Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
46
This sort of thing usually occurs when a ship is offshore, say a pasang or so, and in the vicinity of bazi or Schendi.
This sort of thing usually occurs when a ship is offshore, say a pasang or so, and in the vicinity of Bazi or Schendi.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 13, Sentence #46)
Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
43
Most of us took it as well that the mystery of the light, that which Leros had first seen, from the platform and ring, was solved.
13
44
That was seemingly solved on the second night.
13
45
What had seemed a single blaze in the darkness, far off, was now attributed to the luminescence of a gigantic swarm of lamp flies, in their hundreds of thousands, of which swarms, we later learned, here in the Vine Sea, there were several.
13
46
This sort of thing usually occurs when a ship is offshore, say a pasang or so, and in the vicinity of bazi or Schendi.
13
47
I did not know why Tarl Cabot had come to this ship, as there were others.
13
48
Why this ship and not another? I did know that he and Lord Nishida had surveyed it, from a ship's boat, this morning, as they had others, on other mornings, with the glass of the Builders.
13
49
What was special about this ship? Certainly it had already been looted, its four cabins and its many smaller holds, or compartments.
Most of us took it as well that the mystery of the light, that which Leros had first seen, from the platform and ring, was solved.
That was seemingly solved on the second night.
What had seemed a single blaze in the darkness, far off, was now attributed to the luminescence of a gigantic swarm of lamp flies, in their hundreds of thousands, of which swarms, we later learned, here in the Vine Sea, there were several.
This sort of thing usually occurs when a ship is offshore, say a pasang or so, and in the vicinity of bazi or Schendi.
I did not know why Tarl Cabot had come to this ship, as there were others.
Why this ship and not another? I did know that he and Lord Nishida had surveyed it, from a ship's boat, this morning, as they had others, on other mornings, with the glass of the Builders.
What was special about this ship? Certainly it had already been looted, its four cabins and its many smaller holds, or compartments.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 13)