Who
has been responsible for the largest
number of anecdotes and the butt
of about as many jokes about poor
circuses is Adauto Freire. My contribution
has been the most generous possible,
but I could never have had as much
imagination as he, every moment
flashing a new coloring, some new
flair or detail, and a friendlier
face to give more honesty to his
creativity. The story is only fifteen
days old now, and being constantly
told and retold, mainly to Consuelo
and Mariazinha, which gives it an
authentic, involving and sympathetic
halo of compassion. Raquel has enjoyed
the progression of events, as much
at work as at home, because Rafael
and Rodrigues, her sons, are specialists
in putting up play-circuses, only
to make the lion groan with depression
and apathy. Paulinha, Paulo Sidônio,
Maninho and Elizena, more serious,
ask themselves how far something
like this can go on.
Really,
though…it was just a very
poor, lame and destitute circus,
even though it had a great clown,
a fire-eater, a blond trapeze artist,
a candy man, and a lion tamer. The
trapeze artist doubled as the ticket
lady, that is, when someone courageous
enough to buy one appeared. The
lion trainer also doubled as the
fire-eater, better known as The
Fantastic Flame Licker, as well
as the candy and chewing gum vendor.
The clown also held the double responsibility
being owner and general manager
of the company. As you can imagine,
few people could survive these meager
conditions in times of normality.
The truth, however, is heart rending.
Bone poor, as Tadeu Leite would
have commented, in the time that
he was still a radio announcer,
with his program “Scream it
out”. So…Time goes on,
and the circus’s first week
went by enjoying normal attendance,
and then plummeted until it became
a nightmare, and then blossomed
into a true school of sacrifices.
Hunger came, unchained and furious,
bludgeoning privation, attenuated
by only two pink mango trees in
fruit, located right in front of
the ticket office. The clown, deathly
pale from sub nutrition, no longer
needed white or yellow face paint,
which was good, I guess, because
it made life cheaper for him. The
red, black and blue face paint was
sufficient for his make-up needs.
During
the day, the clown was employed
as a cowboy at a neighboring ranch,
and in his spare time worked as
a carryout boy at the town supermarket.
The trapeze girl went to work as
a maid at the office of the town
doctor, taking advantage of her
spare time, washing and ironing
to fetch a few more pennies. The
lion tamer became a medicine-man
at the local farmer’s market,
and that noble profession, he would
practice at the time he would normally
be feeding the lion, and this was
because he couldn’t stand
to hear the poor animal’s
heart-rending cries for food. But
dreadfully tragic was the situation
of the their children, orphans of
necessity with faces reflecting
empty plates. Lying down close under
the mango trees they would lie,
belly up, incessantly searching
the branches for a ripening fruit,
and when they could find one, just
barely beginning to turn purple-green,
they would skitter up the trunk
like spiders and, ever so gently,
turn each mango around, so that
they would catch more sun and ripen
quicker, trying to hold off their
hunger until they were ripe and
sweet.