HOME STRETCH
Just when he thought he had it made
he kept hearing a muzzled voice
coming from a world of mysteriums
and shadows in the middle of the night:
“The end is near, the end is near.”
Since mother advised “health is wealth”
he figured he was a man of means
as he hopped, skipped and jumped
right by his eighth decade without
ever wearing a hospital gown.
One night as he strained to hear the voice
gurgling murmurings amidst sounds
of splashing water, he was sure
it was his bombastic little brother calling:
“Mouse, come on in the water is warm,
seventy two all day long,” just like he used
to yell plunging into the surf at Old Orchard Beach.
A navy vet, buried at sea, he wished to swim
in the swill and swell of the waves and must have swam
to the Grotta Lazzurra where he honeymooned
on the Isle of Capri.
He had raved the cavern was like no other place,
a splendiferous enclave brimming with white calcite
on flowstones and stalagmites in a transparent azure
blueness of brine.
A shimmering silver of light illuminated
emerald marine algaes and kelp
adorning the ceiling and jagged rock walls.
From now on he vowed to keep his wet suit
and snorkel at his side, a heart-beat away for that
holiest dive, tumbling into that turquoise pool to swim
with his brother again, where he’d rapturously greet him:
“Hello, hello, hello, I’m here at last to join you!”