http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published since 1998 by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg
Only machines should make coffins, soulless machines
          or wise old carpenters in fairy-tale workshops
          that know what they’re doing. They should not
          be made by 20-year-old men in factory-floor settings
          methodically assembling one box after another
          stapling in the ruffled, padded  liner with a loud nail gun
          changing fabrics as needed according to a hand-held sheet containing 
          the day’s orders. These boys should not have to think of death at all.
        This is not how a coffin should be built, 
they should be slapped together quickly 
          by the cold metal hand of a machine 
          or poured out in carbon filament by the extruder of a 3-D printer
          or carefully and lovingly crafted by the old yet steady hand
          of a man bent over a block of wood with a chisel, his own loved ones
          buried in the fields behind his house 
          in coffins of his own making. 
          These are the only scenarios that are acceptable to me.
Go back, let’s go back
          will the fluffy-headed little chick back into the egg.
          There are too many things to worry about now
          that the tiny flightless thing has escaped your womb. 
          Nights spent curled around a fluttering egg
          trying to stretch and escape but trapped
        safely inside your body, these were good times.
The little arms stretch and try to take flight
          there are too many things to worry about now. 
          Hands must be held at all times, little feet
          forced into submission. Look both ways always
          don’t ask questions until we’re across the street. 
Little wings stretched and suddenly there are feathers
          enough that the first step into the darkness is met with flight. 
          Too many nights wondering why babies have to be born at all
          why children have to grow up, why
          it can’t just begin and end 
          with the safety of the womb. 
Holly Day currently teaches at the Loft Literary Center in Minnesota, the Richard Hugo House in Washington, and WriterHouse in Virginia.