter 14)