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"gods "

Book 8. (1 results) Hunters of Gor (Individual Quote)

On the other hand, that night, one of the gods, curious, or perhaps careless, or perhaps driven from the hall and angry, threw down upon the ground his own great ax, and upon this ax he poured paga and his own blood, and the ax laughed and leaped up, and ran away. - (Hunters of Gor, Chapter 18, Sentence #482)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
18 482 On the other hand, that night, one of the gods, curious, or perhaps careless, or perhaps driven from the hall and angry, threw down upon the ground his own great ax, and upon this ax he poured paga and his own blood, and the ax laughed and leaped up, and ran away.

Book 8. (7 results) Hunters of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
18 479 They took a hoe, an instrument for working the soil, and put it among them.
18 480 They then sprinkled water upon this implement and rubbed upon it sweat from their bodies.
18 481 From this hoe was formed most men.
18 482 On the other hand, that night, one of the gods, curious, or perhaps careless, or perhaps driven from the hall and angry, threw down upon the ground his own great ax, and upon this ax he poured paga and his own blood, and the ax laughed and leaped up, and ran away.
18 483 The god, and all the gods, could not catch it, and it became, it is said, the father of the men of Torvaldsland.
18 484 There was, of course, another reason why the commander of the Rhoda and Tesephone would keep within sight of the shore.
18 485 He had a signal to observe.
They took a hoe, an instrument for working the soil, and put it among them. They then sprinkled water upon this implement and rubbed upon it sweat from their bodies. From this hoe was formed most men. On the other hand, that night, one of the gods, curious, or perhaps careless, or perhaps driven from the hall and angry, threw down upon the ground his own great ax, and upon this ax he poured paga and his own blood, and the ax laughed and leaped up, and ran away. The god, and all the gods, could not catch it, and it became, it is said, the father of the men of Torvaldsland. There was, of course, another reason why the commander of the Rhoda and Tesephone would keep within sight of the shore. He had a signal to observe. - (Hunters of Gor, Chapter 18)