Book 6. (1 results) Raiders of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
359
I saw tarns leaping to the decks of the round ships, and I saw the knotted ropes being attached to the saddles, and picked seamen, experts with the sword, five to a rope, taking their positions.
I saw tarns leaping to the decks of the round ships, and I saw the knotted ropes being attached to the saddles, and picked seamen, experts with the sword, five to a rope, taking their positions.
- (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 17, Sentence #359)
Book 6. (7 results) Raiders of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
356
And suddenly I realized that the bird was trembling with excitement and pleasure, finding itself swift and alive and strong in a new world to his senses.
17
357
Already, below me, I saw tarns being unhooded, and the straps that bound their beaks being unbuckled, and cast aside.
17
358
Riders were climbing into the saddles.
17
359
I saw tarns leaping to the decks of the round ships, and I saw the knotted ropes being attached to the saddles, and picked seamen, experts with the sword, five to a rope, taking their positions.
17
360
And besides these seamen, each tarnsman, tied to his saddle, carried a shielded, protected ship's lantern, lighted, and, in the pockets of leather aprons, tied together and thrown across the saddles, numerous clay flasks, corked with rags.
17
361
These flasks, I knew, were filled with tharlarion oil, and the rags that corked them had been soaked in the same substance.
17
362
Soon, behind me, there were some hundred tarnsmen, and below each, dangling, hanging to the knotted ropes, were five picked men.
And suddenly I realized that the bird was trembling with excitement and pleasure, finding itself swift and alive and strong in a new world to his senses.
Already, below me, I saw tarns being unhooded, and the straps that bound their beaks being unbuckled, and cast aside.
Riders were climbing into the saddles.
I saw tarns leaping to the decks of the round ships, and I saw the knotted ropes being attached to the saddles, and picked seamen, experts with the sword, five to a rope, taking their positions.
And besides these seamen, each tarnsman, tied to his saddle, carried a shielded, protected ship's lantern, lighted, and, in the pockets of leather aprons, tied together and thrown across the saddles, numerous clay flasks, corked with rags.
These flasks, I knew, were filled with tharlarion oil, and the rags that corked them had been soaked in the same substance.
Soon, behind me, there were some hundred tarnsmen, and below each, dangling, hanging to the knotted ropes, were five picked men.
- (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 17)