Friday, July 19, 2019

Tipped Ducklings July 1969


As the warm day settled into moonlight on Cape Cod
our vacation cottage settled to sylvan silence
sea salt heavy in the air, we five kids—
my siblings and a couple of friends—perched
our fifty toes gripped round the weathered handrail

of a gnarled grey deck—the kind that puts splinters
in your feet. Defying gravity, bottom sides up
we tipped like ducklings mooning the woods
—a breeze swept over our bums producing
ecstatic giggles as we teetered above grass

and trees far below. Indoors, adults murmured
over martinis, smoked cigarettes preparing
to watch history change. Outside, giddy
with the threat of falling with freedom
far from home up way past bedtime unattended

the cool night air bathed our skin.
The screen door creaked open. Freeze!
Mom's arm appeared—not her face
her voice snapped, “Come in, quickly!”
Uh-oh, we're in big trouble.

We hoisted up our britches, jumped down from the rail
ran into the dim, pine-paneled living room
hoped the scolding would be mild—
it was vacation after all and we had company.

Mom shushed, “Sit down and watch,” —Phew
she hadn't seen us. We sat on the worn, braided rug
adults on the tobacco-stained couch. The TV glimmered
through musty vacation-rental air in wavy black-and-white lines
crackled, “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind,”

and in that unimagined moment we were one
with the cosmos. We all left the TV, stood together on the deck
looked up in silence at the moon. 

We were Neil Armstrong.
We were America. We could do anything 
our hopes and hearts desired. It was as exhilarating 
as the wind on my bum.




photos: 21 April, 2019, Nice
19 May, 2019, Nice 


Historical note:
Listening full speed to Armstrong's quote, my childhood ears did not hear "a man" just "man" on TV.