http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
is bored. Bored with his board travel games, bored with the red plastic 
          steering wheel attached to his rear car-seat, the same wheel that never turns 
          the way he wants the car to turn, and bored with the dioramic landscape 
          that pulls past. Like Berryman's Henry, Baby on Board is heavy bored. 
          How comes such a boredom to one so young and impressionable, 
          whose anterior fontanelle have yet to close? A good question, 
        but HIPPA inappropriate. 
Baby on Board finds solace in listening to the Fifties on 5, the first decade 
          of Rock 'n Roll. Precociously he fills and refills his diapers to teenage angst, 
          thrilling to Be Bop, drifting off with the Drifters. Mack the Knife is a personal 
          favorite when scarlet billows begin to spread. His language skills may be 
          only developing but he knows blood when he hears it even if synonymously. 
When paused at a traffic light, Baby on Board sees a pack of dogs gathered 
          in formation around a rusting but still red fire hydrant, each taking a turn 
          at their favorite piss-stop. Each careful to mark a different spot, to make sure 
          the red post is properly bathed with yellow rain. They have been at it for years 
          and have made noteworthy progress. Already there is seepage at the base. 
          Soon enough their efforts will be rewarded when the weakened metal yields 
          as it must to water's irresistible pressure, and forces itself upon the unsuspecting 
          tourists waiting for the last bus. 
Baby on Board suppresses a giggle, knowing that in comedy, timing is everything.
curves away even as I think it, going in no direction, 
          except away from wherever it came. I am neither its mother
        nor father. Or sperm or egg donor. I am a vessel
of flesh, able to articulate, but unable to know
          how I know. That thought of mine curved away
          has gone elsewhere to roost, to brood or breed, to bother
or bewilder. It no doubt hangs upside down by its claws,
          muttering in Esperanto about its diminished state,
          the disrespect shown it by me, and others whose heads
harbored it briefly, for a second perhaps, and for whom
          its exodus provided a momentary distraction, a partial
          rendering of the satisfaction of blessed relief.
up a downspout to the gutter above, 
          and there to peer with hyper-sensitive nostrils 
          and militant eyes at any and all below, 
          Ramble Rat has ascended to his heaven, a world 
          above the slime below. He chitters there, content 
          in the twilight, at home with leaf mold, airiness, 
          and decay. His heaven on earth. His window
          of the world. He prefers to find whatever 
          can be easily found, and hunts if he has no other 
          choice of insects or small, slower, injured animals. 
          Rambling Rat avoids landfills and garbage cans.
          He has his standards which are inviolate.
          He hoards, if necessary, but admits rarely
          remembering what is hidden or where. Sampling
          is his cautious preference. One nibble is unlikely
          to kill. But Rambler Rat draws the line 
          and turns up his nose at coprophagy. Others
          may well indulge in their own feces, claiming
          beneficial nutrients and even a Vitamin K boost.
        But who are they kidding! How gauche and classless.
The author lives in Baltimore where he volunteers with the Maryland Book Bank, CityLit, the Baltimore Book Festival, acts as the Archivist-at-large for a Jesuit college, and is the poet-in-residence at the James Joyce Irish Pub. Recent pubs: Free State, Mad Swirl, Spank the carp, Triggerfish, and Magnolia Review. He is the author of "The Stars Undone" (Duende Press, 1992). Five poems from his Islander MS became the libretto for a symphony, Of Sea and Stars (2005), performed 4 times to date.