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"merchant " "law "

Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
13 124 "None is larger than a medium-class galley, and none is oared".
13 125 "True," I said.
13 126 It seemed so to me, at any rate, from what I had seen.
13 127 "And the ships are merchant ships, apparently, and, one supposes, would be crewed accordingly, with complements sufficient to the vessel, and perhaps little beyond that".
13 128 "So?" I said.
13 129 "I see no large ships here," said Cabot.
13 130 "A large ship, with many in the crew, could work the vines, even over days, or weeks, cutting a path.
"None is larger than a medium-class galley, and none is oared". "True," I said. It seemed so to me, at any rate, from what I had seen. "And the ships are merchant ships, apparently, and, one supposes, would be crewed accordingly, with complements sufficient to the vessel, and perhaps little beyond that". "So?" I said. "I see no large ships here," said Cabot. "A large ship, with many in the crew, could work the vines, even over days, or weeks, cutting a path. - (Mariners of Gor, Chapter )