Book 36. (1 results) Avengers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
51
89
"You see, Captain," said Sakim, "so much now for Sakim the delusional, Sakim the mad, Sakim the liar, Sakim the fraud".
"You see, Captain," said Sakim, "so much now for Sakim the delusional, Sakim the mad, Sakim the liar, Sakim the fraud".
- (Avengers of Gor, Chapter 51, Sentence #89)
Book 36. (7 results) Avengers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
51
86
A moment before the eightieth Ihn, a gigantic snakelike form with a diameter of some ten feet burst some forty feet upward from the water like some living geyser, and, in the midst of screams and tumult, fell heavily, laterally, across the deck of the enemy ship, and wound itself, with incredible rapidity, coil after coil, about the ship.
51
87
After the third coil the great head of the beast caught the left side of the stem deck in its fanged jaws, and bit into it, as though to fasten itself in living prey, as though the ship might be alive, and attempt to free itself, splintering planks and railings.
51
88
We then, to our terror, watched the ship being crushed in those mighty coils, board by board, plank by plank, until the water was filled with debris and men.
51
89
"You see, Captain," said Sakim, "so much now for Sakim the delusional, Sakim the mad, Sakim the liar, Sakim the fraud".
51
90
"It is horrible," I said.
51
91
"The hith, nearly exterminated on land," said Sakim, "took to cover and plenty, to the vast world of the sea".
51
92
"It breathes air," I said.
A moment before the eightieth Ihn, a gigantic snakelike form with a diameter of some ten feet burst some forty feet upward from the water like some living geyser, and, in the midst of screams and tumult, fell heavily, laterally, across the deck of the enemy ship, and wound itself, with incredible rapidity, coil after coil, about the ship.
After the third coil the great head of the beast caught the left side of the stem deck in its fanged jaws, and bit into it, as though to fasten itself in living prey, as though the ship might be alive, and attempt to free itself, splintering planks and railings.
We then, to our terror, watched the ship being crushed in those mighty coils, board by board, plank by plank, until the water was filled with debris and men.
"You see, Captain," said Sakim, "so much now for Sakim the delusional, Sakim the mad, Sakim the liar, Sakim the fraud".
"It is horrible," I said.
"The hith, nearly exterminated on land," said Sakim, "took to cover and plenty, to the vast world of the sea".
"It breathes air," I said.
- (Avengers of Gor, Chapter 51)