The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Anthony DiMatteo
WHEN NOTHING'S LEFT
Dancers suddenly leave the studio floor And out comes this guy from the back Stumbling, dressed in a shaggy mat, Dinosaur man lost at center floor Bouncing a bit on his haunches Like he’s got hot coals in his pocket, And he places stones in a circle, Little loaves of bread, perhaps, but when He starts hopping around them, I instantly bust out laughing. A room full Of people, one man dancing, one laughing, Another two hundred in dead silence. I stop laughing and join the silence. This is a tragedy, I see. Yes, The program says “potato dance,” The famine in Ireland I think. The man begins to pound his fist On the potatoes, one by one Smashing them down. Now my daughter Hears my suppressed laughter I am trying so hard not to loose The giddy spell bottled in me Like a genie. She wheezes one good, Her laugh coming out of her nose, And we break up. A flood Overcomes us, we are weeping For the man, letting him feed On tears of joy when nothing’s left. The stony people, though, make us stop, Harrumphing and glaring in all directions. Our tears dry in the fire of our shame. Then the man bows as he leaves the floor, Potato flakes in hand, mad grin on his face.
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