San Tropez
April 19, 2013for my stepfather, an identical twin I think of you dreaming in the womb, the same intelligence between you and your twin: talking across the waves of amniotic fluid…
for my stepfather, an identical twin
I think of you
dreaming in the womb,
the same intelligence
between you and your twin:
talking across the waves
of amniotic fluid
so content, I imagine,
to be in the same room.
50 years later
at the family campout
you shadow
each other, Uncle Guy
the clear leader, taller;
he must have beat you out
for some manna from Mama.
The sun sets over Lake Sara,
the family campout dance begins,
you play it cool in the August heat,
until Guy plays
“San Tropez.” Not really
a dance song, nor typical
in any way,
but a B side about a
lonely lover in paradise.
You two find each other
like an old married couple
on the concrete dance floor—
plastic disco ball whirring
on the corner of a card table.
It’s a waltz, almost,
and a gallop, hand-in-hand;
(the first hand you ever held)
and your forearms pressed
together to make one arm.
—Angela Elles (Jefferson County)
Angela Elles is a resident of Madison. A mom, wife, teacher, and student, Angela teaches at Ivy Tech Community College and is pursuing an MFA in poetry at Spalding University.
Indiana Humanities is posting a poem a day from Indiana poets in celebration of National Poetry Month.