Sonnet: Adventures on the Hippocampus Around noontime, we landed on the hippocampus, when squirrels were hungry, leaping from the tree branches down onto the arms of passersby, snatching away peanut butter sandwiches from them and biting, often, the hands that held them, snacks between classes. By lunchtime, we could usually no longer remember what we’d had for breakfast, and yet were almost certain that we had had something. Memories clouded by . . . well, by eleven o’clock at the latest, unless a skill at finding shortcuts helped us all become better taxi drivers. Subcortical inputs rushed around the campus—heads with their chickens cut off, by Talibansters with scimiters where their iPods should have been. Counterdemonstrations by Students Against Islamic Knowledge disrupted both pep rallies and frat hazings. But, by late afternoon, this often murky history has had its sense of relevance restored, on its way to class (Brachiation 101—elective). Hal Halvard Johnson ================ [log in to unmask] http://home.earthlink.net/~halvard/index.html http://entropyandme.blogspot.com http://imageswithoutwords.blogspot.com http://www.hamiltonstone.org http://home.earthlink.net/~halvard/vidalocabooks.html