Book 5. (1 results) Assassin of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
20
253
The other man who had entered with Hup was, to my astonishment, the blind Player whom I had encountered so long ago in the street outside the paga tavern near the great gate of Ar, who had beaten so brilliantly the Vintner in what had been apparently, until then, an uneven and fraudulent game, one the Player had clearly intended to deliver to his opponent, he who had, upon learning that I wore the black of the Assassins, refused, though poor, to accept the piece of gold he had so fairly and marvelously won.
The other man who had entered with Hup was, to my astonishment, the blind Player whom I had encountered so long ago in the street outside the paga tavern near the great gate of Ar, who had beaten so brilliantly the Vintner in what had been apparently, until then, an uneven and fraudulent game, one the Player had clearly intended to deliver to his opponent, he who had, upon learning that I wore the black of the Assassins, refused, though poor, to accept the piece of gold he had so fairly and marvelously won.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 20, Sentence #253)
Book 5. (7 results) Assassin of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
20
250
Hup was now backing around ogling the slave girls, and then he fell over on his back, tripped by a Warrior.
20
251
He sprang to his feet and began to leap up and down making noises like a scolding urt.
20
252
The girls laughed, and so, too, did the men.
20
253
The other man who had entered with Hup was, to my astonishment, the blind Player whom I had encountered so long ago in the street outside the paga tavern near the great gate of Ar, who had beaten so brilliantly the Vintner in what had been apparently, until then, an uneven and fraudulent game, one the Player had clearly intended to deliver to his opponent, he who had, upon learning that I wore the black of the Assassins, refused, though poor, to accept the piece of gold he had so fairly and marvelously won.
20
254
I thought it strange that that man should have been found with Hup, only a fool, Hup whose bulbous misshapen head reached scarcely to the belt of a true man, Hup of the bandy legs and swollen body, the broken, knobby hands, Hup the Fool.
20
255
I saw Sura regarding Hup with a kind of horror, looking on him with loathing.
20
256
She seemed to tremble with revulsion.
Hup was now backing around ogling the slave girls, and then he fell over on his back, tripped by a Warrior.
He sprang to his feet and began to leap up and down making noises like a scolding urt.
The girls laughed, and so, too, did the men.
The other man who had entered with Hup was, to my astonishment, the blind Player whom I had encountered so long ago in the street outside the paga tavern near the great gate of Ar, who had beaten so brilliantly the Vintner in what had been apparently, until then, an uneven and fraudulent game, one the Player had clearly intended to deliver to his opponent, he who had, upon learning that I wore the black of the Assassins, refused, though poor, to accept the piece of gold he had so fairly and marvelously won.
I thought it strange that that man should have been found with Hup, only a fool, Hup whose bulbous misshapen head reached scarcely to the belt of a true man, Hup of the bandy legs and swollen body, the broken, knobby hands, Hup the Fool.
I saw Sura regarding Hup with a kind of horror, looking on him with loathing.
She seemed to tremble with revulsion.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 20)