Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
219
Surely they now had less to fear from one of the greatest and most dangerous of the Kurii, Lord Agamemnon, an ambitious, skilled, determined, brilliant, gifted, implacable foe.
1
220
In any event I had not been slain, or returned to the horrors of the Prison Moon.
1
221
I now found myself again on Gor.
1
222
I had then little hope that priest-kings had finished with me, as I would have fervently desired.
1
223
Had that been so should I not have been returned, liberated and thanked, perhaps even bountifully rewarded, to my holding in Port Kar? But I was here, somehow, on this remote beach, the forest behind me.
1
224
In leaving the Steel World I had brought Ramar with me.
1
225
He deserved, I thought, the woods or forests, the plains or mountains, the openness and freedom, of Gor, not the steel platings and inserted gardens, the contrived geography, of a Steel World.
Surely they now had less to fear from one of the greatest and most dangerous of the Kurii, Lord Agamemnon, an ambitious, skilled, determined, brilliant, gifted, implacable foe.
In any event I had not been slain, or returned to the horrors of the Prison Moon.
I now found myself again on Gor.
I had then little hope that priest-kings had finished with me, as I would have fervently desired.
Had that been so should I not have been returned, liberated and thanked, perhaps even bountifully rewarded, to my holding in Port Kar? But I was here, somehow, on this remote beach, the forest behind me.
In leaving the Steel World I had brought Ramar with me.
He deserved, I thought, the woods or forests, the plains or mountains, the openness and freedom, of Gor, not the steel platings and inserted gardens, the contrived geography, of a Steel World.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter )