Book 12. (1 results) Beasts of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
335
It, or thousands of its animals, fleeing the drivers, pour toward the large, open end of the funnel.
It, or thousands of its animals, fleeing the drivers, pour toward the large, open end of the funnel.
- (Beasts of Gor, Chapter 12, Sentence #335)
Book 12. (7 results) Beasts of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
332
Hundreds of the women and children of the red hunters, fanned out for pasangs, shouting, beating on pans, had turned the herd toward the great alley of stone cairns.
12
333
These cairns, of piled stone, each some four or five feet high, each topped with black dirt, form a long funnel, more than two pasangs in depth.
12
334
The herd, which in the grazing on the tundra, has scattered is reformed to some extent by the drivers.
12
335
It, or thousands of its animals, fleeing the drivers, pour toward the large, open end of the funnel.
12
336
The stone cairns, which are perhaps supposed to resemble men, serve, perhaps psychologically, to fence in and guide the herd.
12
337
The animals seem generally unwilling to break the imaginary boundary which might be projected between cairns.
12
338
For example, the human seeing three dots spaced one way "sees" a line; seeing three dots spaced another way, he "sees" a triangle, and so on.
Hundreds of the women and children of the red hunters, fanned out for pasangs, shouting, beating on pans, had turned the herd toward the great alley of stone cairns.
These cairns, of piled stone, each some four or five feet high, each topped with black dirt, form a long funnel, more than two pasangs in depth.
The herd, which in the grazing on the tundra, has scattered is reformed to some extent by the drivers.
It, or thousands of its animals, fleeing the drivers, pour toward the large, open end of the funnel.
The stone cairns, which are perhaps supposed to resemble men, serve, perhaps psychologically, to fence in and guide the herd.
The animals seem generally unwilling to break the imaginary boundary which might be projected between cairns.
For example, the human seeing three dots spaced one way "sees" a line; seeing three dots spaced another way, he "sees" a triangle, and so on.
- (Beasts of Gor, Chapter 12)