Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
23
23
Who will deny to the tiny ost the shield and threat of its venom, who convince the tarsk boar to put aside his short, curved tusks? How will the unarmed larl defend his territory, or life; how would the unarmed sleen defend its burrow, its brood, its life? Who most desires you to be disarmed? He who will himself be armed, secretly, or by means of another.
Who will deny to the tiny ost the shield and threat of its venom, who convince the tarsk boar to put aside his short, curved tusks? How will the unarmed larl defend his territory, or life; how would the unarmed sleen defend its burrow, its brood, its life? Who most desires you to be disarmed? He who will himself be armed, secretly, or by means of another.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 23, Sentence #23)
Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
23
20
That endows one with a modicum of comfort, however modest might be one's powers.
23
21
Surely, to have the chance of defending oneself is to be preferred to the lack of such a chance.
23
22
Vulnerability is no virtue; it is peril for the vulnerable, and a fault for fools.
23
23
Who will deny to the tiny ost the shield and threat of its venom, who convince the tarsk boar to put aside his short, curved tusks? How will the unarmed larl defend his territory, or life; how would the unarmed sleen defend its burrow, its brood, its life? Who most desires you to be disarmed? He who will himself be armed, secretly, or by means of another.
23
24
Who, unarmed, is wise to dispute the will of the armed? Who wishes you to be most vulnerable, most helpless? He who will not make himself so.
23
25
Let slaves and beasts be disarmed, helplessly, and totally.
23
26
That is fitting for them, as their collars and tethers.
That endows one with a modicum of comfort, however modest might be one's powers.
Surely, to have the chance of defending oneself is to be preferred to the lack of such a chance.
Vulnerability is no virtue; it is peril for the vulnerable, and a fault for fools.
Who will deny to the tiny ost the shield and threat of its venom, who convince the tarsk boar to put aside his short, curved tusks? How will the unarmed larl defend his territory, or life; how would the unarmed sleen defend its burrow, its brood, its life? Who most desires you to be disarmed? He who will himself be armed, secretly, or by means of another.
Who, unarmed, is wise to dispute the will of the armed? Who wishes you to be most vulnerable, most helpless? He who will not make himself so.
Let slaves and beasts be disarmed, helplessly, and totally.
That is fitting for them, as their collars and tethers.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 23)