The girl wore Gorean dancing silk. It hung low upon her bared hips, and fell to her ankles. It
was scarlet, diaphanous. A front corner of the silk was taken behind her and thrust, loose and
draped, into the rolled silk knotted about her hips; a back corner of the silk was drawn before
her and thrust loosely, draped, into the rolled silk at her right hip. Low on her hips she wore a
belt of small denomination, threaded, overlapping golden coins. A veil concealed her muchly
from us, it thrust into the strap of the coined halter at her left shoulder, and into the coined
belt at her right hip. On her arms she wore numerous armlets and bracelets. On the thumb and
first finger of both her left and right hand were golden finger cymbals. On her throat was a
collar.
He clapped his hands. Immediately the girl stood beautifully, alert, before us, her arms high,
wrists outward. The musicians, to one side, stirred, readying themselves. Their leader was a
czehar player.
He looked at the girl. He clapped his hands, sharply.
There was a clear note of the finger cymbals, sharp, delicate, bright, and the slave girl danced
before us.
I regarded the coins threaded, overlapping, on her belt and halter. They took the firelight
beautifully. They glinted, but were of small worth. One dresses such a woman in cheap coins;
she is slave. Her hand moved to the veil at her right hip. Her head was turned away, as though
unwilling and reluctant, yet knowing she must obey.
The dancer was now moving slowly to the music.
I turned to watch the dancer. She danced well. At the moment she writhed upon the "slave
pole," it fixing her in place. There is no actual pole, of course, but sometimes it is difficult to
believe there is not. The girl imagines that a pole, slender, supple, swaying, transfixes her body,
holding her helplessly. About this imaginary pole, it constituting a hypothetical center of
gravity, she moves, undulating, swaying, sometimes yielding to it in ecstasy, sometimes fighting
it, it always holding her in perfect place, its captive. The control achieved by the use of the
"slave pole" is remarkable. An incredible, voluptuous tension is almost immediately generated,
visible in the dancer's body, and kinetically felt by those who watch. I heard men at the table
cry out with pleasure. The dancer's hands were at her thighs. She regarded them, angrily, and
still she moved. Her shoulder lifted and fell; her hands touched her breasts and shoulder; her
head was back, and then again she glared at the men, angrily. Her arms were high, very high.
Her hips moved, swaying. Then, the music suddenly silent, she was absolutely still. Her left hand
was at her thigh; her right high above her head; her eyes were on her hip; frozen into a hip
sway; then there was again a bright, clear flash of finger cymbals, and the music began again,
and again she moved, helpless on the pole. Men threw coins at her feet.
The dancer moaned, crying out, as though in agony. Still she remained impaled upon the slave
pole, its prisoner.
The hips of the dancer now moved, seemingly in isolation from the rest of her body, though her
wrists and hands, ever so slightly, moved to the music.
Samos, with a snap of his fingers, freed the dancer from the slave pole. She moved, turning,
toward us. Before us, loosening her veil at the right hip, she danced. Then she took it from her
left shoulder, where it had been tucked beneath the strap of her halter. With the veil loose,
covering her, holding it in her hands, she danced before us. then she regarded us, dark-eyed,
over the veil; it turned about her body, then,.. she wafted the silk about her, immeshing her in
its gossamer softness. I saw the parted lips, the eyes wide with horror, of the kneeling,
harnessed girl, through the light, yellow veil; then the dancer had drawn it away from her, and,
turning, was again in the center of the floor.
The dancer whirled near us, then enveloped me in her veil. Within the secrecy of the veil,
binding us together, she moved her body slowly before me, lips parted, moaning... I slowly
removed her veil from her, then threw it aside. Then with my right hand, the Tuchuk quiva in it,
while still holding her with my left, as she continued to move to the music, I, behind her back,
cut the halter she wore from her. I then thrust her from me, before the tables, that she might
better please the guests of Samos, first slaver of Port Kar. She looked at me reproachfully,
but, seeing my eyes, turned frightened to the men, hands over her head, to please them. Never
in all this, of course, had she lost the music in her body. The men cried out, pleased with her
beauty.
Tribesmen of Gor, pg. 8, by John Norman.