Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
15
971
"Do you see how it is, that men can love it?" I asked.
"Do you see how it is, that men can love it?" I asked.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 15, Sentence #971)
Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
15
968
Both were covered with dust.
15
969
I scrambled up an embankment of debris to the great opening in the wall.
15
970
There, spread before me, in the bright morning sun, under the clear blue sky, bright with glittering spear blades and shields, with nodding plumes, with the standards of companies and regiments, dotted with engines, here and there a tharlarion stalking about, tarnsmen in the sky, in serried ranks, some stretching back to buildings still standing, even crowding streets in the distance, most on an artificial plain extending for three hundred yards about, created from the flattened ruins of burned, razed buildings, the debris sunk in cellars, and basements, and leveled, or hauled away, was the marshaled might of Cos in the north! I motioned eagerly for Lady Claudia to climb the rubble, that we two, together, might stand in that opening and regard the grandeur of war.
15
971
"Do you see how it is, that men can love it?" I asked.
15
972
"It frightens me!" she gasped.
15
973
"Look at them," I said, "the soldiers, their glory, their strength!" "It terrifies me!" she wept, the wind moving the veil against her lips.
15
974
"How splendid it is!" I cried.
Both were covered with dust.
I scrambled up an embankment of debris to the great opening in the wall.
There, spread before me, in the bright morning sun, under the clear blue sky, bright with glittering spear blades and shields, with nodding plumes, with the standards of companies and regiments, dotted with engines, here and there a tharlarion stalking about, tarnsmen in the sky, in serried ranks, some stretching back to buildings still standing, even crowding streets in the distance, most on an artificial plain extending for three hundred yards about, created from the flattened ruins of burned, razed buildings, the debris sunk in cellars, and basements, and leveled, or hauled away, was the marshaled might of Cos in the north! I motioned eagerly for Lady Claudia to climb the rubble, that we two, together, might stand in that opening and regard the grandeur of war.
"Do you see how it is, that men can love it?" I asked.
"It frightens me!" she gasped.
"Look at them," I said, "the soldiers, their glory, their strength!" "It terrifies me!" she wept, the wind moving the veil against her lips.
"How splendid it is!" I cried.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 15)