• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"children "

Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)

The various ships were now crowded with the men, women and children of Ar's Station. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 20, Sentence #404)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
20 404 The various ships were now crowded with the men, women and children of Ar's Station.

Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
20 401 These were ferrying passengers to the ships lying at anchor in the harbor.
20 402 Then they themselves retained their last loads of passengers and, too, drawn away from the piers, out in the harbor, rode at anchor.
20 403 Many other passengers had boarded the ships which had remained wharfed, such as the Tina and Tais.
20 404 The various ships were now crowded with the men, women and children of Ar's Station.
20 405 I doubted that any one of them now held less than a hundred passengers.
20 406 It must be remembered, too, that these were river galleys and, on the whole, smaller than the galleys of Thassa.
20 407 Too, the river galley, for those whom it might interest, is normally shorter masted than a Thassa galley, seldom has more than one mast, and seldom carries the varieties of sails, changed on the yard according to wind conditions, that are carried by a Thassa galley.
These were ferrying passengers to the ships lying at anchor in the harbor. Then they themselves retained their last loads of passengers and, too, drawn away from the piers, out in the harbor, rode at anchor. Many other passengers had boarded the ships which had remained wharfed, such as the Tina and Tais. The various ships were now crowded with the men, women and children of Ar's Station. I doubted that any one of them now held less than a hundred passengers. It must be remembered, too, that these were river galleys and, on the whole, smaller than the galleys of Thassa. Too, the river galley, for those whom it might interest, is normally shorter masted than a Thassa galley, seldom has more than one mast, and seldom carries the varieties of sails, changed on the yard according to wind conditions, that are carried by a Thassa galley. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 20)