Book 31. (1 results) Conspirators of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
42
30
I was helplessly and futilely angry with Grendel, whose faithlessness, and treachery, cruelty, and ambition, so shocking and dismaying me, had betrayed his friends, his principles, his honor, his allies, his brethren of a far world, Grendel who had used his cleverness to win greater prospects from the conspirators, Grendel who was willing to recruit allies on a far world to provision and support a war which might reduce, if not destroy, the humans of Gor, and perhaps, later, of another world, as well.
I was helplessly and futilely angry with Grendel, whose faithlessness, and treachery, cruelty, and ambition, so shocking and dismaying me, had betrayed his friends, his principles, his honor, his allies, his brethren of a far world, Grendel who had used his cleverness to win greater prospects from the conspirators, Grendel who was willing to recruit allies on a far world to provision and support a war which might reduce, if not destroy, the humans of Gor, and perhaps, later, of another world, as well.
- (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 42, Sentence #30)
Book 31. (7 results) Conspirators of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
42
27
I did not want our eyes to meet.
42
28
Had they met I would have had to assume first obeisance position, and then hold that position until summoned, or he had passed.
42
29
I do not know if he looked upon me, or not.
42
30
I was helplessly and futilely angry with Grendel, whose faithlessness, and treachery, cruelty, and ambition, so shocking and dismaying me, had betrayed his friends, his principles, his honor, his allies, his brethren of a far world, Grendel who had used his cleverness to win greater prospects from the conspirators, Grendel who was willing to recruit allies on a far world to provision and support a war which might reduce, if not destroy, the humans of Gor, and perhaps, later, of another world, as well.
42
31
Too, his pretense of loyalty to, if not affection for, the Lady Bina had been a sham.
42
32
He cared no more for her than any other Kur, to whom humans might seem at best little more than temporarily useful vermin.
42
33
The guard waved me forward, again.
I did not want our eyes to meet.
Had they met I would have had to assume first obeisance position, and then hold that position until summoned, or he had passed.
I do not know if he looked upon me, or not.
I was helplessly and futilely angry with Grendel, whose faithlessness, and treachery, cruelty, and ambition, so shocking and dismaying me, had betrayed his friends, his principles, his honor, his allies, his brethren of a far world, Grendel who had used his cleverness to win greater prospects from the conspirators, Grendel who was willing to recruit allies on a far world to provision and support a war which might reduce, if not destroy, the humans of Gor, and perhaps, later, of another world, as well.
Too, his pretense of loyalty to, if not affection for, the Lady Bina had been a sham.
He cared no more for her than any other Kur, to whom humans might seem at best little more than temporarily useful vermin.
The guard waved me forward, again.
- (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 42)