The Slave's whip Dance
A new dancer came forth upon the floor and began, a tall brute
near her with the leather, to perform a whip dance...
...In the whip dance, though there are various versions of it,
depending on the locality, the girl is almost never struck with the whip,
unless, of course, she does not perform well. When the whip is cracked,
however, the girl will commonly react as though she has been struck. this,
conjoined with the music, and her beauty, and the obvious symbolism of
her beauty beneath total male descipline, can be extremely, powerfully
erotic. In an elegant, civilized context, one of beauty and music, it makes
clear and bespeaks the raw and essential primitives of the ancient, genetic,
biological sexual realtionship of men and women....
The whip dance continued before us.. The whip dance was now approaching
its climax...
I turned my attention to the dancer on the floor. She lay now on
her back, one knee lifted, her arms at her sides, palms down, before the
brute with his whip, who towered over her. Her head, too, was turned to
the side. Then she turned her head to face the brute who tyrannized her.
She looked deeply into his eyes. then, delicately, in a graceful gesture,
she turned her hands, putting their backs to the floor, exposing her palms,
and the soft flesh of her palms, to him, indicating her surrender, her
submission, her vulnerability and her readiness.
There was applause, the striking of the left shoulder, from the
tables.
The brute then crouched beside her and encircled her neck with
the coils of his whip. He drew her to her knees then before him. She looked
up at him, her neck in the whip coils, his.
There was more applause. Then the brute looked to Policrates, who
indicated a table. He then pulled the girl to her feet and, running her
over the tiles, and then releasing the coils from her neck, threw her stumbling
into the arms of waiting pirates who, with a cry of pleasure, sized her
and began to work their lusty wills upon her. There was more applause,
and laughter.
From #15. Rogue of Gor, pg. 191, by John Norman.
A Port Cos Slave's Whip Dance
Example Whip Dance