Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
9
329
But the ship was locked in thassa's ice.
But the ship was locked in Thassa's ice.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 9, Sentence #329)
Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
9
326
I conjectured their numbers might have been as few as two to three hundred.
9
327
Certainly they had not hoped to stand against united Pani, loyal to their lords, and better than a thousand men who might have been armed and brought into the fray from below.
9
328
No, they would have hoped to strike swiftly, seize the mounts, and then, before resistance could be mustered, make good their escape.
9
329
But the ship was locked in thassa's ice.
9
330
Escape even under ideal conditions, given our presumed location, would have been unlikely.
9
331
And, in any event, there were fewer tarns than mutineers, even from the beginning, and certainly after the killings, the slaughter, the injuring of birds, and the escape of several.
9
332
Mutineers, I later learned, had been killing one another to attain the saddle of a tarn, many presumably having hoped to buy that place with steel, when, unfortunately for them, the ship's loyalist forces, Pani and others, rallied and came to the first tarn hold.
I conjectured their numbers might have been as few as two to three hundred.
Certainly they had not hoped to stand against united Pani, loyal to their lords, and better than a thousand men who might have been armed and brought into the fray from below.
No, they would have hoped to strike swiftly, seize the mounts, and then, before resistance could be mustered, make good their escape.
But the ship was locked in thassa's ice.
Escape even under ideal conditions, given our presumed location, would have been unlikely.
And, in any event, there were fewer tarns than mutineers, even from the beginning, and certainly after the killings, the slaughter, the injuring of birds, and the escape of several.
Mutineers, I later learned, had been killing one another to attain the saddle of a tarn, many presumably having hoped to buy that place with steel, when, unfortunately for them, the ship's loyalist forces, Pani and others, rallied and came to the first tarn hold.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 9)