Book 15. (1 results) Rogue of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
340
Is it not the fairest and the most fascinating who are harvested for the slave pits of this world, who are found worthy of the collar!" There was much in what she said, but the professional criteria used in such matters were more complex, more subtle, than she seemed to realize.
Is it not the fairest and the most fascinating who are harvested for the slave pits of this world, who are found worthy of the collar!" There was much in what she said, but the professional criteria used in such matters were more complex, more subtle, than she seemed to realize.
- (Rogue of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #340)
Book 15. (7 results) Rogue of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
337
When one wished, she might be lashed to silence.
1
338
She was only a slave.
1
339
"It is not just any woman on my world," she said, "who is brought here to serve masters, her betters! Surely we are selected for interest, and beauty.
1
340
Is it not the fairest and the most fascinating who are harvested for the slave pits of this world, who are found worthy of the collar!" There was much in what she said, but the professional criteria used in such matters were more complex, more subtle, than she seemed to realize.
1
341
One of the major criteria utilized by slavers, for example, was the native intelligence of the potential acquisition.
1
342
Gorean men, as men of Earth seem seldom to do, prize high intelligence in women.
1
343
Perhaps that is because their own intelligence, on the whole, is high and they might be bored with their properties were the intelligence of the properties not similarly high.
When one wished, she might be lashed to silence.
She was only a slave.
"It is not just any woman on my world," she said, "who is brought here to serve masters, her betters! Surely we are selected for interest, and beauty.
Is it not the fairest and the most fascinating who are harvested for the slave pits of this world, who are found worthy of the collar!" There was much in what she said, but the professional criteria used in such matters were more complex, more subtle, than she seemed to realize.
One of the major criteria utilized by slavers, for example, was the native intelligence of the potential acquisition.
Gorean men, as men of Earth seem seldom to do, prize high intelligence in women.
Perhaps that is because their own intelligence, on the whole, is high and they might be bored with their properties were the intelligence of the properties not similarly high.
- (Rogue of Gor, Chapter 1)