Book 6. (1 results) Raiders of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
80
What else might motivate an intelligent man, other perhaps than the bodies of his women, or those he would decide to make his women, which might serve him for recreation? In these days, in myself, I found little that I could respect, but I did find that I had come, in my way, to love the sea, as is not uncommon with those of Port Kar.
What else might motivate an intelligent man, other perhaps than the bodies of his women, or those he would decide to make his women, which might serve him for recreation? In these days, in myself, I found little that I could respect, but I did find that I had come, in my way, to love the sea, as is not uncommon with those of Port Kar.
- (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #80)
Book 6. (7 results) Raiders of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
77
My battles now would be my own; my risks would be undertaken only for my own gain.
10
78
For the first time in my life I was rich.
10
79
I despised, I discovered, neither power nor wealth.
10
80
What else might motivate an intelligent man, other perhaps than the bodies of his women, or those he would decide to make his women, which might serve him for recreation? In these days, in myself, I found little that I could respect, but I did find that I had come, in my way, to love the sea, as is not uncommon with those of Port Kar.
10
81
I had seen her first at dawn, from the high roof of a paga tavern, holding in my arms the body of a man dying of a wound, one which I had inflicted.
10
82
I had found her beautiful then, and I had never ceased to do so.
10
83
When Tab, young, lean, gray-eyed, who had been second to Surbus, asked me what I would have him do, I had looked upon him and said, "Teach me the Sea".
My battles now would be my own; my risks would be undertaken only for my own gain.
For the first time in my life I was rich.
I despised, I discovered, neither power nor wealth.
What else might motivate an intelligent man, other perhaps than the bodies of his women, or those he would decide to make his women, which might serve him for recreation? In these days, in myself, I found little that I could respect, but I did find that I had come, in my way, to love the sea, as is not uncommon with those of Port Kar.
I had seen her first at dawn, from the high roof of a paga tavern, holding in my arms the body of a man dying of a wound, one which I had inflicted.
I had found her beautiful then, and I had never ceased to do so.
When Tab, young, lean, gray-eyed, who had been second to Surbus, asked me what I would have him do, I had looked upon him and said, "Teach me the Sea".
- (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 10)