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"home " "stone "

Book 3. (1 results) Priest-Kings of Gor (Individual Quote)

"Yes," said my father, "here too is Ko-ro-ba, not only in the particles of its Home Stone, but in the hearts of its men". - (Priest-Kings of Gor, Chapter 34, Sentence #70)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
34 70 "Yes," said my father, "here too is Ko-ro-ba, not only in the particles of its home stone, but in the hearts of its men".

Book 3. (7 results) Priest-Kings of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
34 67 For years he had carried it on his own person.
34 68 I took the small stone in my hands and kissed it, for it was the home stone of the city to which I had pledged my sword, where I had ridden my first tarn, where I had met my father after an interval of more than twenty years, where I had found new friends, and to which I had taken Talena, my love, the daughter of Marlenus, once Ubar of Ar, as my Free Companion.
34 69 "And here, too, is Ko-ro-ba," I said, pointing to the proud giant, the Older Tarl, and the tiny, sandy-haired scribe, Torm.
34 70 "Yes," said my father, "here too is Ko-ro-ba, not only in the particles of its home stone, but in the hearts of its men".
34 71 And we four men of Ko-ro-ba clasped hands.
34 72 "I understand," said my father, "from what you have told us, that now once more a stone may stand upon a stone, that two men of Ko-ro-ba may once again stand side by side".
34 73 "Yes," I said, "that is true".
For years he had carried it on his own person. I took the small stone in my hands and kissed it, for it was the home stone of the city to which I had pledged my sword, where I had ridden my first tarn, where I had met my father after an interval of more than twenty years, where I had found new friends, and to which I had taken Talena, my love, the daughter of Marlenus, once Ubar of Ar, as my Free Companion. "And here, too, is Ko-ro-ba," I said, pointing to the proud giant, the Older Tarl, and the tiny, sandy-haired scribe, Torm. "Yes," said my father, "here too is Ko-ro-ba, not only in the particles of its home stone, but in the hearts of its men". And we four men of Ko-ro-ba clasped hands. "I understand," said my father, "from what you have told us, that now once more a stone may stand upon a stone, that two men of Ko-ro-ba may once again stand side by side". "Yes," I said, "that is true". - (Priest-Kings of Gor, Chapter 34)