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the white deer Oct 2014
i see so much of myself in you,
and you have such subtle give in your conviction,
your eyes are like mirrors,
your heart a hardwood floor,
but someone has ripped the barre
from this ballet studio,
i find no place in you
to steady myself.
Sue Violetta Oct 2014
Music and dance
Her life's pulse
She is compelled
Can't resist
Like an ocean
The music ebbs and swells
And sweeps her in a deep joy
Everything else abandoned
Life's ills and hurts are no more !

She can SEE the music
Imagining the dance
The rhythm and the flow
It gives her wings
The lifts and jumps
Are high to the sky
And majesticaly slow!

But the grand jete
Comes at a price
Every sinew cries
The beautiful arabesque
An epitome of grace
The long line of pirouettes
So fast only a blur
An elegant refrain
And no one see
That her joints are screaming in pain.

Yet
Day in and day out
practisìng ,  rehearsing
For a thousandth time
Finding the strength
For a thousand  and one

Still
The music soars
And in her mind
She is flying,
Turning
Gliding
With a geat joy !
Dance is her life.

Yes, I am still dreaming
Of what might have been once
I just was never good enough.
Ballet, my love.
Eva Sep 2014
Loneliness consumes me though in the kind arms of another
Such a great heart as his suffers at my dead touch.
But every touch brings up in me a shudder
And the image of your face hits away my crutch.

I want to return his light that waits reaching out to me

But only answer with a silent glow of memory.
Souvenirs of you, so oblivious and far at bay
Both caring and not, dancing your life away.

His arms grab mine, trying to shake me awake.
His blue eyes midnight, yours were summer skies
I can’t break away from thoughts of mistakes
And can only stare back, and just apologise.
.
The warmth of your skin, arms rocking me in the night
Block my sight as if engraved onto my eyes
Dancing with you as in a desperate fight
Begging his forgiveness, as life is my disguise.
for Alastair
theaphile Sep 2014
She had swayed to the beat, moving her feet.
Her movements could life spirits beyond the flesh.
Her body was the brush, painting on the floor and the lives around her that would be her canvas.
She would surely leave her mark.
She was a wildfire – fierce, rhythmic and uncontrollable- affecting everything in her way. Don’t try to hold her back, because you simply can’t.
She was a dancer.
Not for her pliés, relevés, sautés or pirouettes,
but because rather than waiting for the storm to pass she had spent all her life dancing in the rain.
No one got it, and she wasn’t sure if they ever would.
No one got it.
They didn’t understand her music.
They didn’t understand the thing that made her soul sting,
the thing she she’d fight ‘til the very death for, rather than have die. They didn’t understand that this was her. That this was all she had left to give. That every day was a constant rhythm and not dancing was impossible. That this was the only way to keep the thoughts out of the way and to keep pushing on every single, ****** day. She had danced ‘til dancing was her excuse for pushing life out of the way. She danced ‘til not dancing was just impossible and being open was life’s biggest struggle. She had danced ‘til her heart and feet were numb - ‘Til her feet were beyond the point of being calloused and until everyday they’d bleed.
She had wondered if this was a genetic trait passed down her bloodline,
one that she couldn’t avoid even though desperately wanted.
One that was tacked onto her simply because of the colour of her skin.
Talks like this of blaming things on race and colour had disgusted her, but
you see her mother was a great dancer.
Every other night at 4am, when she’d wake up for a glass of water as little girl, she saw her stretching - shedding tears that is, before the dance she had to inevitably endure the same day. That’s when she began to dance, because she thought she simply had to.
On the inside, she was the kind of flower that was so beautiful that you just wanted to pick it up, but rather let it live in all its beauty. The kind of flower that in its presence made you think about the simple beauties of the world. But you wouldn’t know because
**** did she dance.
No one got it, and she wasn’t sure if they ever would.
No one got it.
They didn’t understand her music,
and when they tried to come close eardrums burst because the music was too loud,
so there she was, all alone. In the distance.
Pouring out her soul into this world,
body shaking, heart palpitating.
To feelings and to a struggle that was old,
but constantly played on repeat, like a vinyl record.
She violently swayed to the beat, moving her feet.
She was a dancer.
Not for her pliés, relevés, sautés or pirouettes,
but because rather than waiting for the storm to pass she had spent all her life dancing in the rain.
Winter Silk Aug 2014
Her ballet shoes still hang
outside my bedroom door.
I see them every morning,
before my work at the store.

As my car cuts and cruises,
through the country's autumn streets,
My mind slowly wanders
to a harsh, wooden seat.

The judge's decision was irrevocable,
my wife left with everything.
I last saw her ride a taxi, tossing
to the sewers, our wedding ring.

Work is always such a challenge
when my customers just stare.
They know how harsh it was,
but they don't really care.

The judge's decision was irrevocable,
my wife left with everything.
She even took our daughter,
that precious little thing.

As my car cuts and cruises,
through the country's autumn streets,
My mind slowly wanders
to my daughter's little feet

Her ballet shoes still hang
outside my bedroom door.
They once were used for dancing,
but not anymore.
I tried my hand at mirror poems.
Let's hope this turns out well.
Anthony Williams Jul 2014
You're just a tiny bit minimalist in your own unique way
a white star I have to squint to see in daytime sky
not a Mercedes five point but a Nissan Micra car
you park neatly in a three point turn by my netsuke
and put a circular dent on my platonic furniture

Your two humble rooms devoid of any bold sculpture
except a fold-out table and a miniature bubble chair
and a futon for a bed which is troublesome to share
you draw the line at adornments but allow a wallflower

A bulb in a bowl is your ornamental garden feature
mealtimes a nibble on grated carrot celery cucumber
you run so long on empty you're an eco friendly teacher
stretching out the energy is a passion of my lover
engaging in lessons on sustaining a resourceful nature

Your shoes two pointe ballet slip ons easy to care
barely there g-string thin cotton underwear
nothing loud to upset your understated figure
slight as a pin drop your bottom's semi-derrière
sits so light on feet I'd swear you float on air

I rarely get to hear you come before you're in my hair
with a voice pitch high as a smitten kitten's purr
your upper reaches get a score sized single 'A'
nice when it fits into our schemes of feng shui

I carry your bundle home on the roadway rivers of light
yet you only burn one ray of candle power at night
born of scintillating atoms which flow along each vein
containing so much love without clutter in your frame
a brave star small as wings formed of minuscule wire
flutters in your eyes with minimal flare
but deep desire
by Anthony Williams
a bonsai has two elements, the tree and the container, and “once outside its flowerpot the tree ceases to be a bonsai.” Miniturization is not the defining feature of a bonsai; containment is, the strict boundary between the bonsai and the rest of nature. So, too, it was between her nature and mine.
Look out my window to find
the shadow of the sun
done with playing in corners
So watch the mourners paint in black and gray
To their dismay, the corpse arises
to an elegant ballet of dissonance
with perfect timing and diligence
The taste of iron and sugar
bloom in my mouth, sweet and bitter
But still yet I am a slave to the flitter of
butterfly wings beating
so easily with a fleeting sense of obscurity
So yet i look out my window
to find the shadow at peace
but the insanity will never cease
Margaryta Jun 2014
At 5 I was convinced I was
a flower
whose vocation was imitating
their final hysterical
wail
once Winter awoke from its
anorexia.

I pleaded my case with
a botanist
whose seamstress wife consented to stitch
a tutu of Kadupul
flowers,
like a fairy godmother warning of their death at
dawn.

At 16 I finally danced
their goodbye,
petals whisked off as if molted
layers of skin
and only when at the end I stood naked
did the concept of death have
definition.
Soph Raikes Jun 2014
Dance is everything, and it is evergreen.
These movements are the passage
to your mind,
your innermost loves and hates.

You are betrayed by movement,
by dance.
So seductive, so yielding, yet hours
and hours
are necessary to make it
truly yours.

Only after breaking pointe shoes,
only after pulling your world apart,
your body apart
for the right line of your arms.
Only then, when you see your own shadow
moving like water,
then you will know, that dance is
music made visible.

It is all your ninety-nine words for god.
It is evergreen, and it has
survived stronger people than you.
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