Tuesday, July 14, 2015
Proverbs, Sayings, Myths, and Axioms
Gorean Proverbs, Sayings, Myths and
Axioms:
Gorean
Proverbs:
"Scavengers
come to feast on the bodies of wounded tarnsmen" Tarnsman of Gor
pg. 116
"The
sword must drink until it's thirst is satisfied" Guardsman of Gor
pg. 17
"Beware
the sleen that seems to sleep" Guardsman of Gor pg. 50
Gorean
Sayings:
"...one
who speaks of Home Stones should stand, for matters of honor are here involved,
and honor is respected in the barbaric codes of Gor." Tarnsman
of Gor pg. 27
"Let us
drink wine." Tarnsman of Gor pg. 132
"...only
the heart of the mountain larl brings more luck than that of the vicious and
cunning sleen." Outlaw of Gor pg. 37
Gorean
phrase of farewell .. "I wish you well." Outlaw of Gor
pg.170
"It is
better, as the goreans say, for one man to die than many." Priest
Kings of Gor pg. 20
"The
words for 'stranger' and 'friend' in Gorean, are the same word." Priest
Kings of Gor pg. 298
"Gold
has no caste" Nomads of Gor pg. 84
"Any
man who permits himself to care for a slavegirl is a fool." Nomads
of Gor pg. 111
"It is
said, that any man who frees a slavegirl is a fool." Nomads
of Gor pg. 285
"There
is in this a war in which the woman can respect only that man who can reduce
her to utter defeat." Nomads of Gor pg. 298
"Only
the span of the wings of my tarn, only the girth of my tharlarion, only the
width of my body, and no more and that but for the time it takes to pass"
Raiders of Gor pg. 11
"There
was only gold, and power, and the bodies of women, and steel." Raiders
of Gor pg. 90
"Do not
ask the stones or the trees how to live; they cannot tell you; they do not have
tongues; do not ask the wise man how to live, for, if he knows, he will know he
cannot tell you; if you would learn how to live do not ask the question; its
answer is not in the question but in the answer, which is not in words; do not
ask how to live, but, instead, proceed to do so." Marauders
of Gor pg. 9
"Only
in a collar can a woman be truly free" Tribesmen of Gor pg.
75
"More
real than the law is the heart." Tribesmen of Gor pg. 146
"Any
woman who relishes a compliment is in her heart a slave girl. She wants to
please." Beasts of Gor pg. 17
"No man
respects a woman who knows what else to do with her." Beasts
of Gor pg. 434
"It is
said that he whose lips have never touched those of a slave girl does not know,
truly, what it is to hold a woman in his arms." Beasts
of Gor pg. 438
"Before
the feast, go hungry" Guardsman of Gor pg. 175
"He who
ties a woman owns her" Guardsman of Gor pg. 267
"There
are no mere points of Honor." Vagabonds of Gor pg. 63
"The
most dangerous lies are those which we tell ourselves." Vagabonds
of Gor pg. 468
"The
Free Woman is a riddle, the answer to which is the collar." Magicians
of Gor pg. 50
"Only a
fool buys a woman clothed" Magicians of Gor pg. 76
"The
slave is a joy and a convenience to the warrior." Magicians
of Gor pg. 315
"It was
nothing, that it would be no more than a sneeze." Magicians
of Gor pg. 405
Gorean
Myths:
"On
Gor," I said, "the myths have it that only the woman who has been an
utter slave can truly be free." .............."It has nothing to do,
I think," I said, "with what woman is actually slave or free, has
little to do with the simplicity of chains or the collar, or the brand."
.........."It means I think," I said, "that only the woman who
has utterly surrendered -- and can utterly surrender -- loosing herself in a
man's touch -- can be truly a woman, and being what she is, is then free."
Nomads of Gor pg. 289
"The
Gorean myths have it," I said, "that the woman longs for this
identity-to be herself in being his-if only for the moment of paradox in which
she is slave and thus freed." Nomads of Gor pg. 291
Gorean
Axioms:
"The
Gorean senses or believes, that a city cannot be simply identified with its
material elements, which under go their transformations even as do the cells of
a human body. For them a city is almost a living thing, or more than a living
thing. It is an entity with history, as stones and rivers do not have history;
it is an entity with a tradition, a heritage, customs, practices, character,
intentions, hopes. When a Gorean says, for example, that he is of Ar, or
Ko-ro-ba, he is doing a great deal more than telling you of his place of
residence." Outlaw of Gor pg. 22
"At
such time a man may not be spoken to, for according to the Gorean way of
thinking pity humiliates both he who pities and he who is pitied. According to
the Gorean way, one may love but one may not pity." Outlaw
of Gor pg. 31
"...the
Gorean, who seems to think so little of women in some respects, celebrates them
extravagantly in others. The Gorean is keenly susceptible to beauty; it
gladdens his heart, and his songs and art are often paeans to it's glory.
Gorean women, whether slave or free, know that their simple presence brings joy
to men...." Outlaw of Gor pg. 54
"It is
said that as we are to the amoeba and the paramecium so are the Priest-Kings to
us, that the highest and most lyric flights of our intellect are, when compared
to the thoughts of the Priest Kings, but the chemical tropisms of the
unicellular organism." Outlaw of Gor pg. 172
"...from
the Gorean's point of view, one of the most fearful things about slavery is
that one looses one's name. That name which he has had from birth, by which he
has called himself, and knows himself, that name which is so much a part of his
own conception of himself, of his own true and most intimate identity, is
suddenly gone." Outlaw of Gor pg. 197
"The
institution of freedom for women, as many goreans believed, was a
mistake." Nomads of Gor pg. 286
"Goreans
do not generally favor begging, and some regard it as an insult that there
should be such, an insult to them and their city." Assassin
of Gor pg. 11
"Goreans
are extremely sensitive about names, and who may speak them." Assassin
of Gor pg. 12
"The
morality of Earth, from the Gorean point of view, is a morality which would be
viewed as more appropriate to slaves than free men." Marauders
of Gor pg. 8
"Gorean
morality encourages honor, courage, hardness and strength. To Gorean morality
many Earth moralities might ask, "Why so hard?" To these Earth
moralities, the Gorean ethos might ask, "Why so soft?" Marauders
of Gor pg. 8
"The
morality of slaves says, "You are equal to me; we are both the
same."; the morality of masters says, "We are not equal; we are not
the same; become equal to me; then we will be the same." The morality of
slaves reduces all to bondage; the morality of masters encourages all to
attain, if they can, the heights of freedom." Marauders of
Gor pg. 8
"You
may judge and scorn the Goreans if you wish. Know as well, however, that they
judge and scorn you. They fulfill themselves as you do not. Hate them for their
pride and power. They will pity you for your shame and weakness." Beasts
of Gor pg. 11
"The
Gorean, in general, regards many things in a much more intense and personal way
that, say, the informed man of Earth." Beasts of Gor
pg. 29
"The
man of earth thinks of the world as being essentially dead; the Gorean thinks
of his world as being essentially alive" Beasts of Gor pg.
30
"A
mountain is a mountain to Goreans, regardless of whether it be formed of soil
and stone, or ice. We tend to think of mountains as being land formations. The
Gorean tends to think more of them as being objects of a certain sort, rather
than objects of a certain sort with a particular location." Beasts
of Gor pg. 37
"Honor
is important to Goreans, in a way that those of earth might find hard to
understand; .....those of earth find it natural that men should go to war over
matters of gold and riches, but not honor; the Gorean, contrariwise, is more
willing to submit matters of honor to the adjudication of steel than he is
matters of riches and gold; there is simple explanation for this, honor is more
important to him." Beasts of Gor pg. 42
"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." Beasts of Gor pg.
156
"Gorean
men ... you will learn are less tolerant of pretense then men of earth."
Beasts of Gor pg. 202
"The
wife of Earth is, from the Gorean point of view, much overworked."
Beasts of Gor pg. 248
"Goreans,
incidentally, doubt that any female is, qua female, irremediably or ultimately
frigid." Magicians of Gor pg.42 - 43
"The
Gorean tends neither to view the world as a mechanical clockwork of
interdependent parts, as a great, regular, predictable machine, docile to
equations, obedient to abstractions, nor as a game of chance, inexplicable,
meaningless and random at the core." Magicians of Gor pg. 254
"The
Gorean sees the world less as a puzzle than an opportunity, less as a datum to
be explained than a bounty in which to rejoice, less as a problem to be solved
than a gift to be gratefully received." Magicians of Gor pg. 255
"..the
Gorean, in spite of his awe of Priest-Kings, and the reverence he accords them,
the gods of his world, does not think of them as having formed the world, nor
of the world being in some form sense consequent upon their will. Rather the
Priest-Kings are seen as being its children, too, like seen, and rain and
man." Magicians of Gor pg. 255
"...the
Gorean tends to take such things as honor and truth very seriously. Give his
culture and background, his values, he is often easier to impose upon than
would be many others. ....he is likely, at least upon occasion, to be an easier
mark for the fraud and charlatan than a more suspicious, cynical fellow. On the
other hand, I do not encourage lying to Goreans. They do not like it."
Magicians of Gor pg. 255
"It is
a common Gorean belief that all females are bred slaves. It is only that some
have their collars and some, as yet, do not." Magicians of Gor
pg. 257
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Labels: Axioms, Myths, Proverbs, Sayings
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