Book 29. (1 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
222
"Were you there?" one seaman might ask another in the taverns of Port Kar, over kaissa or paga, the girl of his choice lying bound hand and foot by his table, waiting to be carried over his shoulder to an alcove, at his convenience, or wherever two fellows of that unusual polity might meet, perhaps even on a remote beach, by forests, and one need never ask "Where?" But he had asked, in a way, had he not, for he had specified the date.
"Were you there?" one seaman might ask another in the taverns of Port Kar, over kaissa or paga, the girl of his choice lying bound hand and foot by his table, waiting to be carried over his shoulder to an alcove, at his convenience, or wherever two fellows of that unusual polity might meet, perhaps even on a remote beach, by forests, and one need never ask "Where?" But he had asked, in a way, had he not, for he had specified the date.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #222)
Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
219
"It would seem so," I said.
2
220
Certainly a bond would forever unite those who had been at sea on the 25th of Se'Kara, who had met Tyros and Cos that day.
2
221
From that day on they would be different.
2
222
"Were you there?" one seaman might ask another in the taverns of Port Kar, over kaissa or paga, the girl of his choice lying bound hand and foot by his table, waiting to be carried over his shoulder to an alcove, at his convenience, or wherever two fellows of that unusual polity might meet, perhaps even on a remote beach, by forests, and one need never ask "Where?" But he had asked, in a way, had he not, for he had specified the date.
2
223
"Have you ever seen the Home Stone of Port Kar?" he asked.
2
224
"How is it that I, one not of Port Kar, should have seen her Home Stone?" I asked.
2
225
"Have you?" "Of course," he said.
"It would seem so," I said.
Certainly a bond would forever unite those who had been at sea on the 25th of Se'Kara, who had met Tyros and Cos that day.
From that day on they would be different.
"Were you there?" one seaman might ask another in the taverns of Port Kar, over kaissa or paga, the girl of his choice lying bound hand and foot by his table, waiting to be carried over his shoulder to an alcove, at his convenience, or wherever two fellows of that unusual polity might meet, perhaps even on a remote beach, by forests, and one need never ask "Where?" But he had asked, in a way, had he not, for he had specified the date.
"Have you ever seen the Home Stone of Port Kar?" he asked.
"How is it that I, one not of Port Kar, should have seen her Home Stone?" I asked.
"Have you?" "Of course," he said.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 2)