Book 33. (1 results) Rebels of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
54
290
Following this, I had turned the dragon east, and, over thassa, set a course as directly as I could for the Sardar Mountains, the supposed domicile of the gods of Gor, the Priest-Kings.
Following this, I had turned the dragon east, and, over Thassa, set a course as directly as I could for the Sardar Mountains, the supposed domicile of the gods of Gor, the Priest-Kings.
- (Rebels of Gor, Chapter 54, Sentence #290)
Book 33. (7 results) Rebels of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
54
287
"Would Lord Yamada know?" asked Pertinax.
54
288
"What he knows," I said, "is likely to be little different from what is known by thousands of others, namely, that the iron dragon favored the house of Temmu, and then disappeared, perhaps to return to its mysterious realm of origin".
54
289
After the attack on the south camp and the siege works associated with it, I had circled about the mountain of the holding, burning hundreds of tents, blasting earthen ramparts, and pouring fire into better than a hundred trenches.
54
290
Following this, I had turned the dragon east, and, over thassa, set a course as directly as I could for the Sardar Mountains, the supposed domicile of the gods of Gor, the Priest-Kings.
54
291
It had been my supposition, first, that the path of the dragon would be monitored by whatever group was responsible for its existence, and, second, that there would be a provision implicit in the thing itself for its destruction.
54
292
As I had indicated earlier, no one would be likely to put a lethal weapon into the hands of a blood enemy, for it might be turned on one.
54
293
Presumably then a provision would be in place to protect the donor or supplier against this most unpleasant possibility.
"Would Lord Yamada know?" asked Pertinax.
"What he knows," I said, "is likely to be little different from what is known by thousands of others, namely, that the iron dragon favored the house of Temmu, and then disappeared, perhaps to return to its mysterious realm of origin".
After the attack on the south camp and the siege works associated with it, I had circled about the mountain of the holding, burning hundreds of tents, blasting earthen ramparts, and pouring fire into better than a hundred trenches.
Following this, I had turned the dragon east, and, over thassa, set a course as directly as I could for the Sardar Mountains, the supposed domicile of the gods of Gor, the Priest-Kings.
It had been my supposition, first, that the path of the dragon would be monitored by whatever group was responsible for its existence, and, second, that there would be a provision implicit in the thing itself for its destruction.
As I had indicated earlier, no one would be likely to put a lethal weapon into the hands of a blood enemy, for it might be turned on one.
Presumably then a provision would be in place to protect the donor or supplier against this most unpleasant possibility.
- (Rebels of Gor, Chapter 54)