Book 5. (1 results) Assassin of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
331
It is said that men once having seen thassa are never willing to leave it again, that those who have left the sea are never again truly happy.
It is said that men once having seen Thassa are never willing to leave it again, that those who have left the sea are never again truly happy.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 17, Sentence #331)
Book 5. (7 results) Assassin of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
328
In the pit of sand one of the guards, utterly drunk, was performing a ship dance, the movement of his legs marvelously suggesting the pitch and roll of a deck, his hands moving as though climbing rope, then hauling rope, then splicing and knotting it.
17
329
I knew he had been of Port Kar.
17
330
He was a cutthroat but there were drunken tears in his eyes as he hopped about, pantomiming the work of one of the swift galleys.
17
331
It is said that men once having seen thassa are never willing to leave it again, that those who have left the sea are never again truly happy.
17
332
A moment later another guard leaped into the pit of sand and, to the amusement of the girls, began a dance of larl hunters, joined by two or three others, in a file, dancing the stalking of the beast, the confrontation, the kill.
17
333
The man who had been dancing the ship dance had now left the pit of sand and, over against one wall, in the shadows of the torchlight, largely unnoted, danced alone, danced for himself the memories of gleaming thassa and the swift black ships, the Tarns of the Sea, as the galleys of Port Kar are known.
17
334
"Serve me wine," Ho-Sorl ordered Phyllis Robertson, though she was far across the room, and there were several girls nearer.
In the pit of sand one of the guards, utterly drunk, was performing a ship dance, the movement of his legs marvelously suggesting the pitch and roll of a deck, his hands moving as though climbing rope, then hauling rope, then splicing and knotting it.
I knew he had been of Port Kar.
He was a cutthroat but there were drunken tears in his eyes as he hopped about, pantomiming the work of one of the swift galleys.
It is said that men once having seen thassa are never willing to leave it again, that those who have left the sea are never again truly happy.
A moment later another guard leaped into the pit of sand and, to the amusement of the girls, began a dance of larl hunters, joined by two or three others, in a file, dancing the stalking of the beast, the confrontation, the kill.
The man who had been dancing the ship dance had now left the pit of sand and, over against one wall, in the shadows of the torchlight, largely unnoted, danced alone, danced for himself the memories of gleaming thassa and the swift black ships, the Tarns of the Sea, as the galleys of Port Kar are known.
"Serve me wine," Ho-Sorl ordered Phyllis Robertson, though she was far across the room, and there were several girls nearer.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 17)