http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
has not missed a community meeting since birth 
        two years ago. In rat years he’s old in the tooth. 
        A survivor whose days are not worth counting. 
        Even so, he’s present this night, alert and informed, 
        still able to chew asphalt, wire, ancient hard woods, 
        and all things plastic. Truth be told, his preference 
        has always been blacktop over macadam. Entirely for 
        survival he reasons. Tonight’s agenda is thin soup poorly 
        salted. If there is a hint of flavor it is not local, meaning 
        not present. Still, he remains civic-minded, a rat who believes 
        in supporting those who too often fail to vote or write 
        blistering letters to the papers, and can’t be bothered 
        to put a simple sign in their concrete yard. In earlier times 
        he might have been labeled a yellow dog (rat) democrat
        though he prefers to think of himself as independent 
        of fixed thoughts. Anything other than an ambassador 
        of the obvious. His votes are not dangling chads. Partially 
        gnawed purposes. Something considered for their prescience, 
        though on occasion dismissed as incomplete. Inconclusive. 
        He does make the effort. Always. Unlike those who traffic 
      in solipsism. Who’d deny him a voice without quorum or vote. 
sees the massive oak door swing open invitingly, and somehow knows 
      it is already tomorrow inside the house. The doorbell and brass knocker 
still sleep. A house dog monitors the metronomic movement of its tail 
        back and forth across the heart wood pine floor. Pink tongue panting. 
But reports no seismic literary activity. In the foyer, A vase of roses 
        has deadheaded itself, its red petals scattered in a welcoming pattern. 
Looking more closely it is clear their message was intended for someone 
        with mild dyslexia, webbed toes, and a recently administered herbal colonic.
         
        Dear OverReader, the implied you is not an apostrophic intended as you. 
        As Incontinent Reader’s eyes shift in survey, the winterized fireplace coughs out
          
        a hairball made of a squirrel’s nest of leather shoes, a missing hamster carcass, 
        and the Travel section from last week’s Sunday New York Times. The flue has flown
away and into the chimney sweep’s dark arms, and together they have escaped 
        to the Big Upper Middle Land, aka Bahamas where they honeymoon in Bimini, 
naked in their suite and genuflect knee-deep in a bathtub of hickory daiquiris. 
        Do you understand Dear Callipygous Reader, why you must wait outside? 
Or at least move so that I might better see?
powers across the kitchen floor, tail winding 
      and unwinding around the key to maintain itself
in the special light that only kitchens allow.
        Its mouth opens and closes as its haunches
hunch and unhunch. Eyes cross and uncross, 
        flit left, then flirt right. All the while the tip
of its clockwork nose wrinkles and relaxes.
        Noiselessly. As if gearless, or possessed
by the hideous key plunged unhealing in its back.
        Clockwork Rat slows, sensing the sly presence
of Clockwork Cat, his rival for any food left behind 
        by Clockwork Man. Tightly wound, it springs, 
its speed exiting distance and safely entering 
        the now closing clockwork hole. Home. Hungry,
mildly perturb, but freshly oiled and rust-free. The soft 
      ticking of its inner clock, white noise to its ticking ears.
remains in the dark, shaded about most things.
        Fluorescent, incandescent, LED, black light, halogen, 
      mercury vapor, neon, and metal halide, to be precise.
Never bright, it’s dimwitted on the best days and stands
        pedestal-like on a corner bedside table. Its worldview
        is less than panoramic, but better than the rug’s view
or the ceiling fan’s dizzy height. Who knew Ignorant Lamp 
        was fearful of fire in all manifestations: butane lighters, 
        matches and flashlights, glow in the dark plastic worms,
and especially the light creeping out from under the bathroom 
        door. Its partner, Bedside Lamp, now deceased, a shattered victim 
        of a senseless pillow fight, always warned about what hid 
behind the locked door, the door that never opened, but always 
        hinted it could, at any moment, allow its overwhelming sun 
        to burst forth and incinerate all: four-post bed, winged chair, 
        throw rug, hung art, and surviving darkened lamp.
 “He knows the rats are running; he just does not care to join the race” 
        - Steven Fromholz
are those who say the race run is ruined
        by celebrity rats, politico rats and the like.
        Who could possibly challenge Cluny the Scourge?
        Or escape The Death of Rats? Even Ratbert, 
        aka XP-39C², who finds mazes amazing. 
        And then there’s Ritzo, the Brooklyn bred,
        sewer bound street smart rat who famously
        never carried the plague, not even once.
        And Nigel Ratburn, a 4th grade teacher 
        who loves chocolate. And more chocolate.
        Or Professor Ratigan, the Napoleon of Crime, 
        who denies his ratness while reviling mice.
        There are those who might say The Number
        Three Heavy Widdlers Squad, brothers in battle
        with the Amazing Maurice who educated 
        and freed all rats, excepting those who ate
        their own ears and tails, were nothing more
        than piss and chips vinegar. They would be mistaken, 
        confusing form with function, and thereby 
        elevating the taxidermic Emile into unnatural
        ethers. Not a world fit for the stuffed. Sentient
        they would be, elevated to human levels, and often
        above. Sadly Mischief Night has fallen from favor,
        even in Ireland, Scotland, and Yorkshire where
        once it was Halloween, a night for all widdlers.      
begins now. Gravity has to go. Has to be gone. We must be rid of it 
        and our neighbors too. I’ll not be standing here and be told that I am 
      tangled up in strings. Whose crazy idea is that and why isn’t he 
wearing a straitjacket in a rubber room? I’m telling you these theories 
        can kill you. So many and such maddening and crazed ideas tossed out 
        and off roofs like watermelons to make some art below. It ain’t right 
and nothing good can come of it. In case you haven’t cottoned 
        to what I am saying let me say it hollow point blank clear: 
        Who made gravity into a law? It’s not in the Constitution. And isn’t 
an inalienable right. So, why’s it a law and not just some dead man’s idea? 
        I ask you. Why? In most cases you can depend on so-called gravity. 
        Drunks’ll hit the ground more often than not, though there are a few 
who float like clouds in the night sky. Not sure how they do it when 
        I can’t. But they can as I am witness. Who am I to argue with them? 
        They must have cut a secret deal with Mr. Gravity and I only admit 
to wishing I was a balloon and could float in the face of Mr. So-called Gravity. 
        It has nothing to do, and I say this proudly, with my attraction to your mother, 
        my wife and companion of these many star-dusted years, the woman 
I proudly married and buried. Whatever. You don’t ever ask her about you 
        know what, else she’ll rise right up outta the ground and slap you a new face. 
The author hopes to one day once again volunteer with the Maryland Book Bank, CityLit, the Baltimore Book Festival, and was the writer-in-residence at the James Joyce Pub. His pubs: North American Review,crazyhorse, New England Review, Southern Quarterly,Free State Review, Loch Raven Review, & Poetry Magazine. He’s the author of The Stars Undone (Duende Press, 1992), and provided the libretto for a symphony, Of Sea and Stars (2005), performed 4 times to date. Recently his 130th {Ir}Rational Narrative, aka prose poem, was published. He was one of the founders and Poetry editor of the Black Warrior Review.