• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"flowers "

Book 16. (1 results) Guardsman of Gor (Individual Quote)

It is not unknown, for example, for a Gorean warrior, even one of a bandit pride, to admire flowers, if only secretly. - (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 20, Sentence #1787)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
20 1787 It is not unknown, for example, for a Gorean warrior, even one of a bandit pride, to admire flowers, if only secretly.

Book 16. (7 results) Guardsman of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
20 1784 Not until the last of the tiny birds disappeared to the south did the shield signals flash and the drums beat, the tarns take wing, the tharlarion begin to tread, and infantrymen march.
20 1785 Too, Goreans tend to be much closer to nature than at least the common urbanite of Earth.
20 1786 Even the Gorean child is likely to know the names and natures of most of the flora and fauna found in his environment.
20 1787 It is not unknown, for example, for a Gorean warrior, even one of a bandit pride, to admire flowers, if only secretly.
20 1788 More than one such fellow has been caught scattering their seeds from tarnback, that they may grow in new fields.
20 1789 On the other hand, interestingly enough, the Gorean's fondness and tenderness for terrain, and for grass, and winds and clouds, and flowers and small animals, does not extend, or at least not obviously, or not professedly, to one particular form of animal—a particularly delicious form of animal—the female slave, the slave girl.
20 1790 It is culturally understood that she is to be treated quite differently.
Not until the last of the tiny birds disappeared to the south did the shield signals flash and the drums beat, the tarns take wing, the tharlarion begin to tread, and infantrymen march. Too, Goreans tend to be much closer to nature than at least the common urbanite of Earth. Even the Gorean child is likely to know the names and natures of most of the flora and fauna found in his environment. It is not unknown, for example, for a Gorean warrior, even one of a bandit pride, to admire flowers, if only secretly. More than one such fellow has been caught scattering their seeds from tarnback, that they may grow in new fields. On the other hand, interestingly enough, the Gorean's fondness and tenderness for terrain, and for grass, and winds and clouds, and flowers and small animals, does not extend, or at least not obviously, or not professedly, to one particular form of animal—a particularly delicious form of animal—the female slave, the slave girl. It is culturally understood that she is to be treated quite differently. - (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 20)