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"thassa "

Book 29. (1 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Individual Quote)

To be sure, they often thought the lower surface of the sphere, below embedded Thassa, likely to be uninhabitable. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 25, Sentence #202)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
25 202 To be sure, they often thought the lower surface of the sphere, below embedded thassa, likely to be uninhabitable.

Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
25 199 A similar theory maintained that thassa was restricted within her bounds by a great wall of stone, constructed eons ago by Priest-Kings.
25 200 And beyond this wall, again, there was nothing.
25 201 Most mariners, however, believed that the world was spherical, surmising this from a plenitude of considerations, that one first discerns the masts of approaching ships, that Gor's shadow, round, is occasionally cast on a moon, that not all stars are visible at all latitudes, as would be the case if the world were a plane, and so on.
25 202 To be sure, they often thought the lower surface of the sphere, below embedded thassa, likely to be uninhabitable.
25 203 Would not creatures fall from the world if they ventured too far thence? Too, if they could somehow cling to the surface, and move about in such precincts, fugitives or madmen, adventurers or explorers, perhaps by means of ropes or nailed sandals, would not such a life be uncomfortable and dangerous, precariously inverted as they must be? No, such depths must be uninhabited.
25 204 On the other hand, Goreans with access to the Second Knowledge, recognized the sphericity of Gor, the viability of the antipodes, the action of gravity, and such.
25 205 A mystery did remain, of course, to the west, even for those admitted to the Second Knowledge, usually those of the higher castes.
A similar theory maintained that thassa was restricted within her bounds by a great wall of stone, constructed eons ago by Priest-Kings. And beyond this wall, again, there was nothing. Most mariners, however, believed that the world was spherical, surmising this from a plenitude of considerations, that one first discerns the masts of approaching ships, that Gor's shadow, round, is occasionally cast on a moon, that not all stars are visible at all latitudes, as would be the case if the world were a plane, and so on. To be sure, they often thought the lower surface of the sphere, below embedded thassa, likely to be uninhabitable. Would not creatures fall from the world if they ventured too far thence? Too, if they could somehow cling to the surface, and move about in such precincts, fugitives or madmen, adventurers or explorers, perhaps by means of ropes or nailed sandals, would not such a life be uncomfortable and dangerous, precariously inverted as they must be? No, such depths must be uninhabited. On the other hand, Goreans with access to the Second Knowledge, recognized the sphericity of Gor, the viability of the antipodes, the action of gravity, and such. A mystery did remain, of course, to the west, even for those admitted to the Second Knowledge, usually those of the higher castes. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 25)