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Book 6. (1 results) Raiders of Gor (Individual Quote)

Had it not been for the finding of the Home Stone of Port Kar, if one may so speak, I doubt that we could have brought more than four or five hundred ships against Cos and Tyros. - (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 17, Sentence #17)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
17 17 Had it not been for the finding of the home stone of Port Kar, if one may so speak, I doubt that we could have brought more than four or five hundred ships against Cos and Tyros.

Book 6. (7 results) Raiders of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
17 14 Lastly, I was pleased, though astonished, to accept the service of thirty-five ships of two of Port Kar's Ubars, twenty from the squat, brilliant Chung, and fifteen from tall, long-haired Nigel, like a war lord from Torvaldsland.
17 15 These were all the ships that were left to these two Ubars after the fires of En'Kara.
17 16 None of the ships of the Ubars Eteocles or Sullius Maximus had been pledged to the fleet, nor, of course, none of those of Henrius Sevarius, under the command of his regent, Claudius, once of Tyros.
17 17 Had it not been for the finding of the home stone of Port Kar, if one may so speak, I doubt that we could have brought more than four or five hundred ships against Cos and Tyros.
17 18 I snapped shut the glass of the builders and descended the narrow rope ladder to the deck of the Dorna.
17 19 I had scarcely set foot on the deck when I saw, near the mast well, the boy Fish.
17 20 "I told you," I cried, "to remain ashore!" "Beat me later," said he, "Captain".
Lastly, I was pleased, though astonished, to accept the service of thirty-five ships of two of Port Kar's Ubars, twenty from the squat, brilliant Chung, and fifteen from tall, long-haired Nigel, like a war lord from Torvaldsland. These were all the ships that were left to these two Ubars after the fires of En'Kara. None of the ships of the Ubars Eteocles or Sullius Maximus had been pledged to the fleet, nor, of course, none of those of Henrius Sevarius, under the command of his regent, Claudius, once of Tyros. Had it not been for the finding of the home stone of Port Kar, if one may so speak, I doubt that we could have brought more than four or five hundred ships against Cos and Tyros. I snapped shut the glass of the builders and descended the narrow rope ladder to the deck of the Dorna. I had scarcely set foot on the deck when I saw, near the mast well, the boy Fish. "I told you," I cried, "to remain ashore!" "Beat me later," said he, "Captain". - (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 17)