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Book 17. (1 results) Savages of Gor (Individual Quote)

The Waniyanpi, it then seemed likely, may have betrayed themselves, and their children. - (Savages of Gor, Chapter 14, Sentence #762)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 762 The Waniyanpi, it then seemed likely, may have betrayed themselves, and their children.

Book 17. (7 results) Savages of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 759 "If one is not strong it is natural to make a virtue of weakness".
14 760 "I suppose so," I said.
14 761 I then speculated that I had perhaps judged the red savages too harshly.
14 762 The Waniyanpi, it then seemed likely, may have betrayed themselves, and their children.
14 763 In time, of course, such teachings, absurd though they might be, would come to be taken for granted.
14 764 In time they would come to be sanctioned by tradition, one of humanity's most prized substitutes for thought.
14 765 "You, yourself," I said, "do not seem much infected by the lunacy of the Waniyanpi".
"If one is not strong it is natural to make a virtue of weakness". "I suppose so," I said. I then speculated that I had perhaps judged the red savages too harshly. The Waniyanpi, it then seemed likely, may have betrayed themselves, and their children. In time, of course, such teachings, absurd though they might be, would come to be taken for granted. In time they would come to be sanctioned by tradition, one of humanity's most prized substitutes for thought. "You, yourself," I said, "do not seem much infected by the lunacy of the Waniyanpi". - (Savages of Gor, Chapter 14)