The Dance
A middle-aged woman, quite
plain, to be polite about it, and
somewhat stout, to be more courteous
still,
but when she and the rather good-looking, much younger man
she's
with get up to dance,
her forearm descends with such delicate lightness, such
restrained
but confident ardor athwart his shoulder,
drawing him to her
with such a firm, compelling warmth, and
moving him with effortless
grace
into the union she's instantly established with the not at
all
rhythmically solid music in this second-rate cafe,
that something in the rest
of us, some doubt about ourselves, some
sad conjecture, seems to be
allayed,
nothing that we'd ever thought of as a real lack, nothing not to
be
admired or be repentant for,
but something to which we've never
adequately given credence,
which might have consoling implications about how
we
misbelieve ourselves, and so the world,
that world beyond us which so
often disappoints, but which
sometimes shows us, lovely, what we are.
~ C. K. Williams
~
(Repair)
(left button to play, right button
to save)