http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
Someone bought a copy 
        of my Selected Poems 
  2002-2021 at Good Books 
        in Cornwall, New York, and 
        I cannot help but wonder 
        who it was. I would like to 
        think it was a woman, well- 
        educated, perhaps with a 
        doctorate, not in literature, 
        in biology or art history or  
        better yet, in psychology,  
        plain looking in her fifties,  
        glasses, divorced or widowed,  
        who went to the coffee shop  
        next door, opened the book at  
        random, smiled, and, for the first  
        time in her life, wrote a poem,  
        a poem about buying a book of 
        poetry, ten times better than this.
Her granddaughter couldn’t think 
        of the name of her grandmother’s 
        hairdo. “It’s from the 1940s. Is it 
        the quiff?” “No, don’t call it that. 
        Quiff means slut in British slang,” 
        I said to the screen while watching  
        the video about Ruth Stone. “It’s a  
        pompadour,” I said to Bianca as  
        though she could hear me down 
        the years between us. Did she never 
        write a poem about it, about her hair,  
        itself a poem standing and bowing over  
        her forehead like a great red peony? 
  “Never mind, Bianca. It was really  
        a Victory Wave, your grandmother’s 
        wonderful wave of victory,” I said 
        to the screen, waving goodbye.
I asked for Irish Handcuffs. 
        She never heard of it. 
        They almost never do. 
        Even in the Irish bars they almost never do. 
        I told her what it was. 
        A shot of Jameson in one hand, a Guiness in the other. 
        Does it matter which hand? she asked. 
        It may to some but not to me, I said. 
        Now that you know how to serve Irish Handcuffs, it won’t matter. 
        Nobody will ever ask for one ever again, I said. 
        She was a college student. 
        I asked her what she was studying. 
        To become a funeral director, she said. 
        Want another one? she asked. 
        Not today, I said. 
        I still have two years to go, she said. 
        Okay. Good to know. I’ll be back, I said. 
        And I’ll know Irish Handcuffs, she said. 
        And I’ll know who I want to embalm me, I said. 
        She laughed. 
        I didn’t. 
        But she had two years to go. 
        A lot can happen in two years.
Solonche's books forthcoming in 2024 include The Architect's House (Kelsay Books), An Aesthetic Toward Notes: On Poets & Poetry (Deerbrook Editions), God (Shanti Publishing).