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"home " "stone "

Book 11. (1 results) Slave Girl of Gor (Individual Quote)

It is difficult to make clear to a non-Gorean the significance of the Home Stone, for the non-Gorean has never had a Home Stone, and thus cannot understand its meaning, its reality. - (Slave Girl of Gor, Chapter 9, Sentence #1019)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
9 1019 It is difficult to make clear to a non-Gorean the significance of the home stone, for the non-Gorean has never had a home stone, and thus cannot understand its meaning, its reality.

Book 11. (7 results) Slave Girl of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
9 1016 Clans, because of practical limitations on mobility, are usually associated, substantially, with a given city; the caste, on the other hand, is transmunicipal or intermunicipal.
9 1017 These remarks would not be complete without mentioning home stones.
9 1018 Perhaps the most significant difference between the man of Earth and the Gorean is that the Gorean has a home stone, and the man of Earth does not.
9 1019 It is difficult to make clear to a non-Gorean the significance of the home stone, for the non-Gorean has never had a home stone, and thus cannot understand its meaning, its reality.
9 1020 I think that I shall not try to make clear what is the significance to a Gorean of the home stone.
9 1021 It would be difficult to put into words; indeed, it is perhaps impossible to put into words; I shall not try.
9 1022 I think this is one of the saddest things about the men of Earth, that they have no home stone.
Clans, because of practical limitations on mobility, are usually associated, substantially, with a given city; the caste, on the other hand, is transmunicipal or intermunicipal. These remarks would not be complete without mentioning home stones. Perhaps the most significant difference between the man of Earth and the Gorean is that the Gorean has a home stone, and the man of Earth does not. It is difficult to make clear to a non-Gorean the significance of the home stone, for the non-Gorean has never had a home stone, and thus cannot understand its meaning, its reality. I think that I shall not try to make clear what is the significance to a Gorean of the home stone. It would be difficult to put into words; indeed, it is perhaps impossible to put into words; I shall not try. I think this is one of the saddest things about the men of Earth, that they have no home stone. - (Slave Girl of Gor, Chapter 9)