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Civitatis Ar, Plus!
Places
Insulae
"We seek lodging in the city," I
said to the man.
"Lodging is dear," he said. "It is difficult to know what to tell you." He
glanced at Feiqa, who put down her head. She was kneeling behind me, to my
left, my pack still on her back. She had knelt when we had stopped, and
begun to speak to the free person. This was appropriate, of course, for
she was a slave. Her location was approximately what it had been when she
had been following me, in the heeling position. "She," he said, "you could
sleep in the street, chaining her by the neck to a ring, perhaps putting
her in an iron belt, but that sort of thing will not do for free folks."
"No," I said.
"You could try the southern insulae," he said, "such as those below the
Plaza of Tarns."
"The Anbar district?" I asked, skeptically.
"Or those of the Metellan Quarter," he said.
"What about east of the Avenue of the Central Cylinder?" I asked.
"There is the District of Trevelyan," he said.
"That sounds nice," said Boabissia.
"We would hope to survive the night," I said.
"You know the city?" he asked. MERCENARIES OF GOR-, (21) Page 260
"The stench is terrible," said
Boabissia.
"Do not throw up," I told her. "You will get used to it."
"I have told them, time and time again," said the proprietor, testily,
carrying the small lamp, "that they should keep the lid on. It is heavy,
of course, and so it is too often left awry." With a grating sound, he
shoved the heavy terracotta lid back in place, on the huge vat. It was at
the foot of the stairs, where the slop pots could be emptied into it. Such
vats are changed once or twice weekly, the old vats loaded in wagons and
taken outside the city, where their contents are disposed of at one of the
carnarii, or places of refuse pits. They are then rinsed out and ready to
be delivered again, in their turn, to customers. This is done by one of
several companies organized for the purpose. The work is commonly done by
male slaves, supervised by free men.
"Follow me," said the proprietor, beginning to ascend the stairs.
I followed him. Behind me came Boabissia. Then came Hurtha. Feiqa came
last. The staircase was narrow. It would be difficult for two people to
pass on it. That would make it easy to defend, I thought. It was also
steep. That was good. It did not have an open side but was set between two
walls. That conserved space. It made possible extra rooms. Space is
precious in a crowded insula. The stairwell boards were narrow. That was
not so good, unless one were on the landing. That would be the place to
make a stand. One could not get one’s entire foot on them. They were old.
Some were split. Several were loose. For a bit we could make our way in
the light from the shallow vestibule below, where it filtered in through
the shutters of the entrance gate, but in a moment or two, we became
substantially dependent on the proprietor’s tiny lamp. It cast odd
shadows.
"I cannot stand the smell," said Boabissia.
"The room is a tarsk bit a night," said the proprietor. "You may take it
or leave it. You are lucky we have one left. These are busy days in Ar."
"We could have had a better place were it not for something," said
Boabissia, irritably.
That might have been true. I did not know. It was hard to say. Several of
the insulae we had investigated did not allow animals, which meant, of
course, that we could not keep Feiqa with us. Some of them did, however,
have some provision for slaves, such as basement kennels or chaining posts
in the yard. I preferred, however, to keep Feiqa with us. She was lovely.
I did not wish to have her stolen.
"The insula of Achiates," said the proprietor, "is still the finest insula
in all Ar."
"It is dark," said Boabissia.
"How far is it now?" I asked.
"Not far," said the proprietor.
As we climbed, the landings were frequent. The ceilings on the various
levels of insulae are generally very low. In most of the rooms a man
cannot stand upright. This makes additional floors possible.
I put out my hands and touched the walls on the sides of the staircase.
They were very close. They were chipped. In places there were long
diagonal cracks in them, marking stress points in the structure where the
plaster has broken. The insula of Achiates might be the finest insula in
Ar, but I thought that it stood somewhat in a condition of at least minor
disrepair. A bit of renovation might not have been entirely out of order.
The walls, too, were frequently discolored, run with various stains, water
stains and other stains.
"This place stinks," said Boabissia. "It stinks."
"It is those brats," said the proprietor. "They are too lazy to go
downstairs."
"There are families here?" asked Boabissia.
"Of course," said the proprietor. "Most of my tenants are permanent
residents."
We continued to climb. We had now come some seven or eight landings.
"It is stuffy," said Boabissia. "I can hardly breathe."
Insulae were not noted for their ventilation, no more than for the luxury
of their appointments or their roominess. To be sure it conserves fuel.
"It is hot," said Boabissia.
"You complain a great deal," observed the proprietor.
"It is so dark," said Boabissia. "How can one fine one’s way around in
this place?"
"One becomes familiar with it," said the proprietor.
"You should have lamps illuminating the stairs," said Boabissia. "I
suppose that tharlarion oil is just too expensive."
"Yes," said the proprietor. "But it is also against the law."
"Why is that?" I asked.
"The danger of fire," he said.
"Oh," said Boabissia, sobered.
Insulae, incidentally, are famed for their proneness to fire. Sometimes
entire districts of such dwellings are wiped out by a single fire.
"Can we have a lamp in the room?" I asked.
"Of course," said the fellow. "As long as it is tended. But you may not
wish to have one much lit. It fouls the air."
"Do you have insurance on this building?" I asked.
"No," said the fellow.
I was pleased to hear that. He would then not be likely to have the
building fired to collect on the policy. On the other hand, it was not
unusual that such dwellings lacked insurance. This was not simply a matter
of proprietary optimism, but also of the difficulty of obtaining it, at
least at affordable rates. Most carriers would not accept the risks
involved.
We came to another landing.
We heard a noise and the proprietor lifted his lamp. A slave girl was
illuminated, on the landing. She was barefoot. She wore an extremely brief
tunic, one which was divided to her navel. It was awry. Her hair was in
disarray. In the light of the lamp her collar glinted. She flung herself
to her belly before us, fearfully yielding slave obeisance.
"She belongs to Clitus, the Cloth Worker, on the floor above," said the
proprietor.
The girl trembled on her belly before us.
I saw that if Achiates permitted slaves in his house they must exhibit
suitable discipline. They must be well trained.
We continued up the stairs. The girl had had light brown hair, it seemed.
When we had passed she continued on her way. We could hear her bare feet
for a time on the stairs. She seemed to know them well. In time one can
fine one’s way around them in the dark. She was doubtless on an errand.
"Oh!" cried Boabissia, on the next landing. "An urt!"
"That is not an urt," said the proprietor. "They usually come out after
dark. There is too much noise and movement for them during the day." The
small animal skittered backward, with a sound of claws on the boards. Its
eyes gleamed in the reflected light of the lamp. "Generally, too, they do
not come this high," said the proprietor. "That is a frevet." The frevet
is a small, quick, mammalian insectivore. "We have several in the house,"
he said. "They control the insects, the beetles and lice, and such."
Boabissia was silent.
"Not every insula furnishes frevets," said the proprietor. "They are
charming as well as useful creatures. You will probably grow fond of them.
You will probably wish to keep your door open at night, for coolness, and
to give access to them. They cannot gnaw through walls like urts, you
know."
"Is it far now," I asked.
"No," said the proprietor. "We are almost there. It is just under the
roof."
"It seems we have come a long way." I said.
"Not really," he said. "We are not really so high up. The flights are
short."
We then climbed another flight, to the next landing.
"Oh!" said Boabissia, recoiling.
"You see," said the proprietor. "You will come to like the frevets." We
watched a large, oblong, flat-bodied black object, about a half hort in
length, with long feelers, hurry toward a crack at the base of the wall.
"That is a roach," he said.
"They are harmless, not like the gitches whose bites are rather painful.
Some of them are big fellows, too. But there aren't many of them around.
The frevets see to it. Achiates prides himself on a clean house.
"Ai!" said Feiqa, suddenly, startled, moving.
"Kneel, slave girl," said a young, imperious voice.
Swiftly Feiqa knelt.
"Kiss my feet, female slave," said the voice.
Feiqa was kneeling before a boy, perhaps some eleven or twelve years of
age. His face was dirty. He was barefoot, and in rags. I assumed he must
live in the rooms somewhere. Feiqa a full-grown and beautiful female, but
a slave, put down her head and, doing him obeisance, kissed his feet, and
fearfully, and humbly He was a free person, and a male.
"Go away, you disgusting child," said Boabissia.
"Be silent, woman," he said.
"I have a good mind to strike you," said Boabissia.
"Lift your head, slut," said the lad to Feiqa.
She obeyed.
He regarded her. "You are a pretty one," he said. "What do you say?’ he
demanded.
"Thank you, Master," she said.
He then stood close to her and ran his hands through her hair. He then
took her collar by the sides in his small fingers and jerked it forward,
towards him, against the back of her neck. He then, by the pressure on the
collar, forced her head rudely from side to side. He then pressed it up,
cruelly, under her chin, forcing her head up. He was exerting his force on
her through her slave collar. She would have no doubt it was on her. He
did these things, incidentally, with the typical awareness of men who know
how to handle women in collars, in such a way as not to injure or threaten
the windpipe. Such a thing is never done, unless it is intentional. "A
good, solid collar," he said.
"I am pleased that master is pleased," whispered Feiqa, frightened.
"It is on you well, isn't it?" he said.
"Yes, Master," she said.
"What does it mean?" he asked.
"That I am a slave," she said.
"Go away," said Boabissia.
"Oh," said Feiqa.
The lad had put his hands rudely within her tunic and caressed her. Tears
sprang to Feiqa’s eyes.
"Go away," said Boabissia.
"Are you not grateful, slave?" asked the lad.
"Yes, Master," said Feiqa.
"You may kiss my feet in gratitude, slave," said the lad.
"Yes, Master. Thank you Master," said Feiqa, and put her head down,
kissing his feet.
"More lingeringly," he said.
"Yes, Master," she said.
The lad then turned about. "It is pleasant to master slaves," he said.
"Perhaps when I am older, and rich. I shall buy myself one, much like this
one, though perhaps younger, nearer my own age."
He then left.
"He lives in the building," said the proprietor. "He, and some of the
others, sometimes in gangs, enjoy playing "Capture the Slave Girl."
"I see," I said.
Feiqa, still kneeling, somewhat shaken, adjusted her tunic.
I smiled. I now had an excellent idea what had happened to the lovely,
light-haired slave we had seen earlier on a lower landing, she whose tunic
was opened and whose hair had been in such disorder. She had been
"captured" earlier.
"It is an excellent game," said the proprietor. "It helps them to become
men."
Many Gorean games, incidentally, have features which encourage the
development of properties regarded as desirable in Gorean youth, such as
courage, discipline, and honor. Similarly, some of the games tend to
encourage the development of audacity and leadership. Others, like the one
referred to by the proprietor, encourage the young man to see the female
in terms of her most basic and radical meaning, in the terms of her
deepest and true nature, that nature which is most biologically
fundamental to her, that nature which is that on the inestimable prize,
that of the most desirable prey, the most luscious quarry, that of she who
is to be captured and mastered, absolutely, she to whose owning and
domination all of nature inclines, and without which the ancient sexual
equations of humanity cannot be resolved. Such games, in short, thus,
encourage the lad, almost from infancy on, to reality and nature, to
manhood and mastery.
"What a disgusting child," said Boabissia.
The lad had now disappeared.
She looked at Feiqa. "You, too, are disgusting," she said.
"Yes, Mistress," whispered Feiqa.
"It would be the same with you Boabissia," I said, "if you were a slave.
You, too, then, as much as Feiqa, would be at the mercy of free persons.
You, too, then, would have to obey, and anyone, as much as she. You, too,
as then a mere slave, would have to cringe, and perform, and kiss, even if
it were only at the command of a child. You, too, then, as much as she,
would have to obey, responding swiftly, hoping desperately to please,
while being put through your paces."
"It is this way," said the proprietor. "Up this ladder, now."
"It is stifling," said Boabissia.
"Up the ladder," I said.
She went up the ladder, carefully. She held her skirt together, with one
hand, as she could, about her legs. That, I thought, was a note of
charming reserve, appropriate in a free woman. I followed her, into the
dark opening above. Then I turned about and, on my hands and knees, looked
down. Feiqa looked frightened. I do not think she wished to ascent into
that darkness. To be sure, it did not seem a pleasant prospect. "Hand up
the pack," I said to Hurtha. I was not sure Feiqa could manage it on the
ladder. Hurtha removed it from her back, and stood on the lower rungs,
lifting it up to me. I glanced at Feiqa. She had backed away. She was near
the stairs. She was frightened. She did not wish to ascend the ladder. It
frightened her, and that to which it might lead. Certainly it was not much
of a ladder. It was narrow, and moved with one’s weight. The rungs, of
different sizes and unevenly spaced, were roped in place. Too, it would be
dark, and hot, in the loft. What would await her there? She was a slave.
Feiqa backed away another step. Her hand was before her mouth. I was
afraid she might bolt.
"Slave," I said, sternly.
"Yes, Master," she said, and hurried up the ladder.
"Keep both your hands on the uprights," I told her.
"Yes, Master," she said.
Below, Hurtha laughed.
"Disgusting," said Boabissia.
I reached down and helped Feiqa to the loft.
"Here is the lamp," said the proprietor, handing it to Hurtha. He then,
the lamp in hand, climbed up to join us.
"Be careful of the lamp," said the proprietor.
I took the lamp from Hurtha and lifted it up. There was a narrow corridor
there, with some rooms on the left and right.
"It is the last room on the right," called the proprietor.
"Wait," I said to him. I then, bending down, carrying the lamp, led the
way to the room.
I pushed open the door. It was small and low, but it was stout. It could
doubtless be well secured from the inside. It would doubtless prove to be
an effective barrier. The folks in insulae take their doors seriously.
Such a door, plus his own dagger, is the poor man’s best insurance against
theft.
"Frightful," said Boabissia.
"It is furnished, as you can see," called the proprietor from below.
"It is too small, it is too dirty, I can hardly breathe up here," said
Boabissia.
"It is my last vacancy," called the proprietor.
"I cannot stay here," said Boabissia.
"Go inside, and wait for me." I told my party. They bent down and entered
the room.
"Is there no light?" asked Boabissia.
"There is a small shuttered aperture on the left," I said, holding up the
lamp. "Some light will come through that in daylight hours."
"It is dirty here, and hot," said Boabissia. "I will not stay here."
"It is a copper tarsk a night," called Achiates. "Take it or leave it. It
is my last vacancy."
"I will not stay here," said Boabissia, firmly. I saw that Feiqa, too,
regarded the room with horror.
"I feel faint," said Boabissia. "There is not enough air."
"Open the shutters," I said.
"It is too hot in here," said Boabissia.
"We are just under the roof," I said. "The hot air rises and gets trapped
here."
"I think I will be sick," Boabissia said.
"Open the shutters," I said.
"This is a terrible place," said Boabissia.
"It is an insulae," I said. "Thousands live in them."
"I will not stay here," she said.
"What do you think?" I asked Hurtha.
"It is splendid," said Hurtha. "To be sure, it would be even better if the
temperature were more equable and if there were air to breathe."
"I came to Ar to claim my patrimony," said Boabissia, "not to suffocate
and roast in a loft."
"Have no fear," I said. "When the temperature goes down these places, I am
told, can be freezing."
"There, you see," said Hurtha.
"I will not stay here," repeated Boabissia.
I then retraced my steps to the opening to the upper level, where the loft
had been converted into even more rooms. The proprietor was waiting below.
"We will take it," I told him. I dropped a copper tarsk into his palm. He
then turned about and went down the steps, and I, with the lamp, returned
to the room.
They had opened the shutters. There was a tiny falling of light, in a
narrow, descendant shaft, into the room. In it there drifted particles of
dust. They were rather pretty.
I blew out the lamp.
"Surely you did not pay a copper tarsk for this place," said Boabissia.
"Ar is packed with refugees," I said. "Many will not do so well as this."
"This is a terrible place," she said.
"It is furnished," I said. I looked about. Against one wall, there was a
chest. There was some straw in a corner of the room. One could distribute
it and sleep upon it. There were also some folded blankets. Too, there was
a bucket with some water in it, with a dipper in it. That had probably not
been changed recently. Then there was a slop pot as well, one for the
wastes to be emptied into the vat on the ground floor. It was a long trip.
It was not hard to understand how such wastes were occasionally cast from
roofs and windows, usually with a warning cry to pedestrians below.
I looked about the room, in the dim light.
There, in one wall, was a long crack. The floor creaked, too, in places,
as one trod upon it. I trusted this was merely from the disrepair and age
of the boards. Insulae are seldom maintained well. They are cheap to
build, and easily replaced. Their structure is primarily wood and brick.
There are ordinances governing how high they may be built. Although we had
come up several flights, we were probably not more than seventy or eighty
feet Gorean from the street level. Without girders, frame steel and timber
iron, as the Goreans say wrought in the iron shops, such as are used in
the towers, physics, even indexed to the Gorean gravity, is quick to
impose its inexorable limits on heights. Such buildings tend to be
vulnerable to structural stresses, and are sometimes weakened by slight
movements of the earth. Sometimes walls give way; sometimes entire floors
collapse.
I put the lamp down on the chest. I put my pack against a wall.
"This is a terrible place," said Boabissia. She knelt to one side, her
knees together, in the position of the free woman. She did not sit
cross-legged. No longer did she affect the posture of an Alar warrior. She
had learned, I think, to some extent, in some sense or other, in a sense
that she herself perhaps did not yet fully understood, in a sense that she
had not yet herself fully plumbed, that she was a female.
The room was dusty, and dingy.
Hurtha was sitting to one side, cross-legged. He was examining his ax.
The room was hot. It was small. It was, at least, furnished.
To one side there was a slave ring. Near it were some chains. Too, among
them, opened, I saw an iron collar, woman-size, with its lock ring. This
permits it to be fastened on various chains, to be incorporated in a sirik,
to be locked about the linkage of slave bracelets, and such. Too, there
were some manacles there, of a size appropriate to confine perfectly and
helplessly the small, lovely wrists of a female. Various keys hung on a
hook near the door, well out of reach from the ring. On the wall, too,
near the keys, and implement common in Gorean dwellings, hung a slave
whip.
I removed the whip from the wall, and shook out the strands. There were
five of them, pliant and broad.
I looked at Feiqa.
She knelt before me.
"This morning," I said, "you erred. It was a rather serious mistake. You
were intending to drink from the upper bowl of the fountain, that reserved
for free persons."
"Please do not punish me, Master," she begged. "I do not want to be
whipped! Let me go this time! Just this time!"
I looked at her.
"I will not do it again!" she wept.
"I am sure you will not," I said. "Take off your clothes."
MERCENARIES OF GOR-, (21) Pages 273-283
"Where is the key to your
shackle?" I asked.
"Over there, Master," said Feiqa, pointing. It hung on a hook, where it
might be convenient to tenants or visitors, near the door that led to the
apartment of Achiates.
I fetched the key. I returned to where she knelt, shackled. I looked down
upon her. I wondered if there would be point in having her, there,
suddenly, on the floor of the insula’s vestibule, before I unshackled her.
She was very beautiful.
"Master?" she asked.
I thrust her back to the floor, in a rattle of chain. "Oh!" she cried. It
did not matter. She was only a slave. "Oh!" she gasped, and then was
clutching me. "Disgusting," said a free woman, entering the insula, and
then proceeding upstairs. I stood up. Feiqa was at my feet, gasping,
shaken. Such things may be done to such as she. They are only slaves.
Feiqa reached to my foot and kissed it, tears in her eyes.
"Kneel," I said. I then removed the shackle from her fair ankle. But I
then held her ankle in my hand, substituting now for the clasp of the
shackle the grip of the master. She gasped. She put her head down. She
knew herself held, and as a slave. She lifted her head. She looked at me
wildly. She was helpless. Once more I found her beautiful. I thrust her
back, again, down to the stones of the dimly lit vestibule, and pulled her
by the ankle to me. Then I saw to it, as it pleased me, at my caprice, for
she was a mere slave, that she must again helplessly suffer the exigencies
of her bondage.
"Oh, Master, Master, Master," she said, kissing me.
"Lead us to the place Boabissia found," I said.
"Yes, Master," she said. MERCENARIES OF GOR-, (21) Pages 293-294
The Tunnels was one of the slave
brothels of Ludmilla, for whose establishments the street, the Alley of
the Slave Brothels of Ludmilla, is named. She does not own all the
brothels on the street, incidentally, nor the best of them, in my opinion,
nor even the majority of them. It is only that several of them, five, to
be exact, are owned by her, whereas no other entrepreneur owns more than
two, this accounting apparently for the deprivation of the name. Her
brothels, if it is of interest are the Chains of Gold, supposedly her
best, costing at any rate a copper tarsk for admission, a common price for
a paga tavern, and, all cheap tarsk-bit brothels, the Silken Cords, the
Scarlet Whip, the Slave Racks and the Tunnels. On this street, too, of
course, among many other sorts of establishments, such as shops and
stalls, and smaller residences, are several insulae, among them the insula
of Achiates. MERCENARIES OF GOR-, (21) Page 312
We were in a street of Ar, a
narrow, crowded street, in which we were much jostled. It was in the
Metellan district, south and east of the district of the Central Cylinder.
It is a shabby, but not squalid district. There are various tenements, or
insulae, there. It is the sort of place, far enough from broad avenues of
central Ar, where assignations, or triflings, might take place.
MAGICIANS OF GOR-, (25) Page 9
"Nor do I fear," said the brawny
fellow, "the legions of Cos, nor her adherents or spies! I am of Ar!" He
then strode between the ropes of the stone, which rested upon a plank,
itself resting on tow huge terra-cotta vats, of the sort into which slop
pots in insulae are dumped. Such vats are usually removed once or
twice a week, emptied in one carnarium or another, outside the walls,
rinsed out and returned to the insulae. Companies have been
organized for this purpose. MAGICIANS OF GOR-, (25) Page 66
This morning, some Ahn before
dawn, a convoy of wagons had rattled past our lodgings in the Metallan
district, in the insula of Torbon on Demetrios Street. Our room, like many
in an insula, had no window, but I had gone to the hall and thrust back
the shutters of a window there, overlooking the street. Below, guided here
and there by lads, with lanterns, were the wagons. There had been a great
many of them. Demetrios Street, like most Gorean streets, like no
sidewalks or curbs but sloped gently from both sides to a central gutter.
The lads with the lanterns, their light casting dim yellow pools here and
there on the walls and paving stones, performed an important function.
Without some such illumination it is only too easy to miss a turn or gouge
a wall with an axle. Marcus had joined me after a time. The wagons were
covered with canvas, roped down. It was not the first such convoy which we
had seen in the past weeks. MAGICIANS OF GOR-, (25) Page 102
At the foot of the stairs, as is
common in insulae, there was a great wastes pot, into which the smaller
wastes pots of the many tiny apartments in the building are emptied. These
large pots are then carried off in wagons to the carnaria, where their
contents are emptied. This work is usually done by male slaves under the
supervision of a free man. When the wastes pot is picked up, a clean one
is left in its place. The emptied pot is later cleaned and used again,
returned to one insula or another. There is sewerage in Ar, and sewers,
but on the whole these service the more affluent areas of the city. The
insulae are, on the whole, tenements. MAGICIANS OF GOR-, (25) Page
272
I drew my blade and put it to the
bowl of the lamp, on its small shelf in the hall. With a tiny movement I
could tip it to the floor.
"Be careful there," said the fellow. His concern was not without reason.
Such accidents, usually occurring in the rooms, often resulted in the
destruction of an insula. Many folks who lived regularly in insulae had
had the experience of hastily departing from their building in the middle
of the night. There was also the danger that such fires could spread.
Sometimes entire blocks, and even districts, are wiped out by such fires.
"Summon him," I said.
"It is not my building," said the fellow. "It belongs to Appanius!"
"Ah, yes!" I said.
"You know the name?" asked Marcus.
"Yes," I said. "Do you not remember? He is the owner of Milo, the handsome
fellow, the actor who played the part of Lurius of Jad in the pageant, and
is an agriculturist, an impresario, and slaver. That explains, probably,
his interest in this establishment, and his catering to a certain
clientele." I looked up at the pool of light. "It is that Appanius, is it
not?" I asked.
"Yes," said the fellow, "and a powerful man."
I lowered the blade. I had no wish to do anything which Appanius might
find disagreeable, such as burn down one of his buildings. He was
undoubtedly a splendid fellow, and, in any case, I might later wish to do
business with him. I sheathed my sword.
"Appanius is not one to be lightly trifled with!" said the fellow,
seemingly somewhat emboldened by the retreat of my blade.
Marcus’ blade half left its sheath. "And what of heavily trifling with
him?" he asked. "Or trifling with him moderately?" Marcus was still not
well disposed toward most fellows from Ar, and did not seem prepared to
make an exception in favor of the fellow on the landing. I pushed Marcus’
blade back down in its sheath.
"This," I said, indicating a cord and bar to one side, "is undoubtedly the
alarm bar, to be rung in the case of emergency or fire."
"Yes?" said the voice from the pool of light.
"I am pleased to see it," I said. "This will quite possibly save me
burning down the building." MAGICIANS OF GOR-, (25) Pages 273-274
Kudos to you, Mr. Norman for writing the Gorean series!
A rich, yet utterly simple saga; a world, a time, a people;
those of the Counter-Earth .. the planet .. Gor.
Thank you!
The material presented herein was researched and compiled by me,
naia{Saul}.
The material referenced comes from John Norman's Gor Series, The
Counter-Earth Saga.
This is a work in process.
Please, do not take, copy, duplicate, or use this work as your own.
If you find it valuable enough to share, please .. share the link to this
page.
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