http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
He cannot get up from bed in the morning
Like a boy
Or a jack-in-the-box
When its lid is raised.
He remains where he is.
He thinks about what to think about
Or whether to think at all 
And, if so, about what.
That does not work. Clumsily
He lifts today’s sheet and blanket.
Rising, he finds he is able
To get out from under again. 
She is very fond of her cat
      And although she does not dote on him
      She gives him lots of attention
      And is simply grateful for his being there
      With her in her small apartment
    Now that she is elderly and lives alone.
    
Next to her computer desk
      She has placed a small table for him to use
      To rest on.  Often he pads over
      And leaps up onto it.  
      Liking being there,
    Sometimes he watches her send an email 
Or look stuff up on the Web.
      The woman believes
      Her cat is fond of her: their relationship
      Is not a one-way street.  
      It is precisely
      What the cat needs and the woman too.
The beeping of that truck outside
      Backing up 
      Sounds like a cat meowing.
    It really does. 
I have a cat here 
      To prove it. 
      But after two or three 
      Of her harsh statements
When I say “No” to Mona
      She stops;
      Unlike that truck,
      She is cooperative with me.
Poems by Jonathan Bracker have appeared in The New Yorker, Poetry Northwest, Southern Poetry Review and other periodicals, and in eleven collections, the latest of which, New Poems, is available from Amazon as a print-on-demand book.