Book 26. (1 results) Witness of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
19
367
Brazenness can be cause for discipline.
Brazenness can be cause for discipline.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 19, Sentence #367)
Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
19
364
Quickly I thrust my head down to the stones.
19
365
It behooves a slave girl to be careful of whose eyes she meets, and how she meets them.
19
366
We must be careful of looking too boldly into the eyes of our superiors, in particular, unknown free men or women.
19
367
Brazenness can be cause for discipline.
19
368
We do not wish to be punished.
19
369
This is not to deny, of course, the expected and appropriate meetings of eyes in thousands of contexts and times, as in attempting to read one's fate in the eyes of the master, in examining them to learn if one is in favor or disfavor, in meeting them when commanded to do so, as when he examines us to see if we are lying, or when he wishes us to see the sternness in his eyes, that he is displeased, as in trying to read his will, that we may serve him better, as in looking up at him in rapture, squirming in his power, as in gazing into his eyes, on lonely beaches and in sheltered glades, with love.
19
370
But if it can be dangerous for a slave to look too boldly into the eyes of a mere stranger, if such can invite a kick or a cuff, or even a whipping, imagine how wary one would be of meeting, and how one would fear to meet, the eyes of one such as the gaunt figure, the eyes of one seemingly unbalanced, eyes in which, it seemed, only too clearly blazed vanity, cruelty, and madness.
Quickly I thrust my head down to the stones.
It behooves a slave girl to be careful of whose eyes she meets, and how she meets them.
We must be careful of looking too boldly into the eyes of our superiors, in particular, unknown free men or women.
Brazenness can be cause for discipline.
We do not wish to be punished.
This is not to deny, of course, the expected and appropriate meetings of eyes in thousands of contexts and times, as in attempting to read one's fate in the eyes of the master, in examining them to learn if one is in favor or disfavor, in meeting them when commanded to do so, as when he examines us to see if we are lying, or when he wishes us to see the sternness in his eyes, that he is displeased, as in trying to read his will, that we may serve him better, as in looking up at him in rapture, squirming in his power, as in gazing into his eyes, on lonely beaches and in sheltered glades, with love.
But if it can be dangerous for a slave to look too boldly into the eyes of a mere stranger, if such can invite a kick or a cuff, or even a whipping, imagine how wary one would be of meeting, and how one would fear to meet, the eyes of one such as the gaunt figure, the eyes of one seemingly unbalanced, eyes in which, it seemed, only too clearly blazed vanity, cruelty, and madness.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 19)