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"high " "council "

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
3 79 "The Priest-Kings themselves," I said, "could not ask for more".
3 80 "Then, Warrior," said the man, issuing Gor's blunt invitation to a low-caste dinner, "share my kettle".
3 81 "I am honored," I said, and I was.
3 82 Whereas I was of high caste and he of low, yet in his own hut he would be, by the laws of Gor, a prince and sovereign, for then he would be in the place of his own Home Stone.
3 83 Indeed, a cringing whelp of a man, who would never think of lifting his eyes from the ground in the presence of a member of one of the high castes, a crushed and spiritless churl, an untrustworthy villain or coward, an avaricious and obsequious peddler often becomes, in the place of his own Home Stone, a veritable lion among his fellows, proud and splendid, generous and bestowing, a king, be it only in his own den.
3 84 Indeed, frequent enough were the stories where even a warrior was overcome by an angry peasant into whose hut he had intruded himself, for in the vicinity of their Home Stones men fight with all the courage, savagery and resourcefulness of the mountain larl.
3 85 More than one are the peasant fields of Gor which have been freshened with the blood of foolish warriors.
"The Priest-Kings themselves," I said, "could not ask for more". "Then, Warrior," said the man, issuing Gor's blunt invitation to a low-caste dinner, "share my kettle". "I am honored," I said, and I was. Whereas I was of high caste and he of low, yet in his own hut he would be, by the laws of Gor, a prince and sovereign, for then he would be in the place of his own Home Stone. Indeed, a cringing whelp of a man, who would never think of lifting his eyes from the ground in the presence of a member of one of the high castes, a crushed and spiritless churl, an untrustworthy villain or coward, an avaricious and obsequious peddler often becomes, in the place of his own Home Stone, a veritable lion among his fellows, proud and splendid, generous and bestowing, a king, be it only in his own den. Indeed, frequent enough were the stories where even a warrior was overcome by an angry peasant into whose hut he had intruded himself, for in the vicinity of their Home Stones men fight with all the courage, savagery and resourcefulness of the mountain larl. More than one are the peasant fields of Gor which have been freshened with the blood of foolish warriors. - (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter )