Book 32. (1 results) Smugglers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
21
Our tools were the sword and spear, not the ax, the adz, the plane, the saw.
Our tools were the sword and spear, not the ax, the adz, the plane, the saw.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 16, Sentence #21)
Book 32. (7 results) Smugglers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
18
Few of us were woodsmen.
16
19
Most of us were mercenaries, some mariners, many ne'er-do-wells, some landless men, and some fugitives.
16
20
Most, I supposed, were veterans of the forces which had garrisoned Ar.
16
21
Our tools were the sword and spear, not the ax, the adz, the plane, the saw.
16
22
An end had apparently come to the seemingly endless round of cutting and hauling, lopping, the rough shaping, and rude trimming, to the backbreaking labor in the forest, the purpose of which was never explained to us.
16
23
On the morning of the fourth day, we came to a rise from which we could see the Alexandra, like a ribbon below us, and, ahead, men cried out in wonder.
16
24
I hurried forward, with hundreds, thinking to see, for the first time, a great trade fort which might control the trade of the Alexandra, but I stopped, stunned, as others, at the forest's edge, for below, seemingly small in the distance, was what I knew must, from the distance, be the remains of an enormous framework, now empty, a long, wide dock, and, moored at the dock, what seemed a ship, a great ship, a ship like no other, less a ship than an island of wood, a floating city, carved in a ship's likeness.
Few of us were woodsmen.
Most of us were mercenaries, some mariners, many ne'er-do-wells, some landless men, and some fugitives.
Most, I supposed, were veterans of the forces which had garrisoned Ar.
Our tools were the sword and spear, not the ax, the adz, the plane, the saw.
An end had apparently come to the seemingly endless round of cutting and hauling, lopping, the rough shaping, and rude trimming, to the backbreaking labor in the forest, the purpose of which was never explained to us.
On the morning of the fourth day, we came to a rise from which we could see the Alexandra, like a ribbon below us, and, ahead, men cried out in wonder.
I hurried forward, with hundreds, thinking to see, for the first time, a great trade fort which might control the trade of the Alexandra, but I stopped, stunned, as others, at the forest's edge, for below, seemingly small in the distance, was what I knew must, from the distance, be the remains of an enormous framework, now empty, a long, wide dock, and, moored at the dock, what seemed a ship, a great ship, a ship like no other, less a ship than an island of wood, a floating city, carved in a ship's likeness.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 16)