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"discipline "

Book 26. (1 results) Witness of Gor (Individual Quote)

Too, of course, knowing the name, if the slave has one, makes it easier, particularly in a situation such as the pens, to keep track of things, to inform others, and such, for the punishment for later infractions may be considerably more severe if it seems the slave has failed to profit from her earlier discipline, and so on. - (Witness of Gor, Chapter 13, Sentence #790)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
13 790 Too, of course, knowing the name, if the slave has one, makes it easier, particularly in a situation such as the pens, to keep track of things, to inform others, and such, for the punishment for later infractions may be considerably more severe if it seems the slave has failed to profit from her earlier discipline, and so on.

Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
13 787 He knew my name, that which I had been given, that on my collar, which, perhaps, had been worn by many others before me! I recalled that some of the guards in the pens did not care to administer a formal whipping to a woman, as opposed to some admonitory blows now and then, until they knew her name, assuming she had been given one.
13 788 Punishment on this world is often construed in a somewhat personal fashion, as something passing from a particular master to a particular slave.
13 789 This has a way of making it more meaningful to the slave.
13 790 Too, of course, knowing the name, if the slave has one, makes it easier, particularly in a situation such as the pens, to keep track of things, to inform others, and such, for the punishment for later infractions may be considerably more severe if it seems the slave has failed to profit from her earlier discipline, and so on.
13 791 I did not know my name.
13 792 But he knew it.
13 793 "Why did she do that?" asked one of the women by the wall.
He knew my name, that which I had been given, that on my collar, which, perhaps, had been worn by many others before me! I recalled that some of the guards in the pens did not care to administer a formal whipping to a woman, as opposed to some admonitory blows now and then, until they knew her name, assuming she had been given one. Punishment on this world is often construed in a somewhat personal fashion, as something passing from a particular master to a particular slave. This has a way of making it more meaningful to the slave. Too, of course, knowing the name, if the slave has one, makes it easier, particularly in a situation such as the pens, to keep track of things, to inform others, and such, for the punishment for later infractions may be considerably more severe if it seems the slave has failed to profit from her earlier discipline, and so on. I did not know my name. But he knew it. "Why did she do that?" asked one of the women by the wall. - (Witness of Gor, Chapter 13)