• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"music "

Book 10. (1 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Individual Quote)

Their music was a rhapsody of odors, many of which were, to human olfactory organs, not even pleasant. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #760)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 760 Their music was a rhapsody of odors, many of which were, to human olfactory organs, not even pleasant.

Book 10. (7 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 757 Their antennae were their central organs of physical transduction.
1 758 Though they had eyes, they seldom relied upon them, and were perfectly at ease in total darkness.
1 759 Lights, in the Nest, were for the benefit of humans and other visually oriented creatures sharing the domicile.
1 760 Their music was a rhapsody of odors, many of which were, to human olfactory organs, not even pleasant.
1 761 Their decorations were largely invisible lines of scent traced with great care on the interiors of their compartments.
1 762 Their most intense, pleasurable experience was perhaps to immerse their antennae in the filamented, narcotic mane of the golden beetle, which would then, piercing them with its curved, hollow, laterally moving jaw-pincers, drain them of their body fluid, feeding itself, slaying them.
1 763 The social bond of the Priest-Kings is Nest Trust.
Their antennae were their central organs of physical transduction. Though they had eyes, they seldom relied upon them, and were perfectly at ease in total darkness. Lights, in the Nest, were for the benefit of humans and other visually oriented creatures sharing the domicile. Their music was a rhapsody of odors, many of which were, to human olfactory organs, not even pleasant. Their decorations were largely invisible lines of scent traced with great care on the interiors of their compartments. Their most intense, pleasurable experience was perhaps to immerse their antennae in the filamented, narcotic mane of the golden beetle, which would then, piercing them with its curved, hollow, laterally moving jaw-pincers, drain them of their body fluid, feeding itself, slaying them. The social bond of the Priest-Kings is Nest Trust. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 1)