A Girl is Taught what it is to Dance for Men

"You will begin at the beginning," he said.
"You will perform the entire dance,
from beginning to end, for us."
"Please, no," I said.
I could not stand the thought,
the terrifying thought,
of putting myself,
in the beauty of dance,
before men such as these.
I could not even dream
of letting such men see me dance.
It was utterly unthinkable. thusly to common men,
to banal, safe, inoffensive, trivial, conquered men, men of the sort I knew.
Who knew what they might think
, how they might be tempted to act,
what they might be prompted to do?
The piece was excellent,
in its melodic lines,
its moods, and shifts.
It was one of my favorites
. But never before had I danced to it in terror.
Never before had I danced to it before men.
Then it finished in a swirl
and I spun and sank to my knees before them,
my head down,
my hands on my thighs,
in a common ending position for such a dance.
Never before, however, I think,
had I been so suddenly
and deeply struck with the meaning of this ending position,
it following the beauty of the dance,
its presentation of the dancer
in a posture of submission."
(Dancer of Gor, Pages 32-33)