Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
325
We were hundreds of pasangs from land, and who knew how far the ice might last, but, it seemed, even so woeful and improbable a scheme might have some appeal to forlorn, desperate minds, minds half crazed by the imprisonment of the ship, the silence, the darkness, the cold, the endless labor at the ice, the growing shortage of rations.
We were hundreds of pasangs from land, and who knew how far the ice might last, but, it seemed, even so woeful and improbable a scheme might have some appeal to forlorn, desperate minds, minds half crazed by the imprisonment of the ship, the silence, the darkness, the cold, the endless labor at the ice, the growing shortage of rations.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 8, Sentence #325)
Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
322
It was feared that some men might leave the ship, to try to cross the ice east, in the half darkness, perhaps to Torvaldsland.
8
323
Pani had been set about, to guard the bulwarks, and, on the ice, to supervise the work about the ship.
8
324
This venture, whispered about, to leave the ship, seemed to me madness.
8
325
We were hundreds of pasangs from land, and who knew how far the ice might last, but, it seemed, even so woeful and improbable a scheme might have some appeal to forlorn, desperate minds, minds half crazed by the imprisonment of the ship, the silence, the darkness, the cold, the endless labor at the ice, the growing shortage of rations.
8
326
"I wonder where Seremides saw me," she said.
8
327
"It could have been anywhere," I said, "perhaps when you were unhooded, after boarding, perhaps while you were awaiting a chain assignment, in a companionway, in a corridor, on one deck or another, perhaps when you slept, in the Kasra holding area, to which he, as a high officer, might have had access".
8
328
"Few, if any, men are allowed there," she said.
It was feared that some men might leave the ship, to try to cross the ice east, in the half darkness, perhaps to Torvaldsland.
Pani had been set about, to guard the bulwarks, and, on the ice, to supervise the work about the ship.
This venture, whispered about, to leave the ship, seemed to me madness.
We were hundreds of pasangs from land, and who knew how far the ice might last, but, it seemed, even so woeful and improbable a scheme might have some appeal to forlorn, desperate minds, minds half crazed by the imprisonment of the ship, the silence, the darkness, the cold, the endless labor at the ice, the growing shortage of rations.
"I wonder where Seremides saw me," she said.
"It could have been anywhere," I said, "perhaps when you were unhooded, after boarding, perhaps while you were awaiting a chain assignment, in a companionway, in a corridor, on one deck or another, perhaps when you slept, in the Kasra holding area, to which he, as a high officer, might have had access".
"Few, if any, men are allowed there," she said.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 8)