THE SHOW
After dinner grown-ups were ushered into seats
in the living room to see the show grandkids had rehearsed
all afternoon outside on the tufted green lawn.
Flashlights were spot-lights, a CD of “Making Whoopie”
oompha-pha-phad Picadilly circus music in a deep base
baritone just like the blare of the fog horn in the lighthouse
next door.
They balanced a pile of chairs piggy-backing on each other
like Cirque-De Soleil performers.
Camera bulbs popped as they stood stock-still for a photo-op.
They juggled red-white and blue balls, twirled a stack of platters
and a Mexican sombrero; lithe sun-browned bodies climbed
on top of one another, a vertical phalanx of bodies
reaching up to the ceiling, smudged handprints proof
they were there. King Tutankhamen couldn’t have designed
a better pyramid.
They rolled perfect cartwheels and somersaults,
assembled a block and tackle, nail barrels and a milking stool
from the barn for pantomime scenarios; little mimics miming
sad clown’s escapades, grimacing, smiling, slithering and sliding
under imaginary taught lines.
Bowing deeply like seasoned thespians to resounding applause
and shouts of “Encore!” they were reminded to brush their teeth
before being hustled off to bed.
When the youngsters left the tumult was gone and the house
grew silent.
Grandpa listened for the whoosh of the wind in the incoming
tide but was unsure if it was the sound of his tinnitus-plagued
right ear or the night long hum of the thirty year old frig.
The only other noise was the return of the mussel men
at dawn putt-putting across the bay to the reticulum
of white buoys that looked like the caps of Annapolis
cadets on graduation day just before they fling their caps
high in the air.
Milton P. Ehrlich 199 Christie St. Leonia, N.J. 07605