Book 9. (1 results) Marauders of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
86
My hair was no longer now the same.
My hair was no longer now the same.
- (Marauders of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #86)
Book 9. (7 results) Marauders of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
83
Once I had been Tarl Cabot, in the songs called Tarl of Bristol.
1
84
I recalled that I, or what had once been I, had fought at the siege of Ar.
1
85
That young man with fiery hair, laughing, innocent, seemed far from me now, this huddled mass, half paralyzed, bitter, like a maimed larl, sitting alone in a captain's chair, in a great darkened hall.
1
86
My hair was no longer now the same.
1
87
The sea, the wind and the salt, and, I suppose, the changes in my body, as I had matured, and learned with bitterness the nature of the world, and myself, and men, had changed it.
1
88
It was now, I thought, not much different from that of other men, as I had learned, too, that I was not much different, either, from others.
1
89
It had turned lighter now, and more straw colored.
Once I had been Tarl Cabot, in the songs called Tarl of Bristol.
I recalled that I, or what had once been I, had fought at the siege of Ar.
That young man with fiery hair, laughing, innocent, seemed far from me now, this huddled mass, half paralyzed, bitter, like a maimed larl, sitting alone in a captain's chair, in a great darkened hall.
My hair was no longer now the same.
The sea, the wind and the salt, and, I suppose, the changes in my body, as I had matured, and learned with bitterness the nature of the world, and myself, and men, had changed it.
It was now, I thought, not much different from that of other men, as I had learned, too, that I was not much different, either, from others.
It had turned lighter now, and more straw colored.
- (Marauders of Gor, Chapter 1)