Book 2. (1 results) Outlaw of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
4
18
Normally such plants are cleared from the sides of the roads and from inhabited areas.
Normally such plants are cleared from the sides of the roads and from inhabited areas.
- (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter 4, Sentence #18)
Book 2. (7 results) Outlaw of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
4
15
Already my blood, black in the silvery night, mixed with the juices of the plant, stained the stem even to the roots.
4
16
In a matter of perhaps two or three seconds, it had drawn perhaps a gill of liquid.
4
17
With a shudder I hurled the loathsome plant away from the road.
4
18
Normally such plants are cleared from the sides of the roads and from inhabited areas.
4
19
They are primarily dangerous to children and small animals, but a grown man who might lose his footing among them would not be likely to survive.
4
20
I prepared to set forth on my journey again, grateful that now the three moons of Gor might guide my path on this perilous road.
4
21
I asked myself, in a sane moment, if I should not seek shelter, and I knew that I should, but I could not—because questions burned within me that I could not dare to answer.
Already my blood, black in the silvery night, mixed with the juices of the plant, stained the stem even to the roots.
In a matter of perhaps two or three seconds, it had drawn perhaps a gill of liquid.
With a shudder I hurled the loathsome plant away from the road.
Normally such plants are cleared from the sides of the roads and from inhabited areas.
They are primarily dangerous to children and small animals, but a grown man who might lose his footing among them would not be likely to survive.
I prepared to set forth on my journey again, grateful that now the three moons of Gor might guide my path on this perilous road.
I asked myself, in a sane moment, if I should not seek shelter, and I knew that I should, but I could not—because questions burned within me that I could not dare to answer.
- (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter 4)