Stage-struck as a girl, Doreen’s a pudgy old bag,
           ex-hoofer, veteran chorine,
yearning to goose or grope tall, short, young or any-old,
   men.
           At forty, she’s had it, slow to go, can’t quit the scene,
                    still aching for dressing-room noise,
                    one-night-stands, divine chorus-boys.
                    Bud, her darling, dares destiny’s choice:
Baseball? No. Tap? No. Classic-ballet! He’s put down, a
    fag.

She twirled on ’till she managed to manacle Joe,—
           engineer with a curt career
ran off his rails. Stroke. Bud, the kid, a spry sprig at ten,
           (Joe’s sole sprout), faced two further fathers to fear,
                      a brace of brutes she would find fun.
                      Half-orphaned, a sly foster-son
                      sniffed two horny males he must shun,—
Doreen, his ideal; dancing, his dream: tip-top, tappy-toe.

Ray, (Dad No. 2) falls on two brats at life’s school. Their
    play,
          “Doctor”,—a game. Nymphet next door,
under her porch peeps at privately publicized parts.
           Ray paddles the pair. She weeps pints. Bud’s butt
             stays sore
                     a week from the caning he caught.
                     Ray cools off but Buddy stays hot
                     for babes and ballet. Doreen’s forgot
kids grow, up. He’s sweet, but no child jives it like Ray.