Book 9. (1 results) Marauders of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
112
He stood high in the council of Captains.
He stood high in the Council of Captains.
- (Marauders of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #112)
Book 9. (7 results) Marauders of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
109
For such an act there was no atonement, even to the throwing of one's body upon one's own sword.
1
110
It was in that moment of his surrender to his cowardice that Tarl Cabot had gone, and, in his place, knelt a slave contemptuously named Bosk, for a great, shambling oxlike creature of the plains of Gor.
1
111
But this Bosk, forcing his mistress, the beautiful Telima, to grant him his freedom, had come to Port Kar, bringing her with him as his slave, and had there, after many adventures, earned riches and fame, and the title even of Admiral of Port Kar.
1
112
He stood high in the council of Captains.
1
113
And was it not he who had been victor on the 25th of Se'Kara, in the great engagement of the fleets of Port Kar and Cos and Tyros? He had come to love Telima, and had freed her, but she, when he had learned the location of his former Free Companion, Talena, once daughter of Marlenus of Ar, and resolved to free her from slavery, had left him, in the fury of a Gorean female, and had returned to the rence marshes, her home in the Vosk's vast delta.
1
114
A true Gorean, he knew, would have gone after her, and brought her back in slave bracelets and a collar.
1
115
But he, in his weakness, had wept, and let her go.
For such an act there was no atonement, even to the throwing of one's body upon one's own sword.
It was in that moment of his surrender to his cowardice that Tarl Cabot had gone, and, in his place, knelt a slave contemptuously named Bosk, for a great, shambling oxlike creature of the plains of Gor.
But this Bosk, forcing his mistress, the beautiful Telima, to grant him his freedom, had come to Port Kar, bringing her with him as his slave, and had there, after many adventures, earned riches and fame, and the title even of Admiral of Port Kar.
He stood high in the council of Captains.
And was it not he who had been victor on the 25th of Se'Kara, in the great engagement of the fleets of Port Kar and Cos and Tyros? He had come to love Telima, and had freed her, but she, when he had learned the location of his former Free Companion, Talena, once daughter of Marlenus of Ar, and resolved to free her from slavery, had left him, in the fury of a Gorean female, and had returned to the rence marshes, her home in the Vosk's vast delta.
A true Gorean, he knew, would have gone after her, and brought her back in slave bracelets and a collar.
But he, in his weakness, had wept, and let her go.
- (Marauders of Gor, Chapter 1)