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Book 2. (1 results) Outlaw of Gor (Individual Quote)

They have taken from me my father and the girl I love, and my friends, and have given me suffering and hardship, and peril, and yet I feel that in some strange way in spite of myself I have served them—that it was their will that I came to Tharna. - (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter 26, Sentence #9)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
26 9 They have taken from me my father and the girl I love, and my friends, and have given me suffering and hardship, and peril, and yet I feel that in some strange way in spite of myself I have served them—that it was their will that I came to Tharna.

Book 2. (7 results) Outlaw of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
26 6 I shall deliver this manuscript to some member of the Caste of Scribes whom I shall find at the Fair of En'Kara at the base of the Sardar.
26 7 From that point whether or not it survives will depend like so many other things in this barbaric world I have come to love—on the inscrutable will of the Priest-Kings.
26 8 They have cursed me and my city.
26 9 They have taken from me my father and the girl I love, and my friends, and have given me suffering and hardship, and peril, and yet I feel that in some strange way in spite of myself I have served them—that it was their will that I came to Tharna.
26 10 They have destroyed a city, and in a sense they have restored a city.
26 11 What manner of things they are I know not, but I am determined to learn.
26 12 Many have entered the mountains and so many must have learned the secret of the Priest-Kings, though none has returned to tell it.
I shall deliver this manuscript to some member of the Caste of Scribes whom I shall find at the Fair of En'Kara at the base of the Sardar. From that point whether or not it survives will depend like so many other things in this barbaric world I have come to love—on the inscrutable will of the Priest-Kings. They have cursed me and my city. They have taken from me my father and the girl I love, and my friends, and have given me suffering and hardship, and peril, and yet I feel that in some strange way in spite of myself I have served them—that it was their will that I came to Tharna. They have destroyed a city, and in a sense they have restored a city. What manner of things they are I know not, but I am determined to learn. Many have entered the mountains and so many must have learned the secret of the Priest-Kings, though none has returned to tell it. - (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter 26)