| Complaint of Isadora Duncan's Scarf by Charles Jensen My only glory was in beauty, how I reached from her slender neck toward the sky, ravaged by wind
the way a rough lover handles you: dizzying, powerful, unpredictable, but with joy,
joy in touching you, joy in seeing you disheveled. The cool night air ran its lips on my silk skin
to make me dance. I danced, long and lean, with perfect extension and seamless flow.
I had no bones. Not one bit of me was firm or harsh. I was air itself. I was becoming
pure performance. I could see the tire's eye watching me. The car at the sidewalk with its
inflexible frame-it hated my freedom, my lift, my flight. The car, gravity's great love,
envied me. The wind, for a moment, set me down with ballet grace. I lit upon the cold steel spokes
striking out from the wheel like the arms of great Kali. She tangled me, and when the car
drove off the wheel pulled me tighter. I wound around its neck the only way a scarf knows how,
pulling my whole silk body and everything that anchored me into the mouth of never. |
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| This is the first publication of "Complaint of Isadora Duncan's Scarf," copyright © 2012 by Charles Jensen. Used with the permission of the author. |
Poetry by Charles Jensen The First Risk |
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