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Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)

In any event, in the world, and on Gor, as well, poetry, like music, and song, is familiar, public, and popular. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 79, Sentence #180)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
79 180 In any event, in the world, and on Gor, as well, poetry, like music, and song, is familiar, public, and popular.

Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
79 177 There was discussion, as well, of poets.
79 178 I trust this is not surprising, that hardy men, skilled with weapons, who often lived with peril, might have such concerns.
79 179 On Gor and in the world poetry is not the labored, esoteric possession of a delicate, pretentious minority, as it might prove to be in less civilized or more decadent climes, but is a matter of life, robust pride, and zestful living.
79 180 In any event, in the world, and on Gor, as well, poetry, like music, and song, is familiar, public, and popular.
79 181 It has not yet fled into eccentric byways.
79 182 It has not yet been taken away from the people.
79 183 To be sure, much of the conversation was far more prosaic, involving matters of trade, commensurabilities of currencies, tharlarion versus kaiila races, pen procedures for acclimating new girls to their collars, the best seasons and cities for the marketing of women, whether or not the slave girls of Ar were superior to those of Turia, and what not.
There was discussion, as well, of poets. I trust this is not surprising, that hardy men, skilled with weapons, who often lived with peril, might have such concerns. On Gor and in the world poetry is not the labored, esoteric possession of a delicate, pretentious minority, as it might prove to be in less civilized or more decadent climes, but is a matter of life, robust pride, and zestful living. In any event, in the world, and on Gor, as well, poetry, like music, and song, is familiar, public, and popular. It has not yet fled into eccentric byways. It has not yet been taken away from the people. To be sure, much of the conversation was far more prosaic, involving matters of trade, commensurabilities of currencies, tharlarion versus kaiila races, pen procedures for acclimating new girls to their collars, the best seasons and cities for the marketing of women, whether or not the slave girls of Ar were superior to those of Turia, and what not. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 79)