Book 25. (1 results) Magicians of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
219
In spite of the hardships they had endured and the risks they had taken on behalf of Ar, both for the homestone and city, they had been held in contempt.
In spite of the hardships they had endured and the risks they had taken on behalf of Ar, both for the Home Stone and city, they had been held in contempt.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 13, Sentence #219)
Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
216
"And, too, interestingly," he said, "it seems that some of those lads who were "Cosians" now wander about under quite different colors, now affecting beards and hair styles reminiscent of those once associated with veterans, hirsute and shabby, returned from the delta".
13
217
"I have heard that, too," I said.
13
218
I could recall when I had first come to Ar months ago that these veterans had not been welcome in the city.
13
219
In spite of the hardships they had endured and the risks they had taken on behalf of Ar, both for the homestone and city, they had been held in contempt.
13
220
They had been insulted, spat upon, ridiculed, and despised.
13
221
Emotions which might better have been spent on the enemy were ventilated on one's own brothers.
13
222
Some had scorned them as embarrassments and failures, as defeated men and fools, tricked, humiliated and decimated in the north, men who had dared to return to Glorious Ar without the crown of victory.
"And, too, interestingly," he said, "it seems that some of those lads who were "Cosians" now wander about under quite different colors, now affecting beards and hair styles reminiscent of those once associated with veterans, hirsute and shabby, returned from the delta".
"I have heard that, too," I said.
I could recall when I had first come to Ar months ago that these veterans had not been welcome in the city.
In spite of the hardships they had endured and the risks they had taken on behalf of Ar, both for the home stone and city, they had been held in contempt.
They had been insulted, spat upon, ridiculed, and despised.
Emotions which might better have been spent on the enemy were ventilated on one's own brothers.
Some had scorned them as embarrassments and failures, as defeated men and fools, tricked, humiliated and decimated in the north, men who had dared to return to Glorious Ar without the crown of victory.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 13)