"pavlova" poems
THERE is a queen in China, or maybe it's in Spain,
And birthdays and holidays such praises can be heard
Of her unblemished lineaments, a whiteness with no
stain,
That she might be that sprightly girl trodden by a
bird;
And there's a score of duchesses, surpassing woma-
kind,
Or who have found a painter to make them so for pay
And smooth out stain and blemish with the elegance
of his mind:
I knew a phoenix in my youth, so let them have their
day.
The young men every night applaud their Gaby's
laughing eye,
And Ruth St. Denis had more charm although she had
poor luck;
From nineteen hundred nine or ten, Pavlova's had the
cry
And there's a player in the States who gathers up her
cloak
And flings herself out of the room when Juliet would
be bride
With all a woman's passion, a child's imperious way,
And there are -- but no matter if there are scores beside:
I knew a phoenix in my youth, so let them have their
day.
There's Margaret and Marjorie and Dorothy and Nan,
A Daphne and a Mary who live in privacy;
One's had her fill of lovers, another's had but one,
Another boasts, "I pick and choose and have but two
or three.'
If head and limb have beauty and the instep's high and
light
They can spread out what sail they please for all I have
to say,
Be but the breakers of men's hearts or engines of
delight:
I knew a phoenix in my youth, so let them have their
day.
There'll be that crowd, that barbarous crowd, through
all the centuries,
And who can say but some young belle may walk and
talk men wild
Who is my beauty's equal, though that my heart denies,
But not the exact likeness, the simplicity of a child,
And that proud look as though she had gazed into the
burning sun,
And all the shapely body no tittle gone astray.
I mourn for that most lonely thing; and yet God's will
be done:
I knew a phoenix in my youth, so let them have their
day.
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Come, let us pity those who are better off than we are.
Come, my friend, and remember
that the rich have butlers and no friends,
And we have friends and no butlers.
Come, let us pity the married and the unmarried.
Dawn enters with little feet
like a gilded Pavlova
And I am near my desire.
Nor has life in it aught better
Than this hour of clear coolness
the hour of waking together.
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He always wanted to be a ballerina
To dance so dainty up on his toes.
But everyone could see under his tutu
And the bump they saw was not his nose.
He had the talent and the perfect figure
To perform the balletic steps just right.
There was no way he could ever manage
To keep that ample package out of sight.
Jete, jete. Plie, Plie.
Dance like that’s all you want to do.
Dancing straight, or dancing gay,
Do whatever is right for you.
Hands and toes pointed fine
Back and necks held straight.
Maybe it’s not your time to get picked.
But make it worth their wait.
His skin was smooth just like a swaddling baby
There was no concern about flat *******
Many ballerinas are rather mannish
With not much curvature to their chests.
So he could pass completely undetected
Androgyny was his great good friend
But any moment when he swirled about
Tutu would lift and then spell the spell would end.
Jete, jete. Plie, Plie.
Dance like that’s all you want to do.
Dancing straight, or dancing gay,
Do whatever is right for you.
Hands and toes pointed fine
Back and necks held straight.
Maybe it’s not your time to get picked.
But make it worth their wait.
He never really loved the danseur posture
The holds and lifts and hearty leaps about.
But in the world of ballet and its leaders
Ballerina guys are always left out.
Still he danced in tutu at auditions.
He heard the comments, paid them no mind.
If they could not see grandly male Pavlova
That meant that all of them were blind.
Jete, jete. Plie, Plie.
Dance like that’s all you want to do.
Dancing straight, or dancing gay,
Do whatever is right for you.
Hands and toes pointed fine
Back and necks held straight.
Maybe it’s not your time to get picked.
But make it worth their wait.
Aug 7, 2015
Aug 7, 2015 at 9:07 PM UTC
Betty Coutu drives a mean Rambler
takes us public school, heathens
to catechism on Saturday morn
Smokes a cigarette like a prima-ballerina
Shifts three on the wheel
drives that clutch to the floor
with her thick leg
Makes the engine roar
a little
“to warm it up”
Turns with the grace of swan
Pavlova or belladonna
Something of beauty
just to watch her
three-finger the wheel through a turn around
all while taking a drag
exhales to ceiling
to music on the radio
Elvis? Roy O, Patsy Cline
circa 1959
Betty's hair is short, uncombed
but she's not without lipstick
lights her smoke with amazing matchbook skills
Calm
like a woman who does it often
takes on wear
with I'm in love, and I don't give a care
She shifts and turns
cigarette balanced like gossip on lips
or between
those first two fingertips
Smoke swirling
amid kids squabbling and whining
in the back seat
No belts back then
till Dad got home
to keep them in line
But, I bet on Betty every time
to get us there
I want to drive like her, so badly!
I sit beside her-- ossified
watching
her smoke and handle
like a total expert
I am distracted
and will surely fumble
my catechism answers
for the nuns
cataclysmically
She drops us off by an icy foot slide
I swear to God to stop back later when we're done
...with prayer and penance
recitation... and resolvings
to sin no more
Once we're out the door--
back to that forbidden foot-slide
Always had a plan for fun
So did Betty's son
the hemophiliac
Bless myself like an Olympian
and pray for Johnny
before he joins me for a run
hemophilia:
a medical condition in which the ability of the blood to clot is severely reduced, causing the sufferer to bleed severely from even a slight injury. The condition is typically caused by a hereditary lack of a coagulation factor, most often factor VIII.
Mar 24, 2019
Mar 24, 2019 at 7:31 PM UTC
I am from no place for I have never had one home
Having packed too many suitcases and saying goodbye to just as many friends
I am from cheesy Italian pizza in Melbourne to the smoke of shisha in Arabia
From raw fish and coconuts in Fiji to Aunty's famous Kiwi pavlova
I am from the aroma of coffee being breathed in my face as a child
And from losing my breath chasing dad as he drove off to work
I am from long, quiet chats with mother by the ocean
To ferocious one-way conversations as she screamed from the sidelines
I am from a family choir whose desire for perfection spiralled me into years of silence
And the learning the guitar to compensate so I wouldn't feel like an outsider
I am from laughter and I am from mischief
From throwing the sister's cat out a two-story window to emulating the Mask of Zoro with steak knives in the kitchen
I am from hours of swimming laps and hours sprinting on the track
I am from the dewy, green grass of a rugby field upon whom I have many times laid writing in agony
My body has eleven scars from the surgeon's scalpel
And I am a survivor of divine heart surgery as I processed shattered dreams
I am now in pursuit of change everyday
Change to be more like Him who took my sins away
Nov 20, 2017
Nov 20, 2017 at 2:59 PM UTC
Mr Kalashnikov I'll ask you nicely
Please don't point that thing at me
Laszlo Biro how nice to see you
Without you where would we be?
Mr Molotov may I remind you
You are in polite company
May I present the Earl of Sandwich
Do partake of his wares
And special desserts are served soon after
Presented in person by Anna Pavlova
The Duke of Wellington brought in some mud
Mr Macintosh is expecting a flood
Candido Jacuzzi and Joseph Pilates
Appear to be making friends
Henry Shrapnel and Joseph Guillotin
Who invited them?
Ferdinand von Zeppelin,
Perhaps you would like a schnapps?
Mr Winchester, Mr Colt, Mr Gatling, Mr Lewis
So many gunmen I'm alarmed I confess
May I trouble you Mr Hoover
To help tidy up the mess?
Nov 17, 2014
Nov 17, 2014 at 4:00 PM UTC
English Translations of Russian Poems by Vera Pavlova
Shattered
I shattered your heart;
now I limp through the shards
barefoot.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Seasons
Winter―a beast.
Spring―a bud.
Summer―a bug.
Autumn―a bird.
Otherwise I'm a woman.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Pygmalion
Immortalize me!
With your bare, warm palm
please sculpt and mold my malleable snow.
Polish me until I glow.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Scales
Scales:
on the one hand joy;
on the other sorrow.
Sorrow is weightier;
therefore joy
elevates.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Muse
A muse inspires when she arrives,
a wife when she departs,
a mistress when she’s absent.
Would you like me to manage all that simultaneously?
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Stone Wall
You, my dear, are my shielding stone:
to sing behind, or bash my head on.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Fluttering
Remember me as I am this instant: abrupt and absent,
my words fluttering like moths trapped in a curtain.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Flight
I have been dropped
and fell from such
immense heights
for so long that
perhaps I still
have enough
time to learn
how to
fly.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
God saw
it was good.
Adam saw
it was impressive.
Eve saw
it was improvable.
—Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Three versions of Vera Pavlova's "tightrope" poem:
I test the tightrope,
balancing a child
in each arm.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
I walk a tightrope,
balanced by a child
in each arm.
—Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
I test the tightrope,
balanced by a child
in each arm.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Vera Pavlova is a Russian poet. Born in Moscow, she is a graduate of the Schnittke College of Music and the Gnessin Academy of Music, where she specialized in music history. She is the author of twenty collections of poetry, four opera librettos, and the lyrics to two cantatas. Her poetry has appeared in The New Yorker and other major literary publications. Keywords/Tags: Pavlova, Russian, translations, epigrams, woman, female, shards, seasons, scales, tightrope, child, arm, sorrow, joy, shattered, heart, broken, glass, limp, limping, barefoot, snow, sculpt, mold, polish
Mar 20, 2020
Mar 20, 2020 at 1:25 AM UTC
feet buried under sparkling sand,
waves overlapping in colors of dreams
Sky meets water meets earth , define each world in-between
Mountains cities clouds on the skyline
Passion fruit pavlova for the eyes
Hush sprinkle goes the raging waves
who whisper wisdom about thirsty pirates
Hands grab the sculpted sand
Caressed into undulations of small time dunes by the shifting winds
Water , Sand , Clouds , Dimensions
Kites fly delicately in the shining sun who is best friends with the kites
Bali is the Magicians home - an island enclosed in the palm of a mystic glove
Aug 14, 2013
Aug 14, 2013 at 2:13 AM UTC
I used to love that
perfume you would wear:
Pavlova, by pavot.
The name rings a bell.
In the post ****** heat
I remember it well.
Mandarin Orange with
raspberry ,musk,
Jasmine and Hyacinth
all that came between us.
Now the scent is redolent
of another place and time.
It returns me to our youth
in that summer of sixty nine
It of course has no such power
to make me, once more, twenty three-
but its subtle hints of citrus
gives rise to my
memory.
May 25, 2012
May 25, 2012 at 6:23 AM UTC
Vera Pavlova: English Translations of Russian Poems by Vera Pavlova
Shattered
I shattered your heart;
now I limp through the shards
barefoot.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Seasons
Winter―a beast.
Spring―a bud.
Summer―a bug.
Autumn―a bird.
The rest of the time I'm a woman.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Pygmalion
Immortalize me!
With your bare, warm palm
please sculpt and mold my malleable snow.
Polish me until I glow.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Scales
Scales:
on the one hand joy;
on the other sorrow.
Sorrow is the weightier;
therefore joy
elevates.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Muse
A muse inspires when she arrives,
a wife when she departs,
a mistress when she’s absent.
Would you like me to manage all that simultaneously?
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Stone Wall
You, my dear, are my shielding stone:
to sing behind, or bash my head on.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Fluttering
Remember me as I am this instant: abrupt and absent,
my words fluttering like moths trapped in a curtain.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Flight
I have been dropped
and fell from such
immense heights
for so long that
perhaps I still
have enough
time to learn
how to
fly.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Three versions of Vera Pavlova's "tightrope" poem:
I test the tightrope,
balancing a child
in each arm.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
I walk a tightrope,
balanced by a child
in each arm.
—Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
I test the tightrope,
balanced by a child
in each arm.
―Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
God saw
it was good.
Adam saw
it was impressive.
Eve saw
it was improvable.
—Vera Pavlova, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Vera Pavlova is a Russian poet. Born in Moscow, she is a graduate of the Schnittke College of Music and the Gnessin Academy of Music, where she specialized in music history. She is the author of twenty collections of poetry, four opera librettos, and the lyrics to two cantatas. Her poetry has appeared in The New Yorker and other major literary publications. Keywords/Tags: Pavlova, Russian, translations, epigrams, woman, female, shards, seasons, scales, tightrope, child, arm, sorrow, joy, shattered, heart, broken, glass, limp, limping, barefoot, snow, sculpt, mold, polish
Mar 20, 2020
Mar 20, 2020 at 2:37 AM UTC
It's been four days since Christmas
All I've done is watch tv
cooking with the leftovers
two on how to cook the tree
turkey this and rolled up that
jamie, gordon and the rest
it was all so ****** boring
then...Nigella...she's the best
that voice that melts the butter
the jokes that go both ways
a sausage roll from her soft hands
would go on and on for days
she makes it all seem easy
even though it may not be
i didn't know the girl had hair
until christmas of '03
i've cooked all kinds of pastries
turkey pies and turkey stew
but, watching her this christmas
she showed me something new
she made a nice pavlova
god, i love the way she speaks
now, i just can't stop my thinking
of nigella's nice stiff peaks
Dec 28, 2014
Dec 28, 2014 at 3:37 PM UTC
Whilst we had that pavlova frosting on our lips and noses,
I had a Pavlovian reaction that made me gasp.
I like you.
I fancy this gorgeous, wide-eyed, laughing boy
who has the kind of notes in his laugh that makes me fundamentally
agree
with the very fact,
it is okay to laugh at myself.
This utterly imperfect being looking like he does not give a ****
is
colouring
my soul
yellow.
And my lips could never say more Thank you s onto the Cupid's bow of his lips.
For, he taught me how to be happy by myself, with only my shadow in sunlight.
To colour in the blank edges of soul with something a little gorgeous and a pinch of something rather
different.
May 16, 2014
May 16, 2014 at 9:23 AM UTC
you see i love christmas ya see
lots of lollies and cakes oh yeah
followed by a nice cold beer
christmas in australia
we have gum trees and bottlebrush
and koala bears and emus so cool
people suffering that is horrible
how about we save our christmas shopping money dude
to givs a poor person a gift
and there is pavlova and trifle yeah
and white christmas and mushroom cakes to share
ornaments on the christmas tree and lights on outside
yeah, people looking at our lights and they love it when they shine so bright
right into this great dark night
christmas in australia
people are in hospitall, feeling very very sick
and there isn’t that much to do, as to give them gifts of joy
maybe a card decorated with coloured flowers yeah
and a pink and yellow gingerbread house
which is made out of real gingerbread
so they have other things besides hospital food to eat
people are at war today
fighting for what they believe is right
they are away from their houses every day and night
i wish they were all at home celebrating christmas in australia
jingle bells jingle bells
jingle all the way, christmas in australia on a scorching summers day
jingle bells jingle bells
christmas time is beaut
oh what fun it is to ride in a rusty holden ute
we travel up to darwin as well as cairns, broome, katherine and townsville
we see the poor people say, give us a dollar bill
you say yes, but i could regret it when they spend it up on *****
a piece of you thinks they deserve to party, oh yeah they do
being christmas and all, and then we go and sing carols, my friend
in the old church hall
ayers rock and coober pedy, are great places to see
the christmas pageant in adelaide is put on so wonderfully
melbourne and sydney light up the towns voices with carols in the domain and music bowl
and you see all the favourite stars lift up their voices and sing
and whether your a man who enjoys a can of beer by the tele
or a devoted family man looking at carols and lights
we all have fun, ruppity *** ***
at christmas in australia
Dec 13, 2015
Dec 13, 2015 at 12:31 AM UTC
.
She watched as the poor stood at the back of a truck and
received their portion of rice
and thought,
now that’s nice
Then gazed as the middle class pulled up to a window
and were handed burgers, fries and shakes
and thought,
that’s all it takes
She then smiled as a white gloved, tuxedo wearing
handsome young man presented her with
roasted duck with pork and lentils,
macaroni and brie with crab, mushroom risotto with peas
and pomegranate pavlova with pistachios and honey
becoming a happy observer
and thought,
it’s so nice to have a private server
Aug 26, 2016
Aug 26, 2016 at 12:24 PM UTC
I could do this forever.
It's like
Running into an old friend
And sitting down for just one cup
Of coffee, then realizing you've had five.
It's like
Settling into the plump plush pillows
In a darkened room as the beginning credits
To your weekend marathon roll across the screen.
It's like
Shaking out that huge-ass beach towel
On the warm sand and pulling out
The stack of super-fast-read ****** paperbacks.
It's like
The first bite of Pavlova
And digging in and digging in
Until the whole cake is gone and you don't regret it at all.
Its like
Finding that last reserve of strength
To channel all your power into your fist
And strike the bag so hard it loses sand.
It's like
All the things I love to do
And doing them all at the same time.
That's what this is.
Jun 20, 2014
Jun 20, 2014 at 12:36 AM UTC
Russian Duchess of Glory,
Chilling precision behind every turn,
And here I am cracking a joke because I can't even waltz.
Anna Pavlova,
Can you see yourself in the full scope of your beauty tonight?
Can we both stand to be witty,
Or find it easy to live past thirty?
Why is it always more elegant in the moonlight,
Regardless of the action,
From East Europe to the sad blue East Kentucky...
Have you once looked me in the eyes to judge how honest I've been in reading your history...
Oh, Anna Pavlova,
If you only knew that beauty would hold weight in modern reincarnation.
///
Still I wait for your autograph.
You who I dare to look upon through seldom borrowed books.
And if you pay regard at all,
To any of this, that is,
Then how much will you take hold of,
How long can you maintain your balance...
And are your pirouettes more acts of orbit
Or simply spinning out and away from me?
May 4, 2016
May 4, 2016 at 11:38 PM UTC
Coffee makes you ****
Even if you just had a **** if you drink coffee,
you will **** again.
its like some weird impulse,
like pavlova dogs and the bell.
I wonder,
while taking a **** though not having had a coffee today,
if we were somehow enslaved by some previous higher society
of mass corporation
that made us drink coffee and **** when we had it,
as some survival method no doubt.
Apr 13, 2015
Apr 13, 2015 at 8:37 AM UTC
he smells like a vintage petit café from 40s; fresh coffes, cigarettes and pavlova
Jun 16, 2020
Jun 16, 2020 at 7:03 PM UTC
Mother's Day, Mother's Day, Mother's Day,
Mother's Day, Mother's Day, can change the color of the car,
it can be a fire. Pavlova's hot Velveeta.
Money from a firm, for example, future money,
Russia and yen. Beautiful pictures.
What kind of woman are you looking for? ||
Anniversary against Santa Barbara land. |
Does the description of the Saturn
Expository translate to the women in the United States?
In modern history, Italian is a song written by Wall
covering Pi and English, the German German.
These are, for example, English, Spanish, European cities,
camel's heads, Spanish, Prime | |Minister Pavlova at high school,
and his powerful rock music, motorcycles,
written about how good life is in the museum
includes beautifully decorated vitamins And the best life for vitamins;
vitamins, ponds and professions.
We know that the museum can be a dream.
If you cannot write any songs and sing,
you will have nine boys in the skin in the city of AI.
Faleteuoloa - at sea, a new line of Beck's,
a large company, Adeeno Jack, Saint-Agnes,
Saturn Group, Saturn day / day / day,
life of another five years. Mother's Day,
Disappointment, Wedding Day, Wedding Day
The Newspaper can be color-colored.
Pavlova hot velavela. For example,
the factory is a huge expense in Russia.
What's a nice thing about women
and Santa Barbara's Saturn in this area now,
as well as buses with women
in the United States today? Google and children
have updated your own history -
now the English-Islamic Advertising
Theater is the current state of modern beauty of Whiteness,
a window that opens the German mirrors.
This, for example, is English, Spanish,
European cameras, Spanish rockets, bikes, thick ...
life is drawing a picture of the faces in their lives.
quality, good art, rich in vitamin A at the Museum,
know to take vitamins, lakes, prostitutes and lives.
I can be like a museum. He does not use his mind and song,
the article is clear, but they stand at the top of the peat outdoors.
The borough can be expanded over the next 15 years,
caring for beekeeping, Jacuzzi, Beata beaten in the park after parking
the Saturn /
o/o maybe Mike parked.
There are cancer and prostitutes in South Africa.
Jan 9, 2019
Jan 9, 2019 at 9:27 PM UTC
Plates of chicken,
Beef, lamb and pork,
Cherries and grapes,
Fresh from the stalk.
Salads and noodles,
Lettuce, tomatoes, corn,
Not a glass out of place,
Not a prawn.
A enticing odour,
From bottles of wine,
And perfect food,
The finest of fine.
On a separate table,
With red velvet cloth,
Lies stacks of deserts,
More than enough.
Cakes and cream,
Puddings and pies,
And in the corner,
A pavlova lies.
An incomplete job?
Not in the least,
Look at the food,
What a feast!
Mar 14, 2017
Mar 14, 2017 at 1:31 AM UTC
I think I've
found your secret
that
nobody knows.
You're Pavlova.
you belong on a stage
ordained
in sequins,
wing-tipped eyes
and paper wings,
where the violin
becomes your muscle
and the bow becomes
your strings
and when you go,
when you die,
when you pass as
all swans do,
the spotlight
will caress
all of the stages
where you're not
and you'll come back as
you again
Pavlova again
a dancer who loves all the swans again
and I'll be back in this life
to love you too.
Mar 8, 2015
Mar 8, 2015 at 9:18 PM UTC
Brisbane bowling trip day 3
Today was the third day of my tenpin bowling trip in Brisbane
I started the day having a late breakfast at 7-30
And after that I went back to the room till 10
Watching Frasier on tv after everybody loves Raymond
After that we headed off to the bowling alley
Getting ready to play bowling, it will be radical
My scores were 136 and 106 and 116
And, mate, I blew those pins to kingdom come
And then after that I went to the cafe at the bowling centre
And bought sweet potato fries with sour cream and sweet chilli sauce
And mate that was a dainty dish, fit for a king like me
I bought three chocolates and one guy who was fat himself
Told me if you eat too much chocolate, you will get FAT
After I finished that meal, I went to the grandstand
To watch Leckie and Stephen bowl
And mind you they bowled fantastic
I watched Shane bowl with Belinda and Paul bell
That was cool
After leckie and Stephen finished, our team posed for our team photo
And the picture was so close to the bowling lane
We were setting off the fowl lines
It was fun laughing at that, yes it was
After we left there, we put our bowling shirts out to get washed, so
They will be ready tomorrow
And after that we went to the OLD MILL for our dinner
I had chicken parmigiana and I made a joke, of a chicken wearing pyjamas
Ha ha ha ha, very funny
And I had a pavlova for dessert
And I walked home, and went inside to hang our
Bowling shirts out to dry in the cupboard
And watch home and away and the neighbours
And the AFL footy, between port and Geelong
Cats won, and I remembered Matthew Reid’s song
We are Geelong the crappest team of all
We are Geelong we’re always dropping the ball
But the cats won, I wanted port to win😹😹😹😹😹
And now we are off to bed, goodnight
At the club we were remembering all the home and away and neighbours
Stars
Now we are off to bed
Good night😌😌😌😌😌😌
Oct 8, 2021
Oct 8, 2021 at 7:36 AM UTC
She was beautiful
not conventionally so,
sort of lopsided
big ears
blue hair,
but
I want you to know
she was beautiful.
On a parquet floor
(waxed)
behind her closed door,
she would dance
like
Anna Pavlova.
Things being as they were
she had no one
to watch her
no one
to share in her beauty.
Ah,
but I'd watch her
aware of her
wanted her
reached out to touch her,
not much there to hold
anymore.
It was Summer a long time ago and
much more have been since and gone
she lives on,
on the floor
dancing some more
and I watch
as I did so
many times
so
many times
before.
May 12, 2016
May 12, 2016 at 4:12 PM UTC