http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
What do I wish to know of this world?
          That goodness matters?  Still
          There is no one to sing to.  One hurled-
          About planet under faraway moon shell
          Rocks itself to sleep,
          Its scrubbed roots
          Forcing their way toward ins & outs:
          Nothing delicate about this silence,
          Tho it tells & tells & tells,
          Corresponding to ourselves
          When we look at each other
        Not knowing what to say.
My world, this earth, these halls,
          Obstinate with dreams,
  & human drenched,
          Upon which we prance & carol,
          Our basic garments styled
        To put on airs.
Amid grammars of seasons changing willfully
          We loll with time agog,
          These woods, this manor,
          This low-born hutch,
          Each is praised with gold-beating fire.
If I were alive,
          What shd I add to the world?
          A few bright, short measures
          That the Lord of Dance
          Might not be ashamed.
The Past may be as dangerous
          As the present,
          So many places to hide.
          Over?  Is it ever over?
  & Memory perilous.  Was
It Baby Snooks on the radio?
          All that whining
          Earlier generation found funny.
          Change the station.  Overcome
          The static, Daddio!
Behold our new world of Shock
  & awe.  Shock & awe –
          My sexual technique 
          In a nutshell.  Look it up:
          In days of old, we'd flock
To Saturday double features,
          Pathé news of the world & 
          2,000 or so cartoons,
          Followed by Gene Autry
          Fighting underground creatures.
When it's over, it's all over
          Wise men suggest.
          No more double features,
          No more radio comedies,
          No Douglas Fairbanks Jr. hover –
ing over Baghdad.  Today a somber
          Image for somber times.
          I think:  Well,
          At least that's one human being
          Not dropping bombs.
Louis Phillips' latest book of poems is HOW WIDE THE MEADOW, published by World Audience and available from Amazon He is a regular contributor to MYSTERY SCENE MAGAZINE and a frequent contributor to OffCourse.