Book 32. (7 results) Smugglers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
27
63
I continued on, and on, in the mud, stumbling in the darkness.
27
64
Surely I walked for a very long time, and then, exhausted, unable to continue, but content with my progress, I lay down to rest, I think a little before dawn, and must have slept for better than two Ahn.
27
65
It was light when I awakened, and I drank, as might have a tabuk doe, from a puddle of clear, gathered water in a hollow, in the wet grass.
27
66
Then I found a sul plant, the golden sul, and dug out the tuber, washed it clean in the water, and consumed it, I fear voraciously.
27
67
Looking about, gathering my bearings, I noted Tur-Pah clinging about nearby Tur trees.
27
68
The Tur tree is tall and hardy, and the common host to Tur-Pah, but Tur-Pah, interestingly, does not thrive on all Tur trees.
27
69
The difference apparently has to do with the grades and natures of the soil in which the tree is rooted.
I continued on, and on, in the mud, stumbling in the darkness.
Surely I walked for a very long time, and then, exhausted, unable to continue, but content with my progress, I lay down to rest, I think a little before dawn, and must have slept for better than two Ahn.
It was light when I awakened, and I drank, as might have a tabuk doe, from a puddle of clear, gathered water in a hollow, in the wet grass.
Then I found a sul plant, the golden sul, and dug out the tuber, washed it clean in the water, and consumed it, I fear voraciously.
Looking about, gathering my bearings, I noted Tur-Pah clinging about nearby Tur trees.
The Tur tree is tall and hardy, and the common host to Tur-Pah, but Tur-Pah, interestingly, does not thrive on all Tur trees.
The difference apparently has to do with the grades and natures of the soil in which the tree is rooted.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter )