The Gods of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs (most life changing books .TXT) ๐
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The Gods of Mars is Burroughsโ sequel to A Princess of Mars. After ten long years, John Carter is again transported to Mars to try and determine the fate of his wife Dejah Thoris, but finds himself in the forbidden Valley Dor, from which no man may return. Published serially in five parts between January and May 1913, this sequel appeared a year after the initial serialization of its predecessor. It was eventually published in its full novel form in 1918.
Although the Martian series contains ten books in total, the first threeโof which The Gods of Mars is the secondโare often considered a stand-alone trilogy. Throughout the series, Burroughsโ imagination and sense of adventure shine through, and his extravagant prose and innovative vocabulary raise the works up above run-of-the-mill pulp fiction.
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- Author: Edgar Rice Burroughs
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I now learned for the first time the cause of my ten shipsโ retreat from the mouth of the shaft. It seemed that when they had come upon the shaft the navy of the First Born were already issuing from its mouth. Fully twenty vessels had emerged, and though they gave battle immediately in an effort to stem the tide that rolled from the black pit, the odds against them were too great and they were forced to flee.
With great caution we approached the shaft, under cover of darkness. At a distance of several miles I caused the fleet to be halted, and from there Carthoris went ahead alone upon a one-man flier to reconnoitre. In perhaps half an hour he returned to report that there was no sign of a patrol boat or of the enemy in any form, and so we moved swiftly and noiselessly forward once more toward Omean.
At the mouth of the shaft we stopped again for a moment for all the vessels to reach their previously appointed stations, then with the flagship I dropped quickly into the black depths, while one by one the other vessels followed me in quick succession.
We had decided to stake all on the chance that we would be able to reach the temple by the subterranean way and so we left no guard of vessels at the shaftโs mouth. Nor would it have profited us any to have done so, for we did not have sufficient force all told to have withstood the vast navy of the First Born had they returned to engage us.
For the safety of our entrance upon Omean we depended largely upon the very boldness of it, believing that it would be some little time before the First Born on guard there would realize that it was an enemy and not their own returning fleet that was entering the vault of the buried sea.
And such proved to be the case. In fact, four hundred of my fleet of five hundred rested safely upon the bosom of Omean before the first shot was fired. The battle was short and hot, but there could have been but one outcome, for the First Born in the carelessness of fancied security had left but a handful of ancient and obsolete hulks to guard their mighty harbour.
It was at Carthorisโ suggestion that we landed our prisoners under guard upon a couple of the larger islands, and then towed the ships of the First Born to the shaft, where we managed to wedge a number of them securely in the interior of the great well. Then we turned on the buoyancy rays in the balance of them and let them rise by themselves to further block the passage to Omean as they came into contact with the vessels already lodged there.
We now felt that it would be some time at least before the returning First Born could reach the surface of Omean, and that we would have ample opportunity to make for the subterranean passages which lead to Issus. One of the first steps I took was to hasten personally with a good-sized force to the island of the submarine, which I took without resistance on the part of the small guard there.
I found the submarine in its pool, and at once placed a strong guard upon it and the island, where I remained to wait the coming of Carthoris and the others.
Among the prisoners was Yersted, commander of the submarine. He recognized me from the three trips that I had taken with him during my captivity among the First Born.
โHow does it seem,โ I asked him, โto have the tables turned? To be prisoner of your erstwhile captive?โ
He smiled, a very grim smile pregnant with hidden meaning.
โIt will not be for long, John Carter,โ he replied. โWe have been expecting you and we are prepared.โ
โSo it would appear,โ I answered, โfor you were all ready to become my prisoners with scarce a blow struck on either side.โ
โThe fleet must have missed you,โ he said, โbut it will return to Omean, and then that will be a very different matterโ โfor John Carter.โ
โI do not know that the fleet has missed me as yet,โ I said, but of course he did not grasp my meaning, and only looked puzzled.
โMany prisoners travel to Issus in your grim craft, Yersted?โ I asked.
โVery many,โ he assented.
โMight you remember one whom men called Dejah Thoris?โ
โWell, indeed, for her great beauty, and then, too, for the fact that she was wife to the first mortal that ever escaped from Issus through all the countless ages of her godhood. And the way that Issus remembers her best as the wife of one and the mother of another who raised their hands against the Goddess of Life Eternal.โ
I shuddered for fear of the cowardly revenge that I knew Issus might have taken upon the innocent Dejah Thoris for the sacrilege of her son and her husband.
โAnd where is Dejah Thoris now?โ I asked, knowing that he would say the words I most dreaded, but yet I loved her so that I could not refrain from hearing even the worst about her fate so that it fell from the lips of one who had seen her but recently. It was to me as though it brought her closer to me.
โYesterday the monthly rites of Issus were held,โ replied Yersted, โand I saw her then sitting in her accustomed place at the foot of Issus.โ
โWhat,โ I cried, โshe is not dead, then?โ
โWhy, no,โ replied the black, โit has been no year since she gazed upon the divine glory of the radiant face ofโ โโ
โNo year?โ I interrupted.
โWhy, no,โ insisted Yersted. โIt cannot have been upward of three hundred and seventy or eighty
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