Book 3. (7 results) Priest-Kings of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
34
In the following journey the cage was successively submerged in various solutions of various temperatures and densities, some of which, perhaps because I was still ill, I found exceedingly noxious.
14
35
Had I been less ill I would undoubtedly have been more offended.
14
36
At last after I, sputtering and choking, had been duly cleansed and rinsed several times, and then it seemed several times again, the cage began to move slowly, mercifully, between vents from which blasts of hot air issued, and, eventually, it passed slowly between an assortment of humming projection points for wide-beam rays, some of which were visible to my eye, being yellow, red and a refulgent green.
14
37
I would later learn that these rays, which passed through my body as easily and harmlessly as sunlight through glass, were indexed to the metabolic physiology of various organisms which can infect priest-kings.
14
38
I would also learn that the last known free instance of such an organism had occurred more than four thousand years before.
14
39
In the next few weeks in the Nest I would occasionally come upon diseased Muls.
14
40
The organisms which afflict them are apparently harmless to priest-kings and thus allowed to survive.
In the following journey the cage was successively submerged in various solutions of various temperatures and densities, some of which, perhaps because I was still ill, I found exceedingly noxious.
Had I been less ill I would undoubtedly have been more offended.
At last after I, sputtering and choking, had been duly cleansed and rinsed several times, and then it seemed several times again, the cage began to move slowly, mercifully, between vents from which blasts of hot air issued, and, eventually, it passed slowly between an assortment of humming projection points for wide-beam rays, some of which were visible to my eye, being yellow, red and a refulgent green.
I would later learn that these rays, which passed through my body as easily and harmlessly as sunlight through glass, were indexed to the metabolic physiology of various organisms which can infect priest-kings.
I would also learn that the last known free instance of such an organism had occurred more than four thousand years before.
In the next few weeks in the Nest I would occasionally come upon diseased Muls.
The organisms which afflict them are apparently harmless to priest-kings and thus allowed to survive.
- (Priest-Kings of Gor, Chapter )