• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"home " "stone "

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

History on Earth, long ago, had taken a turning away from the body, from nature, from the needs of men and women, from genetically linked psychobiological realities; this turning away, ultimately and inevitably, had produced an unloved, exploited, polluted planet swarming with miserable populations of unhappy, petty, self-seeking, frustrated animals; the human being of Earth had no Home Stone; this turning away had never taken place on the planet Gor. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 4, Sentence #149)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
4 149 History on Earth, long ago, had taken a turning away from the body, from nature, from the needs of men and women, from genetically linked psychobiological realities; this turning away, ultimately and inevitably, had produced an unloved, exploited, polluted planet swarming with miserable populations of unhappy, petty, self-seeking, frustrated animals; the human being of Earth had no home stone; this turning away had never taken place on the planet Gor.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
4 146 "They love their collars".
4 147 "Only in a collar can a woman be truly free," I said.
4 148 It was a Gorean saying.
4 149 History on Earth, long ago, had taken a turning away from the body, from nature, from the needs of men and women, from genetically linked psychobiological realities; this turning away, ultimately and inevitably, had produced an unloved, exploited, polluted planet swarming with miserable populations of unhappy, petty, self-seeking, frustrated animals; the human being of Earth had no home stone; this turning away had never taken place on the planet Gor.
4 150 "The girl, then," said the slave master, referring to Alyena, "is an Earth girl".
4 151 "Yes," I said, "she is an Earth girl, brought here, like many others, by slave ship".
4 152 "Interesting," he said.
"They love their collars". "Only in a collar can a woman be truly free," I said. It was a Gorean saying. History on Earth, long ago, had taken a turning away from the body, from nature, from the needs of men and women, from genetically linked psychobiological realities; this turning away, ultimately and inevitably, had produced an unloved, exploited, polluted planet swarming with miserable populations of unhappy, petty, self-seeking, frustrated animals; the human being of Earth had no home stone; this turning away had never taken place on the planet Gor. "The girl, then," said the slave master, referring to Alyena, "is an Earth girl". "Yes," I said, "she is an Earth girl, brought here, like many others, by slave ship". "Interesting," he said. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 4)