• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"caste " "colors "

Book 3. (7 results) Priest-Kings of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 11 At least I cared for it.
1 12 And only with harsh words could I drive it away, and when it disappeared in the distance, puzzled, perhaps hurt, I wept.
1 13 It was not far to the fair of En'Kara, one of the four great fairs held in the shadow of the Sardar during the Gorean year, and I soon walked slowly down the long central avenue between the tents, the booths and stalls, the pavilions and stockades of the fair, toward the high, brassbound timber gate, formed of black logs, beyond which lies the Sardar itself, the sanctuary of this world's gods, known to the men below the mountains, the mortals, only as Priest-Kings.
1 14 I would stop briefly at the fair, for I must purchase food for the journey into the Sardar and I must entrust a leather-bound package to some member of the caste of Scribes, a package which contained an account of what had occurred at the city of Tharna in the past months, a short history of events which I thought should be recorded.
1 15 * * This is undoubtedly the manuscript which was subsequently published under the title Outlaw of Gor.
1 16 One gathers from Cabot's remarks above that he was, at the time of writing, not aware of the fate of the manuscript.
1 17 The title Outlaw of Gor, incidentally, is mine, not Cabot's.
At least I cared for it. And only with harsh words could I drive it away, and when it disappeared in the distance, puzzled, perhaps hurt, I wept. It was not far to the fair of En'Kara, one of the four great fairs held in the shadow of the Sardar during the Gorean year, and I soon walked slowly down the long central avenue between the tents, the booths and stalls, the pavilions and stockades of the fair, toward the high, brassbound timber gate, formed of black logs, beyond which lies the Sardar itself, the sanctuary of this world's gods, known to the men below the mountains, the mortals, only as Priest-Kings. I would stop briefly at the fair, for I must purchase food for the journey into the Sardar and I must entrust a leather-bound package to some member of the caste of Scribes, a package which contained an account of what had occurred at the city of Tharna in the past months, a short history of events which I thought should be recorded. * * This is undoubtedly the manuscript which was subsequently published under the title Outlaw of Gor. One gathers from Cabot's remarks above that he was, at the time of writing, not aware of the fate of the manuscript. The title Outlaw of Gor, incidentally, is mine, not Cabot's. - (Priest-Kings of Gor, Chapter )