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Turn, Counterturn, Stand
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By Stanley
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Plumly
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(posted Wednesday, Aug.
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19, 1998)
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To hear the poet read
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"Turn, Counterturn, Stand," click .
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He's dressed like a
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patient,
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naked to the waist,
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in bottoms like pajamas.
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And hooked by invisible wire
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to a monitor hooked to an amplifier.
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All of this on stage,
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like intensive care,
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the badge of his connection
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at the center of his chest,
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recording and rendering his pulse.
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His heart is the dancer,
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and its muscle the music
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that rises and subsides: each searching
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step, each turn, each somersault
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and curl, each sudden rest.
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Baryshnikov is fifty, but older,
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paler, resurrected in the lights.
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You hear his heart
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literally leap in the machine-magnified
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midair. He won't come down,
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then all at once he will.
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When I bend to hear my
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parents'
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hearts or lean against a wall
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to hear my friend's,
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it's like water in a shell
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held tightly to the ear:
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salt blood and ocean emptiness
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and wind, vena cavae, almost still.
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The last thing you want
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to hear is the sound
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of your own worn heart.
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It has a signature, a rhythm, a silence
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like your voice or fingerprint,
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the heartline of the graph
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the abstract of a mountain range
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or large waves coming in,
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repeated and repeated and repeated--
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a child's idea of drawing,
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a child's obsessive dance or nursery
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rhyme yet years and years
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of listening to this child,
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who will not change but does.
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When I
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remember what it was like
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to see them in the wards,
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impaled in bed and wired,
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every orifice acknowledged,
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every innocence corrupted and exposed,
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when I think of the awful
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trembling passed by hand,
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the dry white chemical breath
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of what was said, the skeletal skin
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so ghostly it seemed they'd already
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gone--that
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God, in His Mercy,
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had pulled their sick hearts out,
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bled them, drained them, kissed the dead
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weight from the bones,
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that I was looking at myself in rags
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that were my parents--when I think of
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them I think of my friend
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with no one there those hours,
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no one to witness, no one to take
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his pulse, no one to talk or listen,
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no one to cross his heart.
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