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The Mystery of Banking
The bank has ten billion this year,
But the money is surely not here—
It’s been quite lent away,
Pending some future day,
So it’s only a promise , that’s clear.
Is it borrowers then with their share
Who have the bank’s money to spare?
Nope! They’ve spent it all,
To get profits next fall,
So the money is clearly not there.
One may begin wondering where
Is this something not here and not there—
There’s a ten billion list,
But does money exist?
Such thoughts only lead to despair.
Alex J. Pollock, c. 1970
Sonnet
Since we will vanish, oh my one, my own,
Together with the burnt out candle’s flame,
And nothing, nothing, meriting the name
Of You or Me remain, though bright we’ve shown;
Since too no verses, certainly not mine,
Can hold the light or stand against the dark,
No lines recall a glow, no rhymes a spark,
And this is true, although you are divine—
Divine, I say, I also (if with scars),
Two miracles of thought, will, passion, breath,
But since stone blind to miracles is death,
Who snuffs as well as spirits, worlds and stars,
Therefore love me while we burn and be—
Thus purest logic, truest poetry.
Lines on Holbein’s “Dance of Death”
He stalks unseen through all our days,
While puffing self-importance, we
Tote up our wealth, dine richly fed,
Make speeches. He, all mockery.
Sniggers as our flesh betrays.
We push from thought the end we dread,
He waits and grins in parody.
April in Chicago
The zephyrs turned to gusts and chills,
It’s snowing on the daffodils!
Too cold for any vernal fling,
Rough winds do shake Chicago’s spring.
Lines While Riding the Chicago L
Oh, you cannot make a poem out of riding on the L train,
Though you’re clever, Alexander, so my Muses will explain,
It’s for certain not a pleasure—it’s too boring to be pain,
It’s only jerky, crowded, noisy and obnoxiously mundane!
Moonbeams Needed
The daily tasks that never end,
Cling like cobwebs to our minds,
Entangle in a thousand strands
Our souls in lilliputian binds.
They hide the essence from our view,
Intruding even in our dreams,
We must escape! And freely rise,
Like Cyrano, upon moonbeams.
Herrick
Robert Herrick, cavalier free,
And ever perfect metrically,
Your loves were bold,
Your verse controlled.
In poetry a mistress’ knee
Can be a subject properly,
If every rhyme
Arrives on time.
You were immoral we can see,
But still immoral gallantly—
Your sin? An ounce.
It’s style that counts!
Variation on Pope
Radiation wandered blind across the endless night,
God made the Eye, and there was light.