Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
28
165
Here, on this world, it is he who stands and I who kneel! He does not in confusion, in guilty embarrassment, summon me to my feet but rather, in the order of nature, keeps me on my knees before him, where I belong! "You deserted us, in the prairie," said Fel Doron.
Here, on this world, it is he who stands and I who kneel! He does not in confusion, in guilty embarrassment, summon me to my feet but rather, in the order of nature, keeps me on my knees before him, where I belong! "You deserted us, in the prairie," said Fel Doron.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 28, Sentence #165)
Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
28
162
Doubtless, if her surmise was correct, as to his world, and nation, of origin, he would have known her, from her accent, as easily as she knew him, known her to have been once of Earth, and doubtless it was as easy for him to conjecture her country or nation as it was for her to conjecture his.
28
163
So he was an Earth man and she was an Earth woman, but here, on Gor, it was he who stood, and was perhaps even of the caste of Warriors, and she who knelt.
28
164
Yes, she thought to herself.
28
165
Here, on this world, it is he who stands and I who kneel! He does not in confusion, in guilty embarrassment, summon me to my feet but rather, in the order of nature, keeps me on my knees before him, where I belong! "You deserted us, in the prairie," said Fel Doron.
28
166
"No," said Portus Canio.
28
167
"They doubtless understood the meaning of the tarns in the sky, the scent of sleen.
28
168
They then, under the cover of darkness, given the priorities of war, made their rendezvous, and saw to the care of the purloined gold".
Doubtless, if her surmise was correct, as to his world, and nation, of origin, he would have known her, from her accent, as easily as she knew him, known her to have been once of Earth, and doubtless it was as easy for him to conjecture her country or nation as it was for her to conjecture his.
So he was an Earth man and she was an Earth woman, but here, on Gor, it was he who stood, and was perhaps even of the caste of Warriors, and she who knelt.
Yes, she thought to herself.
Here, on this world, it is he who stands and I who kneel! He does not in confusion, in guilty embarrassment, summon me to my feet but rather, in the order of nature, keeps me on my knees before him, where I belong! "You deserted us, in the prairie," said Fel Doron.
"No," said Portus Canio.
"They doubtless understood the meaning of the tarns in the sky, the scent of sleen.
They then, under the cover of darkness, given the priorities of war, made their rendezvous, and saw to the care of the purloined gold".
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 28)