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"love "

Book 2. (1 results) Outlaw of Gor (Individual Quote)

And this perhaps makes them love their cities the more, for they know that their city, like themselves, is subject to mortal termination. - (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #47)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
2 47 And this perhaps makes them love their cities the more, for they know that their city, like themselves, is subject to mortal termination.

Book 2. (7 results) Outlaw of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
2 44 The Goreans generally, though there are exceptions, particularly the Caste of Initiates, do not believe in immortality.
2 45 Accordingly, to be of a city is, in a sense, to have been a part of something less perishable than oneself, something divine in the sense of undying.
2 46 Of course, as every Gorean knows, cities too are mortal, for cities can be destroyed as well as men.
2 47 And this perhaps makes them love their cities the more, for they know that their city, like themselves, is subject to mortal termination.
2 48 This love of their city tends to become invested in a stone which is known as the Home Stone, and which is normally kept in the highest cylinder in a city.
2 49 In the Home Stone—sometimes little more than a crude piece of carved rock, dating back perhaps several hundred generations to when the city was only a cluster of huts by the bank of a river, sometimes a magnificent and impressively wrought, jewel-encrusted cube of marble or granite—the city finds its symbol.
2 50 Yet to speak of a symbol is to fall short of the mark.
The Goreans generally, though there are exceptions, particularly the Caste of Initiates, do not believe in immortality. Accordingly, to be of a city is, in a sense, to have been a part of something less perishable than oneself, something divine in the sense of undying. Of course, as every Gorean knows, cities too are mortal, for cities can be destroyed as well as men. And this perhaps makes them love their cities the more, for they know that their city, like themselves, is subject to mortal termination. This love of their city tends to become invested in a stone which is known as the Home Stone, and which is normally kept in the highest cylinder in a city. In the Home Stone—sometimes little more than a crude piece of carved rock, dating back perhaps several hundred generations to when the city was only a cluster of huts by the bank of a river, sometimes a magnificent and impressively wrought, jewel-encrusted cube of marble or granite—the city finds its symbol. Yet to speak of a symbol is to fall short of the mark. - (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter 2)