The saving grace of unconventional beliefs Is that they are usually held closely to one's chest, Like a poker hand whose possessor Cannot determine if it is advisable to bluff Or simply fold and sacrifice the ante But such reticence is an afterthought Come the evening's third or fourth Buddy long-neck, At which time restraint becomes a weakness, A refuge for losers, and so one of his compatriots Feels sufficiently emboldened (if not ennobled) To lecture his fellow stool-mates On the absurdity, indeed the very impossibility Of the existence of some higher power, Some sky-residing guiding principle, How the whole house of cards Tottered upon the rickety scaffolding of givens and assumptions (Reminding him that his negation Was dependent on a box set of if-then statements Simply a fool's errand, as he was fully in the grip of mania, Possessed by the bedrock of his faithlessness) Not dissuaded by the bartender's admonishing For chrissakes, Philly, maybe it's time for you to call it a night, Mebbe go somewhere to tell some kids There ain't no Santa Claus So he decided to take his leave instead, Nodding to those who chose to remain For the graduate-level portion of Philly's lecture As he stepped into the street to regard the calm nighttime, Just the shaving of a crescent moon in the sky, Hidden now and again by the passing clouds Dotting and dashing the sky like some unknown cipher And he considered the notion that all of this Was the product of some random jumble, Some rudderless happy accident, But as he muddled upon the idea further, He'd thought upon his own voyage Undertaken with little aforethought to manning the tiller, And, being all too familiar with the dreck and dross Of letting things fall where they may, He was unable to reconcile himself To all of this being the upshot of happenstance.