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1871–1938

V

James Weldon Johnson

Do you know what it is to dance? Perhaps, you do know, in a fashion; But by dancing I mean, Not what's generally seen,

But dancing of fire and passion, Of fire and delirious passion. With a dusky-haired señorita, Her dark, misty eyes near your own,

And her scarlet-red mouth, Like a rose of the south, The reddest that ever was grown, So close that you catch

Her quick-panting breath As across your own face it is blown, With a sigh, and a moan. Ah! that is dancing,

As here by the Carib it's known. Now, whirling and twirling Like furies we go; Now, soft and caressing

And sinuously slow; With an undulating motion, Like waves on a breeze-kissed ocean:— And the scarlet-red mouth

Is nearer your own, And the dark, misty eyes Still softer have grown. Ah! that is dancing, that is loving,

As here by the Carib they're known.

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V · James Weldon Johnson · Poetry Cove