I’d Ask You to Dance

The words tumbled from Tuco as he greeted Arlu. “But,” he grumbled,
“Dancing makes me wordy.”¹ And he fell silent. He watched her face,
the shift and weave of light across her as she moved
closer. “You dance well,” she said, “Even silence is a dance.”

“It is to a different rhythm, perhaps.” And she paused, glanced up at clouds,
“You stir in me,” she began again, then, as the wind lifted flowers to hear,
“you stir in me a dance. I left, but the dance — the dance did not leave me.”

“The silence of that dance
never left me. I moved and moved,
swept in directions I did not know, did not choose.
As with the wind and the flower, I danced and danced in each place.
I found the song everywhere.” And she stopped. She looked at him, lifted
her eyes from cloud and wind in flowers to look at him, listen to his silent song.

Tuco watched, listened, waited.
So long he had waited to hear her speak again to him.
And now, as each time, the mystery of her filled him. In his silence
they danced. Once more, as wind and flower,
they danced
to a silent song that was everything.
 
RD Savage
11/29/95
© 1995
¹Jack Evans

<
RD Savage
Home

Letters from the Road
RD Savage
RD Savage
2008
RD Savage
2007
RD Savage
2006
RD Savage
Old Poems
RD Savage
blog
RD Savage
2005
RD Savage
2004
RD Savage
2003
RD Savage
2002
RD Savage
2001
RD Savage
2000
RD Savage
1999
RD Savage
1998
RD Savage
1997
RD Savage
1996
RD Savage
1995
RD Savage
1994
RD Savage
1993
RD Savage
1992
RD Savage
1991
RD Savage
1990


Photos: