Book 9. (1 results) Marauders of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
146
I could not recover my honor, but I could, and did upon one occasion, recollect it, in a stockade at the shore of thassa, at the edge of the northern forests.
I could not recover my honor, but I could, and did upon one occasion, recollect it, in a stockade at the shore of Thassa, at the edge of the northern forests.
- (Marauders of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #146)
Book 9. (7 results) Marauders of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
143
How else could we tell ourselves from urts and sleen? What distinguishes us from such beasts? The ability to multiply and subtract, to tell lies, to make knives? No, I think particularly it is the sense of honor, and the will to hold one's ground.
1
144
But I had no right to such thoughts, for I had surrendered my honor, my courage, in the delta of the Vosk.
1
145
I had behaved as might have any animal, not a man.
1
146
I could not recover my honor, but I could, and did upon one occasion, recollect it, in a stockade at the shore of thassa, at the edge of the northern forests.
1
147
I grew cold in the blankets.
1
148
I had become petulant, bitter, petty, as an invalid, frustrated and furious at his own weakness, does.
1
149
But when I, half paralyzed and crippled, had left the shore of thassa I had left behind me a beacon, a mighty beacon formed from the logs of the stockade of Sarus, and it had blazed behind me, visible for more than fifty pasangs at sea.
How else could we tell ourselves from urts and sleen? What distinguishes us from such beasts? The ability to multiply and subtract, to tell lies, to make knives? No, I think particularly it is the sense of honor, and the will to hold one's ground.
But I had no right to such thoughts, for I had surrendered my honor, my courage, in the delta of the Vosk.
I had behaved as might have any animal, not a man.
I could not recover my honor, but I could, and did upon one occasion, recollect it, in a stockade at the shore of thassa, at the edge of the northern forests.
I grew cold in the blankets.
I had become petulant, bitter, petty, as an invalid, frustrated and furious at his own weakness, does.
But when I, half paralyzed and crippled, had left the shore of thassa I had left behind me a beacon, a mighty beacon formed from the logs of the stockade of Sarus, and it had blazed behind me, visible for more than fifty pasangs at sea.
- (Marauders of Gor, Chapter 1)