• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"games "

Book 25. (1 results) Magicians of Gor (Individual Quote)

I suspected that he was at worst a dupe, a trusting man, perhaps even one of considerable talent, who had found himself, through no real fault of his own, a pawn in games of state, games in which there seemed to be no rules other than survival and victory. - (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #100)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 100 I suspected that he was at worst a dupe, a trusting man, perhaps even one of considerable talent, who had found himself, through no real fault of his own, a pawn in games of state, games in which there seemed to be no rules other than survival and victory.

Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 97 To be sure, he might have been of that party, and might have been, in the developments within that party, outmaneuvered, to find himself suddenly cast in the role of a scapegoat, something to be thrown to the crowd, to satisfy it and protect others.
6 98 On the other hand, from what I knew of Gnieus Lelius, whom I had met, I guessed he was an honest man.
6 99 Indeed, in another time and place, it was my speculation that he might have served as an efficient, beloved administrator.
6 100 I suspected that he was at worst a dupe, a trusting man, perhaps even one of considerable talent, who had found himself, through no real fault of his own, a pawn in games of state, games in which there seemed to be no rules other than survival and victory.
6 101 "Read further," demanded a man.
6 102 "That is the message," said the fellow who had been reading it.
6 103 "There is no more".
To be sure, he might have been of that party, and might have been, in the developments within that party, outmaneuvered, to find himself suddenly cast in the role of a scapegoat, something to be thrown to the crowd, to satisfy it and protect others. On the other hand, from what I knew of Gnieus Lelius, whom I had met, I guessed he was an honest man. Indeed, in another time and place, it was my speculation that he might have served as an efficient, beloved administrator. I suspected that he was at worst a dupe, a trusting man, perhaps even one of considerable talent, who had found himself, through no real fault of his own, a pawn in games of state, games in which there seemed to be no rules other than survival and victory. "Read further," demanded a man. "That is the message," said the fellow who had been reading it. "There is no more". - (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 6)