Book 22. (1 results) Dancer of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
29
185
Too, anyone whose citizenship, for whatever reason, is rescinded or revoked, with dueprocess of law, is no longer entitled to the protections and rights of that polity's Home Stone.
Too, anyone whose citizenship, for whatever reason, is rescinded or revoked, with due process of law, is no longer entitled to the protections and rights of that polity's Home Stone.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 29, Sentence #185)
Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
29
182
There is a Gorean saying that only Priest-Kings, outlaws and slaves lack Home Stones.
29
183
Strictly, of course, that is an oversimplification.
29
184
For example, animals of all sorts, such as tarsks and verr, as well as slaves, do not have Home Stones.
29
185
Too, anyone whose citizenship, for whatever reason, is rescinded or revoked, with dueprocess of law, is no longer entitled to the protections and rights of that polity's Home Stone.
29
186
That Home Stone is then no longer his.
29
187
This suggested to me, again, that the small fellow might have been cast out of Tharna, perhaps exiled or banished.
29
188
He did not seem to me a likely candidate for an outlaw, at least in the fullest sense of the word.
There is a Gorean saying that only Priest-Kings, outlaws and slaves lack Home Stones.
Strictly, of course, that is an oversimplification.
For example, animals of all sorts, such as tarsks and verr, as well as slaves, do not have Home Stones.
Too, anyone whose citizenship, for whatever reason, is rescinded or revoked, with due process of law, is no longer entitled to the protections and rights of that polity's Home Stone.
That Home Stone is then no longer his.
This suggested to me, again, that the small fellow might have been cast out of Tharna, perhaps exiled or banished.
He did not seem to me a likely candidate for an outlaw, at least in the fullest sense of the word.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 29)