Book 11. (1 results) Slave Girl of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
135
My hearing, too, seemed acute.
My hearing, too, seemed acute.
- (Slave Girl of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #135)
Book 11. (7 results) Slave Girl of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
132
How little I had known.
1
133
How foolish I had been.
1
134
It had been only less murky, less dismal, only a sign of what a world might be.
1
135
My hearing, too, seemed acute.
1
136
The wind brushed the grass, moving in it, stirring the gleaming leaves.
1
137
Colors, too, seemed richer, deeper, more vivid.
1
138
The grass was richly green, alive, vast; the sky was blue, deeply blue, far deeper than I had known a sky could be; the clouds were sharp and white, protean and billowing, transforming themselves in the pressures of their heights and the winds which sped them; they moved at different heights at different speeds; they were like great white birds, stately and majestic, turning, floating in the rivers of wind.
How little I had known.
How foolish I had been.
It had been only less murky, less dismal, only a sign of what a world might be.
My hearing, too, seemed acute.
The wind brushed the grass, moving in it, stirring the gleaming leaves.
Colors, too, seemed richer, deeper, more vivid.
The grass was richly green, alive, vast; the sky was blue, deeply blue, far deeper than I had known a sky could be; the clouds were sharp and white, protean and billowing, transforming themselves in the pressures of their heights and the winds which sped them; they moved at different heights at different speeds; they were like great white birds, stately and majestic, turning, floating in the rivers of wind.
- (Slave Girl of Gor, Chapter 1)