Book 31. (1 results) Conspirators of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
33
97
I had feared only that he might be torn between the clear demands of honor and his troubling, profound solicitude for a single human female, the naive, unrealistic, ambitious, frivolous, charming Lady Bina.
I had feared only that he might be torn between the clear demands of honor and his troubling, profound solicitude for a single human female, the naive, unrealistic, ambitious, frivolous, charming Lady Bina.
- (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 33, Sentence #97)
Book 31. (7 results) Conspirators of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
33
94
It was thought that Grendel, who stood high on one of these steel worlds, and was a hero of a recent revolution, might further this project.
33
95
Doing so, of course, would be to repudiate the ends and principles for which he had earlier fought, and to ally himself with the very forces which had sought to destroy him and his party.
33
96
The Grendel I had thought I had known, of matchless courage, integrity, and honor, would rather have perished uncomplainingly beneath the knives and irons of his enemies.
33
97
I had feared only that he might be torn between the clear demands of honor and his troubling, profound solicitude for a single human female, the naive, unrealistic, ambitious, frivolous, charming Lady Bina.
33
98
This solicitude was hard to understand, as he was a mere beast, and she was clearly human.
33
99
If he had been human, or fully human, which he was not, the dilemma might, at least in principle, have been comprehensible.
33
100
As it was, it made no sense.
It was thought that Grendel, who stood high on one of these steel worlds, and was a hero of a recent revolution, might further this project.
Doing so, of course, would be to repudiate the ends and principles for which he had earlier fought, and to ally himself with the very forces which had sought to destroy him and his party.
The Grendel I had thought I had known, of matchless courage, integrity, and honor, would rather have perished uncomplainingly beneath the knives and irons of his enemies.
I had feared only that he might be torn between the clear demands of honor and his troubling, profound solicitude for a single human female, the naive, unrealistic, ambitious, frivolous, charming Lady Bina.
This solicitude was hard to understand, as he was a mere beast, and she was clearly human.
If he had been human, or fully human, which he was not, the dilemma might, at least in principle, have been comprehensible.
As it was, it made no sense.
- (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 33)