MY LIFE AS A KING OSCAR SARDINE
  After having the ocean all to myself,
  I got caught in a net and dumped
  into the bowels of a sardine factory.
  Smoked herring filled the air
  seducing customers for miles around.
  I became a victim of unsmiling
  lady workers with smudged aprons
  who squeezed me into a tin can.
  I mastered the art of snuggling up.
  The ladies were mesmerized
  by synchronized bells, buzzers,
  and the clatter of a conveyer belt.
  They worked feverishly,
  paid by the number of cans packed.
  Letting go of my sardine body, I fell in love.
  I should have earned a Nobel Prize
  in lying cheek by jowl, and bone to bone—
  a degree of intimacy unknown to anyone before.
  It proved to be a tonic for my future wife
  who had grown up as a lonely little critter.
  Years later, trapped in a crowded subway,
  I thought I was turning back into a sardine.
  I screamed at the top of my lungs,
  I ain’t no longer a sardine, and Oscar,
  you ain’t and never was no king.