Book 9. (1 results) Marauders of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
29
I had won her from him by sword right.
I had won her from him by sword right.
- (Marauders of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #29)
Book 9. (7 results) Marauders of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
26
He was a pirate, and a cutthroat, but he was not unhappy in his death; he had died by the sword, which would have been his choice, and before he had died he had looked again upon gleaming Thassa; it is called the death of blood and the sea; he died not unhappy; men of Port Kar do not care to die in their beds, weak, lingering, at the mercy of tiny foes that cannot see; they live often by violence and desire that they shall similarly perish; to die by the sword is regarded as the right, and honor, of he who lives by it.
1
27
"Captain," said the woman, standing back, to one side of the chair.
1
28
After the death of Surbus, the woman had been mine.
1
29
I had won her from him by sword right.
1
30
I had, of course, as she had expected, put her in my collar, and kept her slave.
1
31
To my astonishment, however, by the laws of Port Kar, the ships, properties and chattels of Surbus, he having been vanquished in fair combat and permitted the death of blood and sea, became mine; his men stood ready to obey me; his ships became mine to command; his hall became my hall, his riches mine, his slaves mine.
1
32
It was thus that I had become a captain in Port Kar, jewel of gleaming Thassa.
He was a pirate, and a cutthroat, but he was not unhappy in his death; he had died by the sword, which would have been his choice, and before he had died he had looked again upon gleaming Thassa; it is called the death of blood and the sea; he died not unhappy; men of Port Kar do not care to die in their beds, weak, lingering, at the mercy of tiny foes that cannot see; they live often by violence and desire that they shall similarly perish; to die by the sword is regarded as the right, and honor, of he who lives by it.
"Captain," said the woman, standing back, to one side of the chair.
After the death of Surbus, the woman had been mine.
I had won her from him by sword right.
I had, of course, as she had expected, put her in my collar, and kept her slave.
To my astonishment, however, by the laws of Port Kar, the ships, properties and chattels of Surbus, he having been vanquished in fair combat and permitted the death of blood and sea, became mine; his men stood ready to obey me; his ships became mine to command; his hall became my hall, his riches mine, his slaves mine.
It was thus that I had become a captain in Port Kar, jewel of gleaming Thassa.
- (Marauders of Gor, Chapter 1)