Book 18. (1 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
62
In the high cities, of course, in an urbanized environment, literacy is far more common than in the countryside, even among the lower castes.
In the high cities, of course, in an urbanized environment, literacy is far more common than in the countryside, even among the lower castes.
- (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #62)
Book 18. (7 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
59
Too, for example, many warriors, despite being of high caste, take great pride in being strangers to letters.
2
60
Many seem to feel that literacy is something to conceal if one is a warrior; that literacy is for, say, poets, or scribes, and not something appropriate for those trained to the mud of the field or the reins of the tarn, for those whose province it is to do war, to command, to fight and rule.
2
61
"One can always buy a slave for such things".
2
62
In the high cities, of course, in an urbanized environment, literacy is far more common than in the countryside, even among the lower castes.
2
63
It might be mentioned that literacy in a slave girl can improve her price, but it does not always do so.
2
64
Few men buy a slave for her literacy; her intelligence is another matter.
2
65
Some highly intelligent men who hold reading and writing in contempt, however unreasonably, enjoy buying a sophisticated, beautiful, literate slave girl, once of high caste, and take great pleasure in ruthlessly mastering every cell in her beautiful body; though literate, and doubtless initially contemptuous of him, she soon learns in his arms that he is her master; too, it will take her little time to suspect, or learn, that his own intelligence, raw and untutored though it may be, is far superior to her own; it is pleasant then to have her, begging, at one's feet.
Too, for example, many warriors, despite being of high caste, take great pride in being strangers to letters.
Many seem to feel that literacy is something to conceal if one is a warrior; that literacy is for, say, poets, or scribes, and not something appropriate for those trained to the mud of the field or the reins of the tarn, for those whose province it is to do war, to command, to fight and rule.
"One can always buy a slave for such things".
In the high cities, of course, in an urbanized environment, literacy is far more common than in the countryside, even among the lower castes.
It might be mentioned that literacy in a slave girl can improve her price, but it does not always do so.
Few men buy a slave for her literacy; her intelligence is another matter.
Some highly intelligent men who hold reading and writing in contempt, however unreasonably, enjoy buying a sophisticated, beautiful, literate slave girl, once of high caste, and take great pleasure in ruthlessly mastering every cell in her beautiful body; though literate, and doubtless initially contemptuous of him, she soon learns in his arms that he is her master; too, it will take her little time to suspect, or learn, that his own intelligence, raw and untutored though it may be, is far superior to her own; it is pleasant then to have her, begging, at one's feet.
- (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 2)