The galleries of art
Keep paintings far apart
From dining nook and bath.
Jupiter's splendid wrath,
The tart's décolletage,
The twilight of the Raj—
Too vain for your garage,
They loom there on the wall,
Silent gilt, grown small.
Poems by Richard Epstein. Not much commentary, only one picture (sorry, Alice), and little disruption: just a place to find poems by Richard Epstein
The galleries of art
Keep paintings far apart
From dining nook and bath.
Jupiter's splendid wrath,
The tart's décolletage,
The twilight of the Raj—
Too vain for your garage,
They loom there on the wall,
Silent gilt, grown small.
I have not written much about the Fathers,
Davy Crockett and The Cowboy G-Men,
Those on whom my constitution’s based,
University City and all the state
Houses of Colorado. They left trails
Which I have managed to convert to ruts,
The roots of routes, I almost said, which might
Demonstrate all you need to know. I can
Remember Alamo Park, an old and staid
Neighborhood with a centerpiece of fleurs.
It is still there, though I am not. This happens
A lot these days. There is somewhere a box,
Green and rectangular, if I had to had to guess,
Which holds the GOATS, who once were kids, which saves
Cobwebbed issues in colored ink, which waits
For No Man, who is never going to come.
That was some night. The world went black.
The average of all the dead was 6—
Hundreds of infants and some fogies. Mix
In young adults, a couple spawning males,
And do the math. Disaster never fails
To be absorbed by numbers. Science saves
And sanitizes. Just count up the graves.