Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
5
128
I looked over the rail, at thassa, wanting to see her, again, if only for the last time.
I looked over the rail, at Thassa, wanting to see her, again, if only for the last time.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 5, Sentence #128)
Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
5
125
He might have killed me then, had it not been for the intervention of the tarnsman, Tarl Cabot.
5
126
Apparently I constituted a threat to him, at least in his mind, of considerable portent.
5
127
Were I he I would doubtless have been similarly apprehensive.
5
128
I looked over the rail, at thassa, wanting to see her, again, if only for the last time.
5
129
But she seemed uneasy, cold and dark, and there was a roll of clouds unfurling over her brow in the north.
5
130
"I, Rutilius of Ar," said Seremides, "do not countenance an enemy amongst us.
5
131
Who knows whose throat might be cut in his sleep by this sleen? Will you share water and rations, and loot and slaves, with one who would have delivered you to the teeth of flames or the fangs of sharks? Will we have an enemy, a deadly foe, amongst us?" It interested me that Seremides seemed to feel it incumbent upon him to justify a projected murder.
He might have killed me then, had it not been for the intervention of the tarnsman, Tarl Cabot.
Apparently I constituted a threat to him, at least in his mind, of considerable portent.
Were I he I would doubtless have been similarly apprehensive.
I looked over the rail, at thassa, wanting to see her, again, if only for the last time.
But she seemed uneasy, cold and dark, and there was a roll of clouds unfurling over her brow in the north.
"I, Rutilius of Ar," said Seremides, "do not countenance an enemy amongst us.
Who knows whose throat might be cut in his sleep by this sleen? Will you share water and rations, and loot and slaves, with one who would have delivered you to the teeth of flames or the fangs of sharks? Will we have an enemy, a deadly foe, amongst us?" It interested me that Seremides seemed to feel it incumbent upon him to justify a projected murder.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 5)