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"law " "city "

Book 12. (7 results) Beasts of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
3 184 Now upon its tiny stage was being enacted the story of the Ubar and the Peasant.
3 185 Each, wearied by his labors, decides to change his place with the other.
3 186 Naturally this does not prove fruitful for either individual.
3 187 The Ubar discovers he cannot tax the bosk and the Peasant discovers his grain cannot grow on the stones of the city streets.
3 188 Each cannot stop being himself, each cannot be the other.
3 189 In the end, of course, the Ubar returns gratefully to his throne and the peasant, to his relief, manages to return to the fields in time for the spring planting.
3 190 The fields sing, rejoicing, upon his return.
Now upon its tiny stage was being enacted the story of the Ubar and the Peasant. Each, wearied by his labors, decides to change his place with the other. Naturally this does not prove fruitful for either individual. The Ubar discovers he cannot tax the bosk and the Peasant discovers his grain cannot grow on the stones of the city streets. Each cannot stop being himself, each cannot be the other. In the end, of course, the Ubar returns gratefully to his throne and the peasant, to his relief, manages to return to the fields in time for the spring planting. The fields sing, rejoicing, upon his return. - (Beasts of Gor, Chapter )