Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
36
508
Indeed, some take great pleasure in reading, as others might in music, or conversation.
Indeed, some take great pleasure in reading, as others might in music, or conversation.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 36, Sentence #508)
Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
36
505
By the magic of such marks, the sorcery of small signs, we converse with those we have never met, touch dreams we could not otherwise share, at a glance rekindle flames which first burned in distant hearts.
36
506
How else might one hear the tones of distant trumpets, the tramp of vanished armies, ford rivers where now lies cracked earth, witness distant sunsets, and stand wondering on the shores of vanished seas? Pani warriors, those of the high Pani, so to speak, I learn from the stranger, are almost all literate.
36
507
It is not regarded as demeaning for them.
36
508
Indeed, some take great pleasure in reading, as others might in music, or conversation.
36
509
Indeed, it is not unusual for a Pani warrior to compose songs, and poetry.
36
510
Demetrion had spoken of Captain Nakamura's "mark," as though he might have been illiterate.
36
511
This misunderstanding was based on the fact that the Pani transcribe their Gorean in their own way, with their own characters, as do many in the Tahari region.
By the magic of such marks, the sorcery of small signs, we converse with those we have never met, touch dreams we could not otherwise share, at a glance rekindle flames which first burned in distant hearts.
How else might one hear the tones of distant trumpets, the tramp of vanished armies, ford rivers where now lies cracked earth, witness distant sunsets, and stand wondering on the shores of vanished seas? Pani warriors, those of the high Pani, so to speak, I learn from the stranger, are almost all literate.
It is not regarded as demeaning for them.
Indeed, some take great pleasure in reading, as others might in music, or conversation.
Indeed, it is not unusual for a Pani warrior to compose songs, and poetry.
Demetrion had spoken of Captain Nakamura's "mark," as though he might have been illiterate.
This misunderstanding was based on the fact that the Pani transcribe their Gorean in their own way, with their own characters, as do many in the Tahari region.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 36)