Book 10. (7 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
139
The oil in the lamps, on the poles at the corners of the raft, grew low.
16
140
On the surface it would be dusk.
16
141
I wondered how one might escape from Klima.
16
142
Even if one could secure water, it did not seem one could, afoot, carry water sufficient to walk one's way free of the salt districts.
16
143
And, even if one could traverse the many pasangs of desert afoot, there would not be much likelihood, in the wilderness, of making one's way to Red Rock, or another oasis.
16
144
Those at Klima, by intent of the free, their masters, knew not the trails whereby their liberty might be achieved.
16
145
I remembered, too, the poor slave who had encountered the chain on its march to Klima.
The oil in the lamps, on the poles at the corners of the raft, grew low.
On the surface it would be dusk.
I wondered how one might escape from Klima.
Even if one could secure water, it did not seem one could, afoot, carry water sufficient to walk one's way free of the salt districts.
And, even if one could traverse the many pasangs of desert afoot, there would not be much likelihood, in the wilderness, of making one's way to Red Rock, or another oasis.
Those at Klima, by intent of the free, their masters, knew not the trails whereby their liberty might be achieved.
I remembered, too, the poor slave who had encountered the chain on its march to Klima.
- (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter )