http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
ia a woman who married her neighbor’s mailbox one night 
          when no one was awake or watching. Why it attracted her 
          she had no idea, certainly it wasn’t the sex, which was OK 
            
          but nothing to write home about, although both her parents 
          were dead and would not have understood anyway. It was just 
          one of those things that HAD to be done when it was done. 
And if not then when? And if not by her then whom? Or so 
          she advocated. Her mailbox was jealous of course, felt rejected 
          and unworthy of deliverance. It stayed open on rainy days, 
and was fused shut and otherwise unresponsive 
          to the postman’s warm and probing hands. 
Although they had taken precautions she was late, 
          horrifying late; still, she warmed to the idea and decided 
          without anguished debate, to see things through. To have 
and to hold. To choose names random and syllabic. 
          Perhaps symbolic. To further merge and emerge further, 
          to seek the larger stamp of approval offered by all her neighbors 
and their boxes, especially the postman: large-mouth bass 
          whose metal mouths open to swallow the largest unwanted 
          catalogs, others shaped like a hammer or a sober Futurama’s 
Bender a sadly empty keg of Guinness and a fishing lure designed 
          by Frederico Fellini, a distended  anus a doberman’s mouth 
          the grim reaper on a chopped cycle the barrel of a Glock 
a VV van a fire-hydrant an Evinrude outdoor motor landbound 
          for life in a lighthouse in Kansas windmills and whirligigs turtles 
          and tall-hatted Texans cameras and chastity belts the tin man 
and the little engine that could and all things wild and stranger. 
          The deed done she did not look to unlick her stamps. No solace 
          was sought since none was needed. No regrets reframed the mirror’s 
mirror. The ocean remained offshore and sent congratulations 
          in the form of paired Magnificent Frigatebirds who nested 
          for a year before the male followed his hormones elsewhere. 
Our heroine, for such she is, accepted this gift, and others great 
          and small large and uxorish with absent partner present in cultural 
          memory alone. Nothing special. And certainly not the nest she had 
            
          ever had. Even so, eggs are eggs, and must be tended. And she intended 
          to do just that without squawk or squalling. Determined she decided 
          to continue doing what must be done. What cannot be undone. 
Except by snake or rat or fox or feral dog or hungry human. 
          Or unintended neglect from the uncollectable unconscious. 
had nowhere to go except to the ropes dangling over the ship’s stern. 
          No anchor chain to scrabble down and across. No buoys or inflatable 
          to cling to. We knew the captain to be a drinker, heavy at times, 
but not heavier than the waves flowing over. But we never thought 
          he’d drunk us under, or his crew. To Hell with the passengers, they’re 
          just freight or ballast that pays for itself. But to jeopardize our long-standing 
agreement, to drown us with his cheap screwtop MD20/20 in the dark wine sea, 
          is callous and a slap in history’s face. We are nothing if not historical. 
          A plague on the captain and his bow-legged minions. Let the soulless 
          bastard die as we float away, ever content to nibble. 
Kind sirs,
No mission have I remaining in this world except to distinguish 
      between illogical minds and those whose preferences match mine. 
      I am neither political nor apolitical in these clamorous times. 
Having said that I stand now in dead-wall reverie, fixed, as it were 
      on what remains of this day, this tedious world of walled streets 
      in which the word recondite swells the hearts of motionless souls. 
The moonstruck are beyond compassion. They have no high green 
      folding screens to shield them from the thoughtless lights of others. 
      Their eyes are amber, not in color but in their “luny” fixedness.
Staring silently, they are a flute with holds stoppered. As stated 
      my mission remains unfulfilled; I do write with its fulfillment 
      in mind, and that said I have copied this for general dissemination 
to your readers: I would prefer to be left alone here and voteless.” 
      I can and will say or write no more; I remain unchanged 
      and firm in that pursuit. Please advise your readers thusly. 
The Silent Man, 
      B Scribner 
 
  Richard Weaver is an unofficial snowflake counter (seasonally) in Baltimore’s Inner Harbor. His publications include Loch Raven Review, North American Review, Crazyhorse, 2River View, Pembroke, New England Review, Black Warrior Review, and the ubiquitous Elsewhere. He works as a volunteer for the Maryland Book Bank. Recent poems have appeared in the Southern Quarterly and Conjunctions. Future poems will be appearing in Steel Toe Review, The Little Patuxent Review, and Stonecoast this summer. 
  This is Weaver's first appearance in Offcourse.