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"insects " "beetle "

Book 3. (7 results) Priest-Kings of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
23 25 Though I had hated Vika of Treve I would not have wanted this fate to be hers, nor could I believe that any man, even those whom she had injured, could have wished it to be so.
23 26 As I looked upon her now I felt strangely sad, and there was nothing left in my bosom of the bitterness with which I had earlier regarded her.
23 27 I saw her now as only a girl, surely too innocent for this, who had met the Golden beetle and had in consequence died one of the most horrible of deaths.
23 28 She was of the human kind and whatever might have been her faults, she could not have deserved this grotesque, macabre fate, the jaws and cavern of the Golden beetle.
23 29 And looking upon her I now realized too that somehow, not fully understanding, I had cared for her.
23 30 "I am sorry," I said, "I am sorry, Vika of Treve".
23 31 Strangely there did not seem to be severe wounds on her body.
Though I had hated Vika of Treve I would not have wanted this fate to be hers, nor could I believe that any man, even those whom she had injured, could have wished it to be so. As I looked upon her now I felt strangely sad, and there was nothing left in my bosom of the bitterness with which I had earlier regarded her. I saw her now as only a girl, surely too innocent for this, who had met the Golden beetle and had in consequence died one of the most horrible of deaths. She was of the human kind and whatever might have been her faults, she could not have deserved this grotesque, macabre fate, the jaws and cavern of the Golden beetle. And looking upon her I now realized too that somehow, not fully understanding, I had cared for her. "I am sorry," I said, "I am sorry, Vika of Treve". Strangely there did not seem to be severe wounds on her body. - (Priest-Kings of Gor, Chapter )