- "I
shout for madder music, and I call for stronger
wine;
- But
when the moons are swollen and my questing heart
seeks more
- The
veil parts and draws me forth beyond my Earthly
door
- To
trace your footfalls, Cabot! For the world I seek
is thine.
- And
Enemies surround me, but my spirit will not bow
- Nor
falter like the weak who came before;
- And I
will follow, Cabot! In the best way I know how,
- And
keep alive the wonder that is Gor."
Tal,
Goreans!
Once
again this week's column is full of quotes, simply
because I only received one response to my query of last
week about whether or not I should ease up on the quotes
on this page. That response, I add, was wholeheartedly in
favor of my reduction of displayed quotes; however,
seeing as it came from a fellow GDT staffer, a person to
whom I have, in the past, provided numerous quotes for
her own writings, I took that one with a grain of salt
(it was red salt from the salt shops of Kasra, by the
way).
This
page will therefore maintain its current format until I
receive confirmation that it is getting redundant. Since
this column was the first such on the GDT to concern
itself mostly with quotations from the books, and since
the name of the column is "By the Book," I can
see where the quotes are an important part of its format.
Without the quotes themselves I would have to retitle the
column "My opinions on the Books," and frankly,
my own opinions on the Gor books are a lot less valuable
and pertinent than what John Norman has to say about his
world and those within it.
GOR
according to Norman
My
hearty band of researchers turned in a real grab bag of
random quotes for your perusal this week. Some seem to be
of great aid to maintaining the Gorean aspects of our
interaction both on IRC and offline, while others are
just interesting bits of Gorean trivia pertaining to
various lands and cultures. Enjoy.
GOREAN BRAVERY
- "`A
merchant may be as brave as a warrior, young
Tarnsman,' smiled Mintar."
- --p.175,
Tarnsman of Gor
- "The
braveries of barbarism are seldom of little avail
against a rational, determined, prepared foe. But
let those of the cities tremble that among the
hordes there might one day arise one who can
unify storms and harness lightning."
- --p.58,
Mercenaries of Gor
GOREAN FRIENDSHIP
- "`How
can I ever thank you?' he cried, stepping back,
holding me, proudly, looking at me.
- `Between
friends,' I said, `thanks are neither needed, nor
possible.'"
- --p.116,
Mercenaries of Gor
SITTING VS. KNEELING
- "I
loosened my robes and sat down, cross-legged, on
the cushion before the table. I picked up a piece
of the yellow bread.
- `Oh,
no, Mistress,' said the girl, putting out her
hand. `That is how men sit. We are women. We
kneel.'"
- --p.59,
Kajira of Gor (submitted by Kalun Hail)
LIFE IN THE TAHARI
- "I
extended my hand to Ibn Saran and he, bowing
twice, brushed twice the palm of his hand against
mine. 'May you always have water, may your
waterbags never be empty.' "
- --pg.21,
Tribesmen of Gor
- "A
shelter trench is a narrow trench some four or
five feet deep and eighteen inches wide...The
trench of course is always dug with its long axis
perpendicular to the path of the sun, that it
provide the maximum shade for the longest period
of time."
- --pg.21,
Tribesmen of Gor
- "The
'wheel' is a search pattern. Herdsmen, guards,
Kaiilatenders, leave the camp along a 'spoke' of
a wheel, spacing themselves at intervals. The
number of men in the caravan determines the
length of the 'spoke'. No one in the caravan
departs from it by more than the length of the
wheel's spoke, pertinent to the individual
caravan... As the 'wheel' of men turns about its
axis, the camp, at intervals the men draw arrows
in the dirt or sand, or, if rocks are available,
make arrows pointing to the camp. When the search
is discontinuede, after success or failure, these
markers are destroyed, lest they be taken by
travelers for water arrows, markers indicating
the direction of water."
- --pg.22,
Tribesmen of Gor
- "The
short sword, now slung over my left shoulder in
the common fashion, would be of little use on
Kaiila back. The men of the Tahari do not fight
on foot. A man on foot in the desert, in warfare,
is accounted a dead man."
- --pg.38,
Tribesmen of Gor
A GOREAN MELON
- "..korts,
a large, brownish-skinned, thick-skinned,
sphere-shaped vegetable, usually some six inches
in width, the interior of which is yellowish,
fibrous and heavily seeded."
- --pg.37,
Tribesmen of Gor
THE MASTER/SLAVE RELATIONSHIP
- "The
relation of master and slave, of course, in a
psychophysical organism, of a high order of
intelligence, such as the human being, is a
beautiful and profound expression of the
fundamental and central truth of animal nature,
that of order and structure, and dominance and
submission. It is merely the articulated,
legalized expression, to be expected in rational
organisms, of the biological context in which
human sexuality developed, a context which can be
betrayed but can never, because of the ingrained
nature of genetic dispositions, be fully
forgotten, or in the long run, successfully
denied. In denying it we deny our nature. In
betraying it we betray no one but ourselves. The
master will never be happy until he is a master.
The slave will never be happy until she is a
slave. It is what we are."
- --pg.159,
Explorers of Gor
EARTH AND GOR: TWO WORLDS
- "One
of these worlds was a world poisoning itself, a
pathological world insane and short-sighted,
greed-driven and self-destructive. The other was
a pristine world, virginal in its beauty and
fertility, one not permitted by its masters,
called the Sardar, or Priest-Kings, to follow the
example of its tragic sister. Priest-Kings would
not permit men to destroy Gor. They are not
permissive. They are intolerant of geocide."
- --pg.7,
Beasts of Gor
- "Generally
men of Earth will not listen to women. Their
minds are closed on the matter. Being men they
think all human beings are the same as
themselves. It is a natural fallacy. Masculine
women, those unfortunate creatures, in their
frustrations, exploit this weakness in the men of
Earth. They tell them what they want to hear.
This they then take as evidence confirming their
preconceptions. It is sad that the true needs of
women must then be sacrificed to the ignorance of
men and the political and economical ambitions of
hirsute frustrates."
- --pg.237,
Beasts of Gor
THE LACK OF RACISM ON GOR
- "Race,
incidentally, is not a serious matter generally
for Goreans, perhaps because of the intermixtures
of people. Language and city, and caste, however,
are matters of great moment to them, and provide
sufficient basis for the discriminations in which
human beings take such great delight."
- --pg.156,
Beasts of Gor
THE RED HUNTERS
- "I
had not really thought of the red hunter as an
Indian, but I supposed this was true. The men of
the polar basin are usually referred to as red
hunters in Gorean. Certainly they were culturally
distinct from the red savages, tarn riders, of
the countries north and east of the Thentis
mountains, who maintained a feudal nobility over
scattered agricultural communities of white
slaves. Those individuals, more than the red
hunters I thought of as Indians."
- --pg.155,
Beasts of Gor
- "Red
hunters are often reluctant to speak their own
name. What if the name should go away? What if
it, in escaping their lips, should not return to
them?"
- --pg.159,
Beasts of Gor
- "At
the end of the wall Inmak wept seeing the strewn
fields of slaughtered tabuk. The fur and hide if
the tabuk provides the red hunters not only with
clothing, but it can also be used for blankets,
sleeping bags and other articles. The hides can
serve for harnesses for the snow sleen and their
white-skinned female beasts. Too, they may be
used for buckets and tents, and for kayaks, the
light, narrow hunting canoes ofskin from which
sea mammals may be sought. Lashings, harpoon
lines, cords and threads can be fashioned from
its sinews. Carved, the bone and horn of the
animal can function as arrow points, needles,
thimbles, chisels, wedges, and knives. Its fat
and bone marrow can be used as fuel. Too, almost
all of the animal is edible. Even its eyes may be
eaten and, from its stomach, the half-digested
mosses on which it has been grazing."
- --pg
169-170, Beasts of Gor
- "He
spoke sometimes to them in his own tongue, and
sometimes in Gorean. He had traded furs and skins
south more than once. Many of the red hunters
cannot speak Gorean."
- --pg.191,
Beasts of Gor
- "He
touched her softly with his nose about the cheek
and throat. It is a thing red hunters do. It is a
very gentle thing, like smelling and
nuzzling."
- --pg.220,
Beasts of Gor
QUESTIONS
AND ANSWERS
I didn't
receive any questions this week, although through a
second-hand source I was advised that the word
"taba," which is in common usage in several
Gorean IRC channels as the supposed Gorean word for
"table," could be found in the books. The
person who made this statement was unable to provide the
name of the book and the page number where the reference
might be found, but apparently stated that the Master
Assassin Pa-Kur had, in the passage, "placed his
sword on a nearby taba."
Using
that statement as a starting point, I researched the
matter. Since the character of Pa-Kur appears only in the
first book, I looked there, but had no luck in finding
it. For the record, in that book, Pa-Kur actually appears
in person three times: the first time in Ko-ro-ba, where
he unsuccessfully attempts to assassinate Tarl from
tarnback, later on the bank of the Vosk river when he
oversees Tarl being strapped to the Frame of Humiliation
for his one-way trip to the Vosk Delta, and finally atop
the Cylinder of Justice in Ar when he and Tarl engage in
their climactic duel to the death. In none of those
episodes is a table even present.
So, no
luck. Anyone else out there have any idea where this
"taba" reference might be located? For the
record, I suspect that it is just an affectation of IRC.
Not that there is anything inherently wrong with that; we
all encounter such affectations all the time, and many of
them are true enough to the spirit, if not the word, of
the Gor books. But if there is an actual Gorean word
called "taba" I'd still like to find out where
it exists in the books, to satisfy my own curiosity.
QUOTES
OF INTEREST
GOREAN "VULTURES"
- "Fluttering
jards, covering many of the carcasses like
gigantic flies, stirred, swarming upward as Inmak
passed them, and then returned to their
feasting."
- --pg
170, Beasts of Gor
DISCIPLINE IN THE RANKS
- "I
drew my blade... 'I shall maintain discipline, if
need be, my comrades, by the blade.'"
- --pg
174, Beasts of Gor
A GOREAN GAME
- "Each
player, in turn, drops a bone, one of several in
his supply. The bone Inmak had dropped was carved
in the shape of a small tabuk. Each of the bones
is carved to resemble an animal, such as an
arctic gant, a northern bosk, a lart, a tabuk or
sleen, and so on. The bone which remains upright
is the winner. If both bones do not remain
upright there is no winner on that throw.
Similarily, if both bones should remain upright,
they are dropped again. A bone which does not
remain upright, is placed in the stock of him
whose bone remained upright. The game is finished
when one of the two players is cleaned out of
bones."
- --pg.185,
Beasts of Gor
NADU
- "Then
to the dark haired girl, he said, sharply,
'Nadu!'
- "She
struggled to her knees and, as she could, her
wrists braceleted behind her, assumed before him
the lovely, elegant postion of the pleasure
slave."
- --pg.166,
Explorers of Gor
Above
is another reference to the use of the word
"nadu" as a command or the name of a position,
but again it is from the book which takes place in the
jungled interior east of Schendi. I wonder if all of
those commands, nadu, lesha, bara and the rest, are
actual Gorean words or are just words found in the
various jungle river dialects. An interesting question,
since those words appear only in that book and not in any
of the others.
- My
Quote for the Week:
- "How
beautiful she was. And I owned her. What man does
not want to own a beautiful woman?"
- --pg.9,
Beasts of Gor
Okay,
I said last week I'd display some interesting information
for you in this week's column, so here goes. The new Gor
Magazine project is off and running, and Vision should
have an extensive website up to support it in the next
few days, with new samples of artwork and the straight
dope on subscriptions. My understanding is that the first
batch of subscribers will receive a free Gor Magazine
tee-shirt along with the first six issues of the
magazine. I have previewed some of the art samples and
they are highly accurate (they ought to be, since John
Norman is the technical advisior for the project). In
addition, book #26, Witness of Gor, is all ready to hit
the presses. It is a "slave book," meaning it
concerns itself with a kidnapped female from Earth and
the rise and fall of her fortunes on Gor. I am also led
to believe that book #26 just might introduce us to a
whole new class of slave, one which is more akin to the
geisha of Earth than to anything we have seen
previously... a slave/courtesan class, or "High
Slave." Though this is simply specualtion on my part
based upon excerpts.
The
release date of book #26, and its successor, book #27
(almost finished, I am told) will be determined by the
amount of interest and the initial subscription rate of
the new magazine. Norman is hard at work writing all new
original Gorean short stories which will be featured in
the back of each issue, and I have had the distinct
pleasure of reading several excerpts from book #26, as
mentioned above. It is 100% pure John Norman, believe me.
Book #27, I am told, will finally clue us in to what
occurs in the war between Ar and Cos.
After
an absence of ten years, John Norman is returning to the
literary fold with great gusto. Vision Entertainment is
supporting him in this and will be responsible for
bringing all new Gorean works to the public. It's been a
long ten years, but, for good or ill, Norman is back.
So,
what can you, the Gor fan, do about this? How can you
support this endeavor? Simple. Support the magazine. If
initial subscription rates are high enough, the
publication rate of the new books will speed up and we'll
get a new Gor book before the middle of summer `98. Each
issue of the magazine is a very slick, beautiful graphic
novel, with an artistic style similar to what you might
view in Heavy Metal magazine. So, to all of you who are
just as curious as I am about what a sleen really looks
like, I suggest you join me in subscribing as soon as the
necessary info is available. The faster each issue sells,
the quicker we'll all get our first new look at Gor in
ten years.
- Until next week... I
wish you well!
- _Marcus_
Questions? Comments?
Suggestions? If you have any of the above, have queries
regarding the source books, or have a quote or brief
passage from the books which you would share here, feel
free to e-mail me through the link below.
- This page brought to
you by
- courtesy of the
Gorean Daily Times
- (When you're bored
with the First and Second Knowledge, you're ready
for the Third.)
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