Selma Jeanne Cohen
Preface.
Cohen, Jeanne Selma: “Preface”, Raftis, Alkis: Dance in poetry. An international anthology of poems on dance. Athens, Dora Stratou Greek Dances Theater & International Dance Council, 1991.
PREFACE
Dance has meant many things to many poets.
Some, like Denise Levertov, see themselves in the role of the
dancer:
to leap becomes, while it lasts,
heart pounding, breath hurting,
the deepest, the only joy.
Others, like William Meredith, place themselves in the audience:
/ am but one among your crowd of starers,
One of the blur of shirt-fronts and hands clapping.
There are those who admire the ballerina, as does Norma Farber:
Dancer, how do you rise?
The ground sends me.
Grace suspends me.
While Adrian Mitchell prefers an earthier genre:
....big dancers, they stamp and they stamp fast,
Trying to keep their balance on the globe.
Carl Sandburg wrote some lines for Gene Kelly to tap dance to:
Can you dance a couple of commas?
And bring it to a finish with a period?
Sacheverell Sitwell was enchanted by the Bayaderes:
They sway like young trees with wind upon their leaves
In an airy rapture........
And Thomas Hardy imagined Grandma Jenny swooping through:
The favourite Quick-step "Speed the Plough” –
(Cross hands, cast off, and wheel)
"The Triumph", "Sylph", "The Row-dow-dow",
Famed "Major Malley's Reel".......
The pleasures of dance and of poetry are manifold. Some dancers are happiest with the steps of classical ballet; others prefer jazz or jigs. Some poets choose to describe dancers in sonnets; others in free verse. The choices are numerous. The riches are here for the reader to enjoy.
Selma Jeanne Cohen