• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"honor "

Book 12. (1 results) Beasts of Gor (Individual Quote)

Earth, as the Kur sees it, and I hesitate to speculate with what accuracy, is a meretricious, polluted, materialistic sphere too sophisticated, too culturally advanced, to be influenced by the obsolescent, primitive considerations of loyalty and honor, eccentric impediments to success, to be put on and taken off with variations in the political weather. - (Beasts of Gor, Chapter 35, Sentence #442)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
35 442 Earth, as the Kur sees it, and I hesitate to speculate with what accuracy, is a meretricious, polluted, materialistic sphere too sophisticated, too culturally advanced, to be influenced by the obsolescent, primitive considerations of loyalty and honor, eccentric impediments to success, to be put on and taken off with variations in the political weather.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
35 439 They, many, as might many of Earth, see Gor as no more than an arena, a theater, in which they may safely exploit and prosper.
35 440 Gor, for them, exists not to be loved, but looted.
35 441 The world from which they derive, of course, seems to the Kur eye one ripe for such recruitments; as they see it, it is a hypocritical world, one on which selflessness is praised while carefully and deliberately evaded, one in which greed is denounced while being frequently and often substantially rewarded, one in which egotism thrives most profoundly, and keenly, behind the veils of its own denial.
35 442 Earth, as the Kur sees it, and I hesitate to speculate with what accuracy, is a meretricious, polluted, materialistic sphere too sophisticated, too culturally advanced, to be influenced by the obsolescent, primitive considerations of loyalty and honor, eccentric impediments to success, to be put on and taken off with variations in the political weather.
35 443 These women then, natively well trained in the unspoken principles of prestige and gain, of self-seeking and egotism, are easily lured by promises of wealth and power.
35 444 Arlene had been such a woman.
35 445 You see, they have no Home Stones.
They, many, as might many of Earth, see Gor as no more than an arena, a theater, in which they may safely exploit and prosper. Gor, for them, exists not to be loved, but looted. The world from which they derive, of course, seems to the Kur eye one ripe for such recruitments; as they see it, it is a hypocritical world, one on which selflessness is praised while carefully and deliberately evaded, one in which greed is denounced while being frequently and often substantially rewarded, one in which egotism thrives most profoundly, and keenly, behind the veils of its own denial. Earth, as the Kur sees it, and I hesitate to speculate with what accuracy, is a meretricious, polluted, materialistic sphere too sophisticated, too culturally advanced, to be influenced by the obsolescent, primitive considerations of loyalty and honor, eccentric impediments to success, to be put on and taken off with variations in the political weather. These women then, natively well trained in the unspoken principles of prestige and gain, of self-seeking and egotism, are easily lured by promises of wealth and power. Arlene had been such a woman. You see, they have no Home Stones. - (Beasts of Gor, Chapter 35)