Book 21. (7 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
38
Within the entrance to the Semnium was a marble-floored, lofty hall.
14
39
Passageways and stairways led variously from this broad vestibule.
14
40
The walls were adorned with mosaics, scenes generally of civic life, prominent among them scenes of public gatherings, conferences and processions.
14
41
One depicted the laying of the first stone in Torcadino's walls, an act which presumably would have taken place more than seven hundred years ago, when, according to the legends, the first wall, only a dozen feet high, was built to encircle and protect a great, sprawling encampment at the joining of trade routes.
14
42
Within the hall were several soldiers, and several officers, at tables, conducting various sorts of business.
14
43
To one side, permanent fixtures, immovable and sturdy, their supports fixed in the floor, were several rows of long, low, marble benches.
14
44
It was on these that clients and claimants, with their various causes, grievances, and petitions, would wait until their turn came to be called for their appointments or hearings.
Within the entrance to the Semnium was a marble-floored, lofty hall.
Passageways and stairways led variously from this broad vestibule.
The walls were adorned with mosaics, scenes generally of civic life, prominent among them scenes of public gatherings, conferences and processions.
One depicted the laying of the first stone in Torcadino's walls, an act which presumably would have taken place more than seven hundred years ago, when, according to the legends, the first wall, only a dozen feet high, was built to encircle and protect a great, sprawling encampment at the joining of trade routes.
Within the hall were several soldiers, and several officers, at tables, conducting various sorts of business.
To one side, permanent fixtures, immovable and sturdy, their supports fixed in the floor, were several rows of long, low, marble benches.
It was on these that clients and claimants, with their various causes, grievances, and petitions, would wait until their turn came to be called for their appointments or hearings.
- (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter )