Book 26. (1 results) Witness of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
19
71
I had seen such flashes occasionally from the balustrade, presumably the routine signals of guards.
I had seen such flashes occasionally from the balustrade, presumably the routine signals of guards.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 19, Sentence #71)
Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
19
68
But I did not think they were so different from me, really, they, such proud things, so gorgeously bedecked, so smug under those layers of cloth.
19
69
Beneath the protective, shielding casings of those stiff brocades were there not terrains and latitudes which, shorn of their armor, would prove as vulnerable and soft as mine? I was momentarily blinded by a flash of light, the sun reflected from a huge silver plate, perhaps a yard in width, held over his head by a mounted raider.
19
70
The flash was not unlike that from mirrors used as signal devices in the mountains.
19
71
I had seen such flashes occasionally from the balustrade, presumably the routine signals of guards.
19
72
Smoke signals, too, are apparently sometimes used, but I had not seen them from the balustrade.
19
73
At night, beacon fires, which may be shielded and then unshielded, in codes, may be used.
19
74
The flash of the mirrors, the sight of the smoke signal, the glimpse of a fire, such things, it might be recollected, convey their message at the speed of light, far faster than a tarn can fly, incomparably more swift, even, than the flighted sound of a distant bar.
But I did not think they were so different from me, really, they, such proud things, so gorgeously bedecked, so smug under those layers of cloth.
Beneath the protective, shielding casings of those stiff brocades were there not terrains and latitudes which, shorn of their armor, would prove as vulnerable and soft as mine? I was momentarily blinded by a flash of light, the sun reflected from a huge silver plate, perhaps a yard in width, held over his head by a mounted raider.
The flash was not unlike that from mirrors used as signal devices in the mountains.
I had seen such flashes occasionally from the balustrade, presumably the routine signals of guards.
Smoke signals, too, are apparently sometimes used, but I had not seen them from the balustrade.
At night, beacon fires, which may be shielded and then unshielded, in codes, may be used.
The flash of the mirrors, the sight of the smoke signal, the glimpse of a fire, such things, it might be recollected, convey their message at the speed of light, far faster than a tarn can fly, incomparably more swift, even, than the flighted sound of a distant bar.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 19)