Moon Dancer
MOON DANCER
A prose poem by
ROBERT DAVIDSON
Tonight I walk the beach to the stone jetty where my boat is moored.
Moonlight caressing waves causes a quivering pulsation of light over water.
Looking out over the curve of the bay I see the moth-like figure of a girl
dancing on the shore. She pirouettes, advancing retreating, as moonlit waves
wash shimmering sand. A slight wind from the sea blows through her hair
moulding her dress to her body. Her movements captivate.
She comes up to me and all woman she is. Her breasts rise and fall as she
speaks and we soon become as one - pressed together in the dance, my
love-kiss finding her mouth. The white moon at full inspires emotion and for
a night she becomes my passion as smooth the bare flesh I feel her body
surrender. She cries as sensuality washes over her in multiple waves. Her
breath warm in my ear.
This is where I belong, spoke my heart. But many are the moods of the moon,
the wind having risen with the turn of the tide. And as a moonbeam glides
across a wave, she slips from me saying, I never said forever.
My heart sinks like a stone flung into a deep pool. She drifts away from
me, a withered leaf on the edge of a storm. My passion shipwrecked, my voice
- a drowning sailor’s call.
Copyright 2006 http://www.robertdavidson.blogsource.com
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