Book 26. (1 results) Witness of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
286
The Peasants were generally regarded as the lowest of the castes, though why that should be I have never been able to determine.
The Peasants were generally regarded as the lowest of the castes, though why that should be I have never been able to determine.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 12, Sentence #286)
Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
283
"Or perhaps, less," she said, "you are one of those boorish lasses from the fields, that you are of the Peasants".
12
284
Again I did not respond.
12
285
"That is doubtless it," she said, seemingly satisfied.
12
286
The Peasants were generally regarded as the lowest of the castes, though why that should be I have never been able to determine.
12
287
That caste is sometimes referred to as "the ox on which the Home Stone rests".
12
288
I am not clear as to what a Home Stone is, but I have gathered that it, whatever it might be, is regarded as being of great importance on this world.
12
289
So, if that is the case, and the Peasants is indeed the caste upon which the Home Stone rests, then it would seem, at least in my understanding, to be a very important caste.
"Or perhaps, less," she said, "you are one of those boorish lasses from the fields, that you are of the Peasants".
Again I did not respond.
"That is doubtless it," she said, seemingly satisfied.
The Peasants were generally regarded as the lowest of the castes, though why that should be I have never been able to determine.
That caste is sometimes referred to as "the ox on which the Home Stone rests".
I am not clear as to what a Home Stone is, but I have gathered that it, whatever it might be, is regarded as being of great importance on this world.
So, if that is the case, and the Peasants is indeed the caste upon which the Home Stone rests, then it would seem, at least in my understanding, to be a very important caste.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 12)