Book 26. (1 results) Witness of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
213
Too, for what it is worth, intelligent women are commonly better looking than less intelligent women, a feature which is not without its appeal to masters, and one which makes them more likely candidates for the slavers' ropes and irons; too, they also tend to be more helplessly responsive in the arms of a master.
Too, for what it is worth, intelligent women are commonly better looking than less intelligent women, a feature which is not without its appeal to masters, and one which makes them more likely candidates for the slavers' ropes and irons; too, they also tend to be more helplessly responsive in the arms of a master.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 13, Sentence #213)
Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
210
Intelligent, she derives more from the uncompromising completeness of her state and the deliciousness of her domination.
13
211
She is expected, you see, to serve with sensitivities, delicacies, diligences and subtleties beyond the ken of simpler women.
13
212
Our intelligence, interestingly, makes us more the properties of our masters, just as one will demand, and have, more from an intelligent animal than from one less intelligent; we are more easily controlled in a thousand ways by as little as a glance or gesture, because we grasp what is required; our bodies, too, tend to be more sensitive, and this puts us the more at the mercy of our masters, and any disciplines he may choose to impose upon us; if we attempt to conceal our intelligence, in order to have less expected of us, we are whipped; our service is to be perfect, and well beyond that of a less intelligent woman; too, our faults or shortcomings are dealt with more severely, for we should know better.
13
213
Too, for what it is worth, intelligent women are commonly better looking than less intelligent women, a feature which is not without its appeal to masters, and one which makes them more likely candidates for the slavers' ropes and irons; too, they also tend to be more helplessly responsive in the arms of a master.
13
214
They tend, as well, to be more in touch with their inner selves and secret needs, and less the victims of negativistic conditioning programs.
13
215
The intelligent woman often knows what she is missing and what she wants, whereas the less intelligent woman is often little more than the troubled, unwitting victim of the prescriptions and pathologies of a negativistic culture within which she is, unbeknownst to herself, imprisoned.
13
216
"I am a helpless free woman," said the free woman, wheedlingly, "and you are a free man.
Intelligent, she derives more from the uncompromising completeness of her state and the deliciousness of her domination.
She is expected, you see, to serve with sensitivities, delicacies, diligences and subtleties beyond the ken of simpler women.
Our intelligence, interestingly, makes us more the properties of our masters, just as one will demand, and have, more from an intelligent animal than from one less intelligent; we are more easily controlled in a thousand ways by as little as a glance or gesture, because we grasp what is required; our bodies, too, tend to be more sensitive, and this puts us the more at the mercy of our masters, and any disciplines he may choose to impose upon us; if we attempt to conceal our intelligence, in order to have less expected of us, we are whipped; our service is to be perfect, and well beyond that of a less intelligent woman; too, our faults or shortcomings are dealt with more severely, for we should know better.
Too, for what it is worth, intelligent women are commonly better looking than less intelligent women, a feature which is not without its appeal to masters, and one which makes them more likely candidates for the slavers' ropes and irons; too, they also tend to be more helplessly responsive in the arms of a master.
They tend, as well, to be more in touch with their inner selves and secret needs, and less the victims of negativistic conditioning programs.
The intelligent woman often knows what she is missing and what she wants, whereas the less intelligent woman is often little more than the troubled, unwitting victim of the prescriptions and pathologies of a negativistic culture within which she is, unbeknownst to herself, imprisoned.
"I am a helpless free woman," said the free woman, wheedlingly, "and you are a free man.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 13)