Castes, Chronology, Celebrations, Measurements (including money)
 Castes  Chronology  Celebrations  Measurements
Castes and Colors
HIGH CASTES:
Initiates: Representatives of the Priest Kings, their color is White
Scribes: Scholars and Clerks, their color is Blue
Builders: Includes builders, architects etc, their color is Yellow
Physicians: The Caste of Physicians color is Green
Warriors: The Caste of Warriors color is Red
***
"These tiers shared the color of that portion of the wall behind them, the caste colors.The tier nearest the floor, which denoted some preferential status, the white tier, was occupied by the Initiates, Interpreters of the Will of the Priest Kings. In order, the ascending tiers; blue, yellow, green and red were occupied by representatives of the Scribes, Builders, Physicians, and Warriors."
            Tarnsman of Gor, page 61
" 'Ho!' cried Torm, that most improbable member of the Caste of Scribes, throwing his blue robes over his head..."
            Tarnsman of Gor, page 36
"On the other hand, the High Castes, specifically the Warriors, Builders, Scribes, Initiates, and Physicians...."
            Tarnsman of Gor, page 41
"Many castes, incidentally, have branches and divisions. Lawyers and Scholars, for example, and Record Keepers, Teachers, Clerks, Historians and Accountants are all Scribes."
            Assassin of Gor, page 208

LOW CASTES:
Assassins: Their color is black
"You will see the black banner of the Caste of Assassins"
Tarnsman of Gor, page 175
*
Bakers: Their colors are yellow and brown
"I stayed for four days in the rooms above the shop of Dina of Turia, there I dyed my hair black and exchanged the robes of the merchant for the yellow and brown tunic of the Bakers; to which caste her father and two brothers had belonged."
Nomads of Gor, page 237
*
Bleachers:
Mentioned in Assassin of Gor
"...its libraries, its records and files; its cubicles for Smiths, Bakers, Cosmeticians, Bleachers, Dyers, Weavers,  and Leather Workers..."
Assassin of Gor, page 111
*
Cosmeticians:
Mentioned in Assassin of Gor
"...its libraries, its records and files; its cubicles for Smiths, Bakers, Cosmeticians, Bleachers, Dyers, Weavers,  and Leather Workers..."
Assassin of Gor, page 111
*
Charcoal Makers: 
"His stature and burden proclaimed him a member of the Caste of Carriers of Wood, or Woodsmen, that Gorean caste which, with the caste of Charcoal Makers, provides most of the common fuel for the Gorean cities."
Outlaw of Gor, page 27
*
Cloth Workers:
"The Carders and Dyers, incidentally, are subcastes separate from the Weavers. All are subcastes of the Rug Makers, which itself, interestingly, perhaps surprisingly, is accounted generally as a subcaste of the Cloth Workers. Rug Makers themselves, however usually regard themselves in their various subcastes, as being independent of the Cloth Workers. A rug maker would not care to be confused with a maker of kaftans, turbans, or djellabas."
Tribesmen of Gor, pages 49-50
"I was the daughter of a Cloth Worker..."
Assassin of Gor, page 317
*
Dyers
"...its libraries, its records and files; its cubicles for Smiths, Bakers, Cosmeticians, Bleachers, Dyers, Weavers,  and Leather Workers..."
Assassin of Gor, page 111
*
Goat Keepers: 
"I was pleased to see that the men of other castes....and even castes as low as the Peasants, Saddle-Makers, the Weavers, the Goat-Keepers, the Poets, and the Merchants...."
Priest-Kings of Gor, pages 294-295
*
Leather Workers:
"It was there that she had been purchased by Barus, of the Leather Workers."
Captive of Gor, page 234
"...its libraries, its records and files; its cubicles for Smiths, Bakers, Cosmeticians, Bleachers, Dyers, Weavers,  and Leather Workers..."
Assassin of Gor, page 111
*
Magicians:  
"The magicians of Anango are famed on Gor. If you wish to have someone turned into a turtle or something, those are the fellows to see."
Magicians of Gor, page 259
*
Merchants: Their colors are gold and white
"Down the stairway slowly, in trailing white silk, bordered with gold, the colors of the Merchants... ...Aphris of Turia, then, was of the caste of merchants."
Nomads of Gor, page 91
"I wore a white robe, woven of the wool of the Hurt, imported from distant Ar, trimmed with golden cloth, from Tor, the colors of the Merchant."
Hunters of Gor, page 7
*
Metal Workers:
"My opponent was not Andreas, but a squat, powerful man with short-clipped yellow hair, Kron of Tharna, of the Caste of Metal Workers."
Outlaw of Gor, page 113
*
Musicians:  
"A similar decree, in most cities, stands against the enslavement of one who is in the Caste of Musicians."
Beasts of Gor, page 44
*
Peasants:
"Economically, the base of the Gorean life was the free peasant, which was perhaps the lowest but undoubtedly the most fundamental caste..."
Tarnsman of Gor, page 43
*
Players: Their colors are red and yellow
"In most cities it is regarded, incidentally, as a criminal offense to enslave one of the Caste of Players."
Beasts of Gor, page 44
"...he wore the garb of the Player, but his garb was rich and the squares of the finest red and yellow silk..."
Assassin of Gor, page 322
*
Poets: 
"It could have been worse, I thought. After all, though the Caste of Singers, or Poets, was not a high caste, it had more prestige than, for example, the Caste of Pot-Makers or Saddle-Makers, with which it was sometimes compared."
Outlaw of Gor, page 103
*
Pot-Makers(Potters):
"Hup's rag might once have been of the Caste of Potters."
Assassin of Gor, page 10
(Also, see Poets for quote mentioning the existence of the Caste of Pot-Makers)
*

Saddle-Makers: 
(See Poets for quote mentioning the existence of the Caste of Saddle-Makers)

*

Rencers:
"The Rencers are often thought to be a higher caste than the Peasants."

Raiders of Gor, page 94
*
Rope-Makers:
This is more of a guild, or union, not specifically a caste and are mentioned here as exceptions to the caste system.
"These organizations, such as the sail-makers, almost guildlike, not castes, have dues...."
Raiders of Gor, page 134
*
Sail-Makers:
See Rope Makers

Singers: 
(See Poets for quote mentioning the existence of the Caste of Singers)

*

Slavers: Their colors are blue and yellow (sub caste of the Merchants)
"I saw that the cover of the thalarion wagon, which had been rolled back, was of blue and yellow silk. It was the camp of a slaver."

Outlaw of Gor, page 185
"The Slavers, incidentally, are of the Merchant caste, though, in virtue of their merchandise and practices, their robes are different."
Assassin of Gor, page 208
"Samos wore the blue and yellow robes of the Slaver."
Hunters of Gor, page 7
"From among the domed tents, wearing a swirling robe of broadly striped blue and yellow silk, with a headband of the same material, there approached a short, fat man, Targo the Slaver..."
Outlaw of Gor, page 191
*
Sleen Trainers: Their colors are brown and black (may be a sub castes or a specialty)
"He now no longer wore the brown and black common to professional sleen trainers..."
Beasts of Gor, page 78
*
Smiths:
Mentioned in Assassin of Gor
"...its libraries, its records and files; its cubicles for Smiths, Bakers, Cosmeticians, Bleachers, Dyers, Weavers,  and Leather Workers..."
Assassin of Gor, page 111
*
Tarn Keepers:
"...was purchased by a fat, odious fellow, of the Caste of Tarn Keepers."
Tarnsman of Gor, page 132
*
Thieves:
"There is even, in Port Kar, a recognized Caste of Thieves, the only such I know of on Gor...They are recognized by the Thiefs Scar, which they wear as a caste mark, a tiny, three-pronged brand burned into the face, in back of and below the eye, over the right cheekbone."
Raiders of Gor, page 104
"On his right cheek, over the cheekbone was the Thief brand of the Caste of Thieves of Port Kar, who use the small brand to identify their members."
Assassin of Gor, page 96
*
Vintners: Their colors are white and green (to represent leaves)
"...of the Caste of Vintners...wearing a white tunic with a representation in green cloth of leaves about the collar and down the sleeves of the garment..."
Assassin of Gor, page 29
*
Weavers:
"I was pleased to see that the men of other castes....and even castes as low as the Peasants, Saddle-Makers, the Weavers, the Goat-Keepers, the Poets, and the Merchants...."
Priest-Kings of Gor, pages 294-295
*
Wood Carriers/Woodsmen:
"His stature and burden proclaimed him a member of the Caste of Carriers of Wood, or Woodsmen, that Gorean caste which, with the caste of Charcoal Makers, provides most of the common fuel for the Gorean cities."
Outlaw of Gor, page 27


Chronology
 TIME
A Gorean Day is 20 Ahn (hours) in length.
Ahn (hour)
Ehn (minute)
Ihn (second)
Earth equivalents are:
Ahn = 1.2 hours (1 hour, 12 minutes)
Ehn = 1.8 minutes (1 minute, 48 seconds)
Ihn = 1.35 seconds
***
Ihn, Ehn, Ahn (second, minute, hour)
80 Ihn = 1 Ehn
40 Ehn = 1 Ahn
20 Ahn = 1 Day
Noon is the 10th Ahn, Midnight is the 20th Ahn
"It was past the fourteenth Gorean Ahn, or hour, the Gorean Day is divided into twenty Ahn, which are numbered consecutively, the tenth Ahn is noon, the twentieth, midnight. Each Ahn consists of 40 Ehn, or minutes, and each Ehn of eighty Ihn, or seconds."
Outlaw of Gor, page 26
*
THE GOREAN CALENDAR
There are 12 months per year.
Each month is 25 days long, split into 5 weeks.
Each week is made up of 5 days. (Weeks are called, 'hands')
Then, between each month is a five day week, called a 'Passage Hand', used to separate one month from the next. At the end of the year, there is one more 5-day week separating the old year from the new, this week is called the 'Waiting Hand'
So, 5 days = week (hand)
5 weeks (hands) = month
1 week (Passage Hand) between each month
12 months per year
1 week (Waiting hand) for a total of 365 days per Gorean year
(5 days/week * 5 weeks/month * 12 months/year) + (5 days/passage hand * 12 passage hands/year) + (5 days/waiting hand * 1 waiting hand/year) = 365
*
Years are generally kept track of differently in each city by virtue of Administrator Lists (ex. the Second Year when So-and-So was administrator) although some cities do add the dating of Ar next to their own cities dates. Time in Ar is calculated from the founding date of the city (called Contesta Ar). Most Goreans calculate the year from vernal equinox to vernal equinox.  Turians, however, calulate it from summer solstice to summer solstice, and the Wagon Peoples calculate it from Season of Snows to Season of Snows.
                *
 The Gorean Calendar (a link)  (shows equivalent Earth dates)
                *
"There are twelve twenty-five day Gorean months, incidentally, in most of the calendars of the various cities. Each month, containing five five-day weeks is separated by a five-day period, called the Passage Hand, from every other month, there being one exception to this, which is that the last month of the year is separated from the first month of the year, which begins with the Vernal Equinox, not only by a Passage Hand, but by another five day period called the Waiting Hand...."
Assassin of Gor, page 78

"...but on the Vernal Equinox, which marks the first day of the new year in most Gorean cities..."

Assassin of Gor, page 78

"It was now the month of the vernal equinox on Gor, called En'Kara, or The First Kara. The full expression is En'Kara-Lar-Torvis, which means, rather literally, The First Turning of the Central Fire. Lar-Torvis is a Gorean expression for the sun. More commonly, though never in the context of time, the sun is referred to as Tor-Tu-Gor, or Light Upon the Home Stone. The month of the autumnal equinox is called fully Se'Kara-Lar-Torvis, but usually simply, Se'Kara, The Second Kara, or The Second Turning. As might be expected, there are related expressions for the months of the solstices, En'Var- Lar-Torvis and Se'Var-Lar-Torvis, or, again rather literally, the First Resting and the Second Resting of the Central Fire. These, however, like the other expressions, usually occur in speech only as En'Var and Se'Var, or The First Resting and The Second Resting."

Outlaw of Gor, page 178
"...publically sold during the ninth passage hand, that preceding the winter solstice."
Assassin of Gor, page 192
"Chronology, incidentally, is the despair of scholars on Gor, for each city keeps track of time by virtue of its own Administrator Lists...sometimes cities are willing to add, in their records, beside their own dating, the dating of Ar, which is Gor's greatest city...Time is reckoned "Contasta Ar", or from the "founding of Ar."
Outlaw of Gor, pages 178-179
"He did so late in the spring, on the sixteenth day of the third month, that month which in Ar is called Camerius, in Ko-ro-ba Selnar."
Assassin of Gor, pages 234-235
"...for the Wagon Peoples calculate the year from the Season of Snows to the Season of Snows; Turians, incidentally, figure the year from summer solstice to summer solstice; Goreans generally, on the other hand, figure the year from vernal equinox to vernal equinox."
Nomads of Gor, page 11


Celebrations, Feasts, Fairs, Festivals and the Like

RITUAL LIBATION
"I am offering a libation..Ta-Sardar-Gor...It means..To the Priest-Kings of Gor."
            Outlaw of Gor, page 13

THE SARDAR FAIRS
The fairs happen four times per year, one at each of the vernal and autumnal equinox and one each at the summer and winter solstice. Each fair is named for the month in which it is held. For example, the Fair of En'Kara, the Fair of Se'Var, etc.

"One is the fairs at the Sardar Mountains which occur four times a year and are number chronologically."
            Outlaw of Gor, page 179
"...each Gorean, whether male or female, is expected to see the Sardar Mountains, in honor of the Priest-Kings, at least once in his life, prior to his twenty-fifth year."
            Priest-Kings of Gor, page 12
"They had thought to come to the Sardar as free women, discharging their obligation to the Priest-Kings. They would leave as slave girls."
            Priest-Kings of Gor, page 13

KAJURALIA
Kajuralia (the Holiday of Slaves, the Festival of Slaves) occurs once a year in most northern Gorean cities.  It is a day when the slaves play pranks on the Masters and Mistresses or when the slaves have a FreeMan or FreeWoman serve them.  Some cities observe it on the last day of the twelfth Passage Hand, others on the last day of the fifth month.

"The Kajuralia, or Holiday of Slaves, or Festival of Slaves, occurs in most of the northern, civilized cities of known Gor once a year. The only exception to this that I know of is Port Kar, in the delta of the Vosk. The date of the Kajuralia, however, differs. Many cities celebrate it on the last day of the Twelfth Passage Hand, the day before the beginning of the Waiting Hand; in Ar, however, and certain other cities, it is celebrated on the last day of the fifth month, which is the day preceding the Love Feast."
            Assassin of Gor, page 229

LOVE FEAST
The five days of the fifth passage hand. It is a time of feasts and races and games. It is also a very big time in the sale of slaves from the Curulean in Ar.

"On the other hand, the single greatest period for the sale of slaves is the five days of the Fifth Passage Hand, coming late in the summer, called jointly, the Love Feast."
            Assassin of Gor, page 193
"The Love Feast...is also a time of great feasting, of races and games....The evening of the fourth day of the Love Feast is usually taken as its climax from the point of view of slave sales. The fifth day, special races and games are celebrated, regarded by many Goreans as a fitting consummation of the holidays."
            Assassin of Gor, page 281

THE LOVE WAR
Takes place annually between the Wagon Peoples and Turians. Up to 1000 Free Women each from the Wagon Peoples and Turia stand bound to a stake. A warrior from each side stands as her champion. The winning warrior takes the woman from the opposite side as slave. (Ex. If the Wagon Peoples warrior wins, the Turian woman then becomes a slave of that warrior). The Love War started in ancient times and give the warriors of both sides a chance to show their prowess to the other....the fights are generally to the death.

"The institution of Love War is an ancient one among the Turians and the Wagon Peoples...The games of the Love War are celebrated every spring..."
            Nomads of Gor, page 115
"The theoretical justification of the games of the Love War, from the Turian point of view, is that they provide an excellent arena in which to demonstrate the fierceness and prowess of Turian warriors, thus perhaps intimidating or, at the very least, encouraging the often overbold warriors of the Wagon Peoples to be wary of Turian steel."
            Nomads of Gor, page 116
"As I knew, not just any girl, any more than just any warrior, could participate in the games of the Love War. Only the most beautiful were eligible, and only the most beautiful of these could be chosen."
            Nomads of Gor, page 117

THE OMEN YEAR
Occurs once every ten years among the Wagon Peoples. All four tribes of the Peoples; Tuchuks, Paravaci, Kataii, and Kassars gather for the Omen takings; to see if there will be an Ubar-San (the One Ubar), who would lead all of the Wagon Peoples.

"The games of the Love War are celebrated every spring...whereas the Omen Year occurs only every tenth year."
            Nomads of Gor, page 115
" 'It is the Omen Year,' had said Kamchak of the Tuchuks....It is in the spring that the omens are taken, regarding the possible election of the Ubar San, the One Ubar, he who would be Ubar of all the Wagons, of all the Peoples."
            Nomads of Gor, page 55
"The animals sacrificed, incidentally, are later used for food, so the Omen taking, far from being a waste of animals, is actually a time of feasting and plenty for the Wagon Peoples, who regard the Omen taking, provided it results that no Ubar San is to be chosen, as an occasion for gaiety and festival. As I may have mentioned, no Ubar San had been chosen for more than a  hundred years."
            Nomads of Gor, page 171
"In the thinking of the Wagon Peoples it is called the Omen Year, though the Omen Year is actually a season, rather than a year, which occupies a part of two of their regular years, for the Wagon Peoples calculate the year from the Season of Snows to the Season of Snows...the Omen Year, or season, lasts several months, and consists of three phases, called the Passing of Turia, which takes place in the fall; the Wintering, which takes place north of Turia and commonly south of Cartius, the equator of course lying to the north in this hemisphere; and the Return to Turia, in the spring, or as the Wagon Peoples say, in the Season of Little Grass. It is near Turia, in the spring, that the Omen Year is completed, when the Omens are taken, usually over several days by hundreds of haruspexes, mostly readers of bosk blood and verr livers, to determine if they are favorable for a choosing of a Ubar San, a One Ubar, a Ubar who would be High Ubar, a Ubar of all the Wagon Peoples, a Ubar of all the Peoples, one who could lead them as one people...The omens, I understood, had not been favorable in more than a hundred years."
                Nomads of Gor, pages 11-12
" ' This is the first Omen, said Kamchak, '--the Omen to see if the Omens are propitious to take the Omens.' "
            Nomads of Gor, page 172
" Conrad spoke. 'The Omens have been taken, ' he said.
'They have been read well, ' said Hakimba.
'For the first time in more than a hundred years,' said the Paravaci, 'there is a Ubar San, a One Ubar, Master of the Wagons!'...
'Kamchak,' they cried, 'Ubar San!' "
            Nomads of Gor, page 334

THE PLANTING FEAST
"The Home Stone of a city is the center of various rituals. The next would be the Planting Feast of Sa-Tarna, The Life-Daughter, celebrated early in the season to insure a good harvest. This is a complex feast, celebrated by most Gorean cities, and the observances are numerous and intricate. The details of the rituals are arranged and mostly executed by the Initiates of a given city."
            Tarnsman of Gor, page 68

THE PROCESSION TO THE SEA
Happens annually in Port Kar.
"...in the annual Procession to the Sea, which takes place on the first of En'Kara, the Gorean New Year."
            Raiders of Gor, page 134

VERNAL EQUINOX (NEW YEAR) and THE WAITING HAND
During the Waiting Hand (the week before the New Year begins), many Goreans observe the passing of the old year by eating little, no singing or rejoicing, and painting their door white and attaching the branches of the Brak Bush to discourage the entry of bad luck into the house in the coming year. Then, on the vernal equinox, there is much rejoicing and celebrating.
*
"On the first day of the Waiting Hand, the last five days of the old year, the portals of Ar, including that of even the House of Cernus, had been painted white, and in many of the low caste homes, sealed with pitch, not to be opened until the first day of En'Kara. Almost all doors, including that of the House of Cernus, had nailed to them some branches of the Brak Bush, the leaves of which, when chewed, have a purgative effect. It is thought that the pitch and the branches of the Brak Bush discourage entry of bad luck into the houses of the citizens. During the days of the Waiting Hand the streets are almost deserted, and in the houses there is much fasting, and little conversation, and no song."
            Assassin of Gor, page 211
"...but on the Vernal Equinox, which marks the first day of the new year in most Gorean cities, there is great rejoicing; the doorways are painted green, and there is song...and much feasting..."
            Assassin of Gor, page 78



Measurements
Lengths:
ah-il, ah-ral
"Cloth is measured in the ah-il, which is the length from the elbow to the tip of the middle finger, and the ah-ral, which is ten ah-ils."
Tribesmen of Gor, page 50
*
Hort = 1 and 1/4 inches
"The hort is approximately and inch and a quarter in length."
Tribesmen of Gor, page 49
*
Gorean Foot = 10 horts, approxiamtely 12 1/2 inches
"The Gorean foot, is in my estimation, just slightly longer than the Earth foot; based on the supposition that each of its ten horts is roughly one and one-quarter inches long, I would give the Gorean foot a length of roughly twelve and one-half inches, Earth measure."
Raiders of Gor, pages 127-128
*
pasang = 0.7 miles
"The pasang is a measure of distance on Gor, equivalent approximately to 0.7 of a mile."
Tarnsman of Gor, page 58
*

Weights and Volumes:
gill = liquid volume
"In a matter of perhaps two or three seconds, it had drawn perhaps a gill of liquid."

Outlaw of Gor, page 34
*
Stone = 4 Earth pounds
"I have calculated this from the Weight, a Gorean unit of measurement based on the Stone, which is about four Earth pounds."
Raiders of Gor, page 127
*
tef, tefa, huda:
tef = handful, fingers closed
tefa = 6 tef
huda = 5 tefa
"A handful with the five fingers closed, not open, is a tef. Six such handfuls constitute a tefa, which is a tiny basket. Five such baskets constitute a huda."
Tribesmen of Gor, page 46
*
Weight = 10 Stone = 40 Earth pounds
"A given tree, annually, yields between one and five Gorean weights of fruit. A weight is some ten stone, or some forty Earth pounds."
Tribesmen of Gor, page 37
"I have calculated this from the Weight, a Gorean unit of measurement based on the Stone, which is about four Earth pounds. A Weight is ten Stone."
Raiders of Gor, page 127
*
Money:
"For example, a 'double tarn' is twice the weight of a 'tarn'. It seems there are usually eight tarsk bits in a copper tarsk, and that these are the result of cutting a circular coin in half, and then the halves in half, and then each of these halves in half. An analogy would be cutting the round, flat Gorean loaves of Sa-Tarna bread into eight pieces. There are approximately something like one hundred copper tarsks in a silver tarsk in many cities. Similarly, something like ten silver tarsks would apparently be equivalent, depending on weights, etc., to one gold piece, say, a single 'tarn'. Accordingly on this approach, the equivalencies, very approximately and probably only for certain cities, would be eight tarsk bits to the copper tarsk, one hundred copper tarsks to a silver tarsk, and ten silver tarsks to a gold piece, a single tarn. On this approach, there would be, literally, 8,000 tarsk bits in a single gold piece."
Magicians of Gor, footnotes, page 469
 
 
So, using this formula,
8 copper tarks bits = 1 copper tarsk
100 copper tarsks = 1 silver tarsk
10 silver tarsks = 1 gold tarn
 

"Without speaking, the man took twenty pieces of gold, tarn disks of Ar, of double weight, and gave them to Kuurus..."

Assassin of Gor, page 4
"Hup wildly thrust a small, stubby, knobby hand into his pouch and hurled a coin, a copper tarn disk, to Kuurus who caught it..."
Assassin of Gor, page 13
"Dumbfounded I reached in my pouch and handed her a coin, a silver Tarsk."
Assassin of Gor, page 76
*
Now, to give some idea of what that means in terms of prices of things...
"Five pieces of gold, in its way, incidentally, is also a fortune on Gor. On could live, for example, in many cities, although not in contemporary Ar, with its press on housing and shortages of food, for years on such resources."
Magicians of Gor, pages 468-469
"...In many paga taverns, one may have paga and food, and a girl for the alcove, if one wants for a single copper tarsk. Dancers, to be sure, sometimes cost two."
Renegades of Gor, pages 51-52
*
Now, in an earlier book, the author mentions silver tarn disks (as opposed to tarsks). These are valued a little differently apparently...(or it could be the differences in the cities, as cited in the first quote); but the quotes do seem contradictory
*
"The tarsk is a silver coin, worth forty copper tarn disks."
Assassin of Gor, page 160
*
More on the relative prices on Gor:
"Actually, fifty silver tarn disks was an extremely high price, and indicated the girl was probably of high caste as well as extremely beautiful. An ordinary girl, of low caste, comely but untrained, might, depending on the market, sell for as little as five or as many as thirty tarn disks."
Outlaw of Gor, page 193
"A golden tarn disk was a small fortune. It would buy one of the great birds themselves, or as many as five slave girls."
Tarnsman of Gor, page 191

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