They’re selling postcards of the hanging
They’re painting the passports brown
The beauty parlor is filled with sailors
The circus is in town
Here comes the blind commissioner
They’ve got him in a trance
One hand is tied to the tight-rope walker
The other is in his pants
And the riot squad they’re restless
They need somewhere to go
As Lady and I look out tonight
From Desolation Row
- from Desolation Row, Bob Dylan 1965
They’re painting the passports brown
The beauty parlor is filled with sailors
The circus is in town
Here comes the blind commissioner
They’ve got him in a trance
One hand is tied to the tight-rope walker
The other is in his pants
And the riot squad they’re restless
They need somewhere to go
As Lady and I look out tonight
From Desolation Row
- from Desolation Row, Bob Dylan 1965
***********
Josh Breslin had to laugh as
he saw the kids, broke kids for sure, probably from over in the Acre projects
(officially the Olde Saco, Maine Housing Authority Complex but known since it
first opened, or at least from the time when he and the Breslin family lived
there in the 1950s, as “The Acre” as in Hell’s Acre not God’s Little Acre),
slap-dashing with the eternal cheap jack flour paste signs on every available
telephone and light pole , every brick storefront wall, every vacant telephone
booth, every plexi-glassed bus stop shelter, hell, just say everything and you
would not be far off. Obviously these kids, just like when he did that odd job
himself as a kid fifty years ago on those cold October 1962 nights to earn a
few bucks and free admission, were being paid by how many they put up and so no
public space was safe from their brushes.
And of course the posters
being placed up helter-skelter through the town could only signal one thing,
Bob Brewer’s One And Only World Famous Circus And Carnival (all letter
capitalized just like that, not some typo error ) was coming to town, coming to
magnificent Olde Saco for the fiftieth straight year, the fiftieth straight
October. And probably for the fiftieth straight year since Josh was one of the
first to catch hitting the circus road
fever, and be damned with plain vanilla Olde Saco, that some kid, boy or girl
these days, also will get that long ago genetically-encoded wanderlust on
seeing that sign.
Jesus, Josh said to himself,
he could still feel the tension in his mouth as he thought about what might
have been, what lowly life he would have led if he survived that long on the
rough and tumble big top, had he just skedaddled that last Sunday night the
show was in town. He certainly had the bug, a bug aided by troubles within the
Breslin family, meaning troubles with Meme Breslin (Delores, nee LeBlanc,
French-Canadian LeBlanc from up Quebec City way as were many other Acre
residents) like many another kid in those days when Papa worked and let mother
raise the kids. He could barely remember the direct cause of the argument but
it was probably just some wisp of time thing that could have been resolved
short of running away with the circus. But that would have taken the romance out
of that ingrown teen angst. Instead he bided his time, had ten or twenty more
wisp of time battles with Meme (and with
Pa thrown in a couple of times so you know they were serious) and then flew the
coop just after high school when the summer of love, San Francisco 1967, was
his rage.
Thinking back, Josh, still
watching those kids slap-dashing heaven, thought how the idea of some new
adventure, even as he came to recognize some tacky, and dangerous adventure
like running away with the circus, will sent any kid spinning, and maybe a few
adults too. Everybody, well, almost
everybody has been to the circus as a kid, or later maybe. Many probably had
their first exposure to the circus when some small side-show ramble wreak operation
like Bob Brewer’s was that fifty years ago when it showed up made up of a three
truck gypsy caravan and came to your not big city town, a town not unlike Olde
Saco, and put on a show or two and then headed out, laughing at the rubes as
they left.
Or maybe that first look was
even less than a circus, some two bit neon-flamed carnival with every drifter,
grafter and midnight sifter trying (and mostly succeeding) to get you to part
with your hard-earned dough (back in the day maybe you had a kid job, mowing
lawns or a paper route, or slapping signs on walls and so those were really
hard-earned dollars that were soon departed). But mainly, if you didn’t look too
closely, at the ragged not recently cleaned costumes, the ancient girlies, some
real gypsies, some faux gypsies strictly in it for the gyp that went with every
show to bring in the farm boy (or small town harmless corner boy) rubes, the
broken-down animals just short of serious complain to the local Society For The
Prevention Of Cruelty To Animals, and the broken-down has been tightrope
walkers, sword-swallowers, bearded ladies, sad-eyed clowns and other geeks performers you bought into the grand circus
illusion, the spectacle. What you bought into as well was the bright lights, cotton
candy, the kewpie dolls, and the other gee-gads and the art of something
different, some minute change of pace. Just don’t deny it okay
See, though it wasn’t like
Josh didn’t get to see the seamy side of the travelling hustle. In that October
of 1962 (shortly before the October
missile crisis with the Russkies and Cubans that almost smacked all dreams, tacky or pure, to oblivion) Sammy
Whammy, Bob Brewer’s main barker kind of took Josh under his wing, and Josh
thirteen going on ten lapped it up. Sammy was in need of an assistant and he
had zeroed in on Josh when he showed the slightest interest in learning the
ropes. (Sammy, deep in alcoholic trauma,
really didn’t need an assistant but needed someone to get his liquor for him,
sober him up for the next day’s efforts and if he was too gone to go on to take
his place as barker. Yes, Sammy was in tough shape but all Josh saw was a way
to get even with the world, or at least make his own rules in a world he didn’t
create, and didn’t get a say in. Powerful stuff)
In those days Bob’s Brewer’s
operation would decamp on Olde Saco for a week, showing up on Monday to set up,
running nightly Tuesday through Thursday and then all day Friday through Sunday
and then hit the road that Sunday evening early. In those days as well Bob
himself would show up a couple days early, hit the Acre, and get his
sign-posting crew to splash the town with signs. That is how Josh got his big
start in the circus dream business. Olde Saco, unlike Portland, where the
suckers were a little more hip or down in Kittery where the naval workers might
very well torch the damn operation if things didn’t add up, was a high spot on
Bob’s calendar because the French-Canadians, Irish and Down East Yankees who
mainly worked in the dying textile mills were big spenders (and frankly, as
Sammy Whammy confessed, easy, easy like taking candy from a baby to take
dollars from on almost any foul- ball proposition). And they, the Olde Saco men
and boys, needed to show their women that they could beat these ramshackle
circus gawkers at their own game. Yes, like Sammy said, easy stuff, really
easy.
That week though Josh learned
all the ins and outs of every carny game, of every illusion, of every attempt
at busting down human defenses against one’s own greed, of every trick,
tricked. Here is a beauty courtesy of Sammy, as an example, that he still
remembered (and later had pulled it a couple of times himself when he was on
the bum but only when he really needed dough bad, real bad). Everybody has seen
the shell game, right. Three shells with a pea underneath one of them. If you
call the right shell you win. Simple. Here was Sammy at work though (at work
early in the evening when he was half-sober). The first five or seven times you
work it so you have a pea under all three shells (not all that hard to do on
cold October nights with artificial light and that gawker-busting rube ready
show who is who) so that the rube wins, no question. So maybe he gets ahead ten
or fifteen dollars and is feeling like king of the world, and especially so if
his lady friend is around. The rube is so in love with his prowess that when
Sammy cries that he wants a chance to get even so he can feed his kids (or some
such malarkey) the rube says sure thing, no problem. At that point said rube’s
luck runs out-runs out because there is no pea under any shell. See the rube is
so into his pride that he is not really watching the play. Twenty bucks of his
own money down (and asking his girlfriend if she has any dough to see him
through a luck change) and he is out for the count. Beautiful.
Josh also learned that the
night time glitter gave way to day time sad sack sites. Those tents that housed
the bleachers for the man show were filled with patches and looked like a stiff
wind would blow them to smithereens. The neon highway of games
down the mainline venue looked like the product of some demented mind along
with the faded kewpie dolls and cheap jack stuffed animal prizes. Worst the
acts, the mustached lady turned out to have no mustache, the clowns looked
pathetic in the sun, and worst of worst those hoochie-goochie girls who hustled
guys for drinks (and the guys got not much else), who made so much of Sammy’s
new boy turned out to be as old and ugly as Medusa come dawn.
Still he loved it, loved the
idea of it, and had his rucksack ready to go come that Sunday afternoon. And
then that Sunday morning, as will happen with thirteen year old boys who have a
falling out with mother, Meme said she would really miss him if he left her and
that maybe she would buy him that typewriter that he was hounding her for. So
what is a thirteen year guy to do when his mother caves in and turns out to be,
well, a mother. Yes, but still it was a close thing.
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