Over the Falls

"I am not of the common daredevil sort..."
- Annie Edson Taylor, 24 October 1901




There's a place at the oceanfront
where you pay sixty dollars to be sucked

into a vertical wind tunnel simulating free-
fall conditions in a skydive. Or you can find

an instructor to do a tandem jump from a plane
thirteen thousand feet in the air. In 1982,

a man tied forty-five helium balloons to his
lawn chair and rapidly rose through the air,

disrupting flight traffic near LAX before landing
in a tangle of power lines. Was it the culmination

of compulsion, a dream he'd always had from
childhood? I read about Annie, who on her sixty-

third birthday in 1901 thought of going over
Niagara Falls in a padded barrel with an anvil

for ballast and her cat for company. She lived,
first human over the falls. Conned by her manager,

she never found fortune and fame, her name
on a boardwalk tote or trinket, people lining up

for an autograph. Soaked stockings and skirts,
the water's loud hum outpacing her heart, she

walked in a swoon stepping out of that cloister,
the world's drum tumbling as if without end.

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