Crickets at Lakemont Park
The crickets are sounding a catastrophe
outside my window, reminding me
of the painted tin clickers whose tongues
we’d arc and release, consolation prizes
for the perennially rigged ring toss,
that huge stuffed Orangutan getting more
moth-eaten every year, smell of sweat
and hot axel grease, gear eating gear when
the paint-peeling rolly coaster creaked
its way up and plunged past the carousel,
the real crickets’ jig-chorus racket
in the long-limbed grass where we spread
our thin blanket. Then the carnival light
and crackle would fade, then I’d arc
and release again and again. Your hands,
your tongue, the cricket-sung, grass-sweet dark.
“Crickets at Lakemont Park” first appeared in Spoon River Poetry Review, 2009.