Book 3. (7 results) Priest-Kings of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
17
For example, an odor can carry, to the sensory appendages of a priest-King, much farther than can the shout or cry of a man to another man.
10
18
Moreover, if not too much time is allowed to elapse, a priest-King may leave a message in his chamber or in a corridor for another priest-King, and the other may arrive later and interpret it.
10
19
A disadvantage of this mode of communication, of course, is that the message may be understood by strangers or others for whom it is not intended.
10
20
One must be careful of what one says in the tunnels of priest-kings, for one's words may linger after one, until they sufficiently dissipate to be little more than a meaningless blur of scent.
10
21
For longer periods of time there are various devices for recording a message, without relying on complex mechanical devices.
10
22
The simplest and one of the most fascinating is a chemically treated rope of clothlike material which the priest-King, beginning at an end bearing a certain scent, saturates with the odors of his message.
10
23
This coiled message rope then retains the odors indefinitely and when another priest-King wishes to read the message he unrolls it slowly, scanning it serially with the jointed sensory appendages.
For example, an odor can carry, to the sensory appendages of a priest-King, much farther than can the shout or cry of a man to another man.
Moreover, if not too much time is allowed to elapse, a priest-King may leave a message in his chamber or in a corridor for another priest-King, and the other may arrive later and interpret it.
A disadvantage of this mode of communication, of course, is that the message may be understood by strangers or others for whom it is not intended.
One must be careful of what one says in the tunnels of priest-kings, for one's words may linger after one, until they sufficiently dissipate to be little more than a meaningless blur of scent.
For longer periods of time there are various devices for recording a message, without relying on complex mechanical devices.
The simplest and one of the most fascinating is a chemically treated rope of clothlike material which the priest-King, beginning at an end bearing a certain scent, saturates with the odors of his message.
This coiled message rope then retains the odors indefinitely and when another priest-King wishes to read the message he unrolls it slowly, scanning it serially with the jointed sensory appendages.
- (Priest-Kings of Gor, Chapter )