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Book 1. (7 results) Tarnsman of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
5 6 It was Sana, the Tower Slave whom I had seen on my first day in Gor.
5 7 I waved a farewell to the Older Tarl and to my father, drew back on the one-strap, and was off, leaving the tower and their tiny figures behind me.
5 8 I leveled the tarn and drew on the six-strap, setting my course for Ar.
5 9 As I passed the cylinder in which Torm kept his scrolls, I was happy to catch a glimpse of the little scribe standing at his rough-hewn window.
5 10 I now realize he might have been waiting there for hours.
5 11 He lifted his blue-clad arm in a gesture of farewell—rather sadly, I thought.
5 12 I waved back at him and then turned my eyes away from Ko-ro-ba and toward the hills beyond.
It was Sana, the Tower Slave whom I had seen on my first day in Gor. I waved a farewell to the Older Tarl and to my father, drew back on the one-strap, and was off, leaving the tower and their tiny figures behind me. I leveled the tarn and drew on the six-strap, setting my course for Ar. As I passed the cylinder in which Torm kept his scrolls, I was happy to catch a glimpse of the little scribe standing at his rough-hewn window. I now realize he might have been waiting there for hours. He lifted his blue-clad arm in a gesture of farewell—rather sadly, I thought. I waved back at him and then turned my eyes away from Ko-ro-ba and toward the hills beyond. - (Tarnsman of Gor, Chapter )