The Twelve Dancing Princesses

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If you danced from midnight

to six A.M. who would understand?

The runaway boy

who chucks it all

to live on the Boston Common

on speed and saltines,

pissing in the duck pond,

rapping with the street priest,

trading talk like blows,

another missing person,

would understand.

The paralytic's wife

who takes her love to town,

sitting on the bar stool,

downing stingers and peanuts,

singing "That ole Ace down in the hole,"

would understand.

The passengers

from Boston to Paris

watching the movie with dawn

coming up like statues of honey,

having partaken of champagne and steak

while the world turned like a toy globe,

those murderers of the nightgown

would understand.

The amnesiac

who tunes into a new neighborhood,

having misplaced the past,

having thrown out someone else's

credit cards and monogrammed watch,

would understand.

The drunken poet

(a genius by daylight)

who places long-distance calls

at three A.M. and then lets you sit

holding the phone while he vomits

(he calls it "The Night of the Long Knives")

getting his kicks out of the death call,

would understand.

The insomniac

listening to his heart

thumping like a June bug,

listening on his transistor

to Long John Nebel arguing from New York,

lying on his bed like a stone table,

would understand.

The night nurse

with her eyes slit like Venetian blinds,

she of the tubes and the plasma,

listening to the heart monitor,

the death cricket bleeping,

she who calls you "we"

and keeps vigil like a ballistic missile,

would understand.

Once

this king had twelve daughters,

each more beautiful than the other.

Anne SextonWhere stories live. Discover now