Saturday, August 12, 2023

Disconnecting the Dots

(reposted from Wednesday, August 16, 2017)

Sometimes I left messages in the street.
          - David Markson, Wittgenstein's Mistress

And then Frank O'Hara stopped by.
He's living in a yurt . . . in the 'Dacks
doing this . . . doing that
And here I am, the
center of all beauty!
writing these poems!
Imagine!

And how about Gustav Mahler channeling Frank O'Hara . . .
bicycling Bavaria
I seem to be absolutely born for the cycle!
deconstructing Moby's Porcelain
disconnecting the dots
as if it matters . . . and it does . . . but not to
his gorgeous, alcoholic, hearing-impaired,
superflirty, 19 years his junior, wife and muse, Alma,
whose bedpost is mottled
with the notches of affairs.
Billed as the most beautiful girl in Vienna
she believes several men are better than one
and spills as much to Freud one afternoon on his couch.
Never a fan of her husband's music
she chooses none of his for her funeral 50 years after his death.
And here again is Frank:
It's my lunch hour, so I go
for a walk among the hum-colored
cabs. First, down the sidewalk
where laborers feed their dirty
glistening torsos sandwiches
and Coca-Cola, . . .


Laura Mentink in Wittgenstein's Mistress (2017)












Early this morning, bicycling Route 28 to Inlet:
unforgettable . . .
meandering past pristine lakes, deep woods,
and rustic little towns,
 someone wrote.
I know a moose when I see one.
And I've seen several . . . at Hoss's General Store in Long Lake.
Everything anyone would need . . . or want.
Everything.
Books . . . some read, some unread . . . on my shelves.
OK, so I've skipped a few chapters
and skimmed others
and disregarded enjambments.
Who hasn't?
But really . . . what is this thing called PO-ET-RY?
Without coffee, I mean . . . or, I mean, of course.
And what's with that?
Simon and Garfunkel's Bookends:
A photograph's all that's left of you.
Must we write from prompts?
Or from furniture music, à la Satie?
I am now trying . . . to write upon nothing, Swift said.
Someone keeps elbowing in with irregardless.
Where, oh where, are the grammar police?
Can you spell donuts?
How about potato?
How about VP Quayle's version of potato?
By the way, it's now called Dunkin'.
Dunkirk is showing at Bow Tie Cinema.
Try this . . . but not at home.
This is a text.
I'm embedding pics in a text.
Putting pen to paper . . . sitting on the fence.
Trying to write right
and other absurdities for understudy
by standins . . . and passersby . . . and wannabes
saddled with odysseys.
Three rows over, 60 years ago, in Latin Class
this girl - an upperclassman - in the school uniform
imprisons me in Dr. Caligari's Cabinet
while Julius Caesar divides Gaul into three parts.

Latin Class













Coming Into the Country with John McPhee
who memorialized big rigs and other uncommon carriers
in Uncommon Carriers
after shadowing truckers for a few months.
Something about momentum
and air brakes
and commercial breaks
which speed delusions
with Copeland's Fanfare for the Common Man.
I'm out here waiting for the answer with Soren Kierkegaard
the other Dane who loved the rain falling mainly on the plain
in full view of Either/Or
written after breaking up with his fiancée Regine Olsen
using the pseudonyms A for Either, B for Or,
and Johannes Climacus for The Diary of the Seducer.
I can well understand why children love sand, Wittgenstein said.
It's all about castles . . . my home is my castle, yes?
With you bundled with apps . . . one day in the foreseeable . . .
An algorithm walks into a bar . . .
This too will be tweaked . . . and tweeted . . .
to fit the model to the facts
or the facts to the model . . . whichever . . .
before Cicero's Third Oration:
How long, O Catiline, will you tax our endurance?
How long will that madness of yours escape us?
To what end will your unruly boldness hurl itself at us?


Lucius Sergius Catilina













Sound familiar?
This, by the way, is an example of trichotomy,
in full habit Sister Anna Roberta said.
And why the Fates red-carded Caesar
in the middle of the Rubicon
and why Hannibal joined the circus and mastered elephantese.
It comes full circle . . . all of it . . .
the dots connected . . . disconnected . . . fading from view . . .
with paybacks and fallbacks
playbacks and callbacks
wetbacks and drybacks
and boxes of ephemera
near the counter of the old, lamented
Avenue Victor Hugo Bookshop in Boston,

Dan Chaisson wrote in The New Yorker
brimmed with
mangy postcards
wedding announcements
lobby cards
vinyl LPs
hippie stickers and patches
Civil Defense pamphlets and evacuation maps
poker chips
Old Maid decks
and skinny dogeared self-published PO-ET-RY chapbooks
filled with messages in the street.

Avenue Victor Hugo Bookshop

Thursday, August 10, 2023

Screen Dump 718

Rehearsing lines for detox where talk-talk is restrung
with unwords for transposition . . .
rearranging the furniture of the mind
to extract the right answer by rewording the question . . .
Of course, the drama of the get-go
with the feel of a silent movie . . .
eyes darting around the corners of the room
as if a mouse had sped past
slamming down chunks of cheddar
trailed by a reconfigured tabby . . .
The flattish physiognomy of the perp
under the cold, bleary sheets of confusion
opens the key to eventual deformity . . .
To hear the little click for another season of reruns . . .
is OK . . . even par for some of the players
chomping to borrow a phrase
for when the lake freezes over
with you dotting the horizon in yet another rewrite
of your one wild and precious life
bought and sold by plagiarists
shoplifting future episodes for junkyard flaneurs
in search of thought bubbles
floating above orphaned backstreets . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Monday, August 7, 2023

Screen Dump 717

Content providers are providing content
for weekend do-it-yourselfers . . .
Why did you walk off the set? . . .
The troubling aftermath of parsing the logic
long listed drip-dried
up and out . . . into and out of the tropes
clutching the elusive, the untranslatable . . .
chopping and framing the sum of its parts
to evoke the essence of absence . . .
You're drowning in word soup and loving it . . .
backstroking to Nothing Compares 2 U
while down-time and emptiness haunt the backstory . . .
Wouldn't you rather smirk the passcode
reminiscing short stacks in the greasy spoon
of one of your past lives
when odysseyites stood on their heads
and busied themselves
assembling paraphernalia
for your next expedition
into a supermarket's labyrinthine aisles? . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Screen Dump 716

A long hauler paging through the elements
and with that, the scene shifts
summoning a fact-checker
to fact-check the epigraph on tippy-toes
when all seemed taken by the virtual bridge
you had conjured the morning after . . .
Where were you on the night in question?
You seem never to tire of that . . .
Approaching it as if this is it
as if this time is it
as if toggling the options . . .
The events in the just-released transcript
by the just-released who had long been forgotten by most . . .
But that was long ago
to say nothing of your selfish devotion to your art . . .
And then this happened
with the weird-ass energy of the woebegotten
and you bejeweled with scrimshaws
sitting among the antique furniture in the atelier
blue-penciling diatribes . . .
Was there no other way? . . .
What was that anyway? . . .
The dynamics of engagement, perhaps? . . .
The regrettable choices? . . .
The nomenclature of streaming seems to have caught on
as a contender for an individual's legacy
revealing the contents of the steamer trunk hidden in the attic
having been asked on facebook chat what's important . . .
Weathering love's inconsistencies
you may want to consider the language of divinity schools
where the shades of gray are Wac-A-Moled into submission
to the delight of those on the wait list . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Friday, June 16, 2023

That Was Then . . . This Is Now

That was then . . . and it was good, yes? / But this is now.
          - anon

When is one finished?
When does one know that one is finished?
A repurposed wasteland appears.
The walls whitewashed.
The floors swept.
But the rooms remain empty.
Meanwhile, stories . . .

~

It's 1967. The Summer of Love.
You're living in a VW Bus
trout fishing in America with Richard Brautigan
drifting along like an easy creek
trying to follow the words of Carl Rogers
to become the self that you really are.

~

What is it all about?
What are you all about?
You get what you put into trout fishing in America
stepping in the water
feeling the cool drift
taking it with you.
Taking what?
The otherworldly contours of love.
The spellbinding angularities.
The waking-in-the-middle-of-the-night inconsistencies.
The ups and downs . . . the ins and outs . . . the wicked game.

~

Your daughter dances to Strauss's Annen Polka,
floating with the wide-eyed innocence
of a nine-year-old who has yet to glimpse
the world of the backstage.
Look at her taut sureness, the steadiness and poise,
the promise of her young movements
as they transcend choreography with a joy that,
you can only hope, will buoy her through a life
filled with huge pockets of uncertainty.

~

You cross over and find yourself in a choral group
performing Arvo Pärt’s The Peace.
This is good. This is really good.
The puzzle at the foot of your bed?
You try to recall the connection.
The mystery of happiness without remorse
or something like that. You’re not sure.
Here’s how it’s done, the caped magician told you
after your eighth birthday party.
Misdirection. Misdirection.

~

At 42, she faced her final storm,
and now floats, high above the seas,
guiding fellow sailors,
her last words, Goodbye, my love.
You turn the soil for a vegetable garden:
tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, eggplant.
Rhode Island Reds appear
scratching for worms with gnarled, yellow claws.
Your grandfather is here, too, from the dead,
a stubby Philip Morris dangling from his lower lip.
He speaks to you, in Polish, about happiness.

~

K. H. Brandenburg tweaks an algorithm
for compressing audio files to birth MP3s
using Suzanne Vega's a cappella, Tom's Diner.

~

You return to a post
about a rhino poacher
who was stomped to death by an elephant
then eaten by a pride . . .

~

She checks herself out of detox
chugging rubbing alcohol and hand sanitizer
and into an ICU where a voice says
You're not going anywhere
but to a psych ward
and a 28-day program . . .
and the Monkey laughs
and rides shotgun
through late-night streets.

~

It's good that grandma's here
on this early July morning
on the beach
in her housedress
with her beach chair
and it's good that she's invited you
to sit on her lap for a while
watch your cousins in the water
and slowly wade into the day.

~

On reconnaissance in his second tour of Viet Nam,
he takes a shrapnel
dying 35 years later at 57
without a memory of a parade
because there were none.

~

Looking at the lobsters in their watery cells
awaiting execution by boiling water
reminds you of David Foster Wallace
clinically depressed for most of his life
who one day stopped taking Nardil
walked out onto his back porch
threw a rope over a beam and hanged himself.
Wallace was an abusive assaultive explosive misogynistic
gifted alcoholic and drug addict.
Looking away from the lobsters
you think of Consider the Lobster
Wallace’s essay highlighting the unethical abuse of animals
in which he asks
Is it right to boil alive a sentient creature
for our gustatory pleasure?
Knowing that the so-called scream
of the lobster being boiled alive
is not its voice but air rushing out
of the holes in its shell doesn’t help . . .
nor should it.

~

You've stopped by again today
to see how your father's doing.
It's August and he's eighty-six.
He's asked for some blackberries,
so you're out here,
in the blackberry bushes,
in shirt and tie,
picking.

~

You get lost with Chet Baker
replaying the opening bars
to All Blues from The Last Great Concert 
recorded two weeks before he fell
out of a window in Amsterdam . . .
because you can't stop
because it's one of the realest things you've encountered
and for a few moments . . . nothing else matters . . .

~

She breaks into her counselor's office
at the therapeutic community house
drinks a bottle of hand sanitizer
and is taken to the emergency room
where she drinks more hand sanitizer
then sneaks out of the hospital . . . wasted . . .
She's picked up by the police
taken to a homeless shelter
on Christmas Eve
then back to the community house
the day after Christmas
where she apologizes to her counselor
and the other residents
and is put on probation . . .
binging . . . purging . . .
She is given the option of treatment for bulimia . . .
She refuses
and is discharged to a cot
in a warming center
where the lights go out at 9 . . .
Next day . . . she's back on the street . . .

~

Do you believe in magic?
Of course you do.

~

March 28, 1941, a little before noon
Virginia Woolf
with hat walking stick overcoat and large heavy stone
wades into the River Ouse drowning herself.
She was an escape artist
who mapped the extraordinariness
of our interiors . . .

~

Elizabeth Bishop catches a tremendous fish.

~

It's 1960. Latin Class.
Julius Caesar divides Gaul into three parts.
Three rows over, an upperclassman, in the school uniform
imprisons you with her long legs
while Marcus Tullius Cicero addresses the Senate
with the trichotomy of his Third Oration:
How long, O Catiline, will you tax our endurance?
How long will that madness of yours escape us?
To what end will your unruly boldness hurl itself at us?

~

You fritter away time and space.
Goalposts splinter.
Your goalposts splinter.
No one believes the converse.
At one time the b-ball shoe of choice
but then on the seventh day
of the seventh month in the seventh year
you fall asleep at the wheel
drift over the double line
and the winged goddess of victory
teams with Aldous Huxley
to open the doors of perception . . .
an aha moment.

~

The mixing of your lines bear the awesomeness of youth.
The imperfection is imperfect, perhaps,
yet as perfectly as possible
as perfectly as you know how
with the almost-imperceptible mistakes
making it delightful.
Let disorder triumph along the boulevards of redaction
where the ifs ands and buts barter transfusions.
Adjusting your sightline along the monochrome,
you resemble a look-alike
from one of your favorite films
the wake of which is a which of a which
but my advice is not to wait it out.
You will know, trust me.
And it will be good.

~

Late at night when you lie awake,
tell yourself that you love who you are,
that your half-concealed life
is not without promise.

Antonio Palmerini


Sunday, May 28, 2023

Screen Dump 715

Losing your place in line at a tag team lawn party
the moment-to-moment gazes
the moment-to-moment costumes . . .
The iffyness . . . especially the embellishments
highlighting the timetable of your life . . .
where you are . . . and why . . .
The accumulation of happenstance . . . scripted . . .
does little to quell the offhandedness . . .
The offhanded notations of old money . . . of old and new money . . .
Consulting a flowchart for next steps . . .
But is it enough? . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Tuesday, May 23, 2023

Screen Dump 714

Irrevocability pins you to the mat
to wrangle seconds . . . or thirds . . .
as if messaging with footnotes a sarabande by Yo-Yo Ma . . .
Why bother sweating the opening bars
with the prelude bleeding through the score
inflicted by a little-known? . . .
You're regressing faster than the speed of sound
to when you auditioned for intimacy's promises
and were thrown for an infinite loop
by odysseyites reopening the book to the chapter you slammed shut . . .
A well-known misstep, yes? . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Thursday, May 18, 2023

 The Poetry Hotel at the Rensselaerville Library . . .



Wednesday, May 17, 2023

Woman XLVII

(reposted from Tuesday, April 19, 2016)

She consorts with puppets . . . no strings attached . . .
in a room filled with bobby-soxers

where she is subjected to the free passes
of agents who feign muteness

to fake Stradivari's signature
while playing stoop-ball with bassoonists smoking joints.

Weed is dressed to kill.
She loves basement bashes . . . un-posing . . .

and underclothing worn out.
The streets criticize her player-piano introductions

bottlenecked on bridges during rush hour.
Her wherewithal has caught on

with post-coital interviewers
who tweet at double-headers

where triple plays are as commonplace
as nosebleeds.

Costumed for night . . . she seldom rides shotgun
saving her literary lollipops for footnotes

and phony phone numbers floating in her wake . . .
her long legs spanning one and a half sidewalk cracks.



Saturday, May 13, 2023

Let's Get Lost

Chet Baker 12/23/1929 - 5/13/1988

Leaving the airport at 5:30 AM you keep replaying the opening bars to All Blues from The Last Great Concert recorded two weeks before he fell out of a window in Amsterdam . . .

because you can't stop
because you can't get over how perfectly he nailed it
because it's one of the closest things you've encountered
and for a few moments . . . nothing else matters . . .



Thursday, May 11, 2023

Screen Dump 713

Nonsense lapses into feigned forgetfulness
dumping you in the middle of nowhere . . .
second guesses segue to pastoral settings
upstate with stemmed glass bumped
to the edge of tomorrow as Georgian models
infiltrate your REM sleep . . .
There's a history, of course, going back to the City
where who knows what happened . . .
the loss temporary . . . weighing the pluses and minuses
of your next move . . . memories of tagalongs
bloating the escape route . . . conflating the statistics
while all along, in the cards, the Shirelles
with Number One on Billboard's Top 100 Chart
for 1960: Will You Love Me Tomorrow? . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Wednesday, May 10, 2023

An article on a poem's first line by Elisa Gabbert in The New York Times Book Review from February 12, 2023 reminded me of Raymond Carver reading My Boat at UAlbany in 1987:

My Boat

by Raymond Carver

My boat is being made to order. Right now it's about to leave 
The hands of its builders. I've reserved a special place 
for it down at the marina. It's going to have plenty of room 
on it for all my friends: Richard, Bill, Chuck, Toby, Jim, Hayden, 
Gary, George, Harold, Don, Dick, Scott, Geoffrey, Jack, 
Paul, Jay, Morris, and Alfredo. All my friends! They know who they are. 
Tess, of course. I wouldn't go anyplace without her. 
And Kristina, Merry, Catherine, Diane, Sally, Annick,
Pat, Judith, Susie, Lynne, Annie Jane, Mona. 
Doug and Amy! They're family, but they're also my friends, 
and they like a good time. There's room on my boat 
for just about everyone. I'm serious about this! 
There'll be a place on board for everyone's stories. 
My own, but also the ones belonging to my friends. 
Short stories, and the ones that go on and on. The true 
and the made-up. The ones already finished,
and the ones still being written. 
Poems, too! Lyric poems, and the longer, darker narratives. 
For my painter friends, paints and canvases will be on board my boat. 
We'll have fried chicken, lunch meat, cheeses, rolls, 
French bread. Every good thing that my friends like and I like. 
And a big basket of fruit, in case anyone wants fruit. 
In case anyone wants to say he or she ate an apple, 
or some grapes, on my boat. Whatever my friends want, 
name it, and it'll be there. Soda pop of all kinds. 
Beer and wine, sure. No one will be denied anything, on my boat. 
We'll go out into the sunny harbor and have fun, that's the idea. 
Just have a good time all around. Not thinking 
about this or that or getting ahead or falling behind. 
Fishing poles if anyone wants to fish. The fish are out there! 
We may even go a little way down the coast, on my boat. 
But nothing dangerous, nothing too serious. 
The idea is simply to enjoy ourselves and not get scared. 
We'll eat and drink and laugh a lot, on my boat. 
I've always wanted to take at least one trip like this, 
with my friends, on my boat. If we want to 
we'll listen to Schumann on the CBC. 
But if that doesn't work out, okay, 
we'll switch to KRAB, The Who, and the Rolling Stones. 
Whatever makes my friends happy! Maybe everyone 
will have their own radio on my boat. In any case, 
we're going to have a big time. People are going to have fun, 
and do what they want to do, on my boat.



Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Screen Dump 712

But there was more to it than the translation
skirting the main event while asking the resident Sphinx
the passcode to some inner chamber
where alternatives are kept on ice with Facebookers
posting the past despite the plethora
of contemporary adaptations of your take on Beowulf . . .
those damaged destined to repeat their obsessions
tumbling head over heels into roundabouts . . .
A treatise on the importance of getting your house in order
targets hoarders making the mess messier . . .
This longing for one last shot at immortality . . .
a day in the life of a day in the life . . .
everything volumizing a high wire act 
with no less than how to get through the day . . .
The vigilance you signed up for, yes? . . .
Can you imagine this ancient hatch? . . .
This escapade of hopscotch fueling the voices in the air
that today argue happenstance . . . the lone and level sands
stretching to a wooden-legged captain awaiting a white whale? . . .

Antonio Palmerini







Thursday, April 20, 2023

Screen Dump 711

An afternoon class in Classics
changes the way you approach texts
while the gravel trail bloats
big cats on fat bikes
waiting to find out what it all means
beginning with Shall we begin?
as we begin Frances O'Connor's Emily
with more isms to latch onto
sprung from the sibs' paracosms
to embellish the autofictions of those
in the boarded-up storefronts of no-no
disputing the biopic tag
with sex, drugs, rock n roll
and a downplay of collaboration
ignoring Emily's diary paper . . .
And behind the embellishments
The facts in the case of . . .
You walk the walk for more words
using the Index of First Lines
to guide googling only to return
cache full of purple waywardisms
as if you had trod the moors . . .
Then on to the myth hands in pockets
parlaying passcodes at transfer stations
to level the playing field
for odysseyites bused to the soundstage . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Tuesday, April 4, 2023

Screen Dump 710

Again, asking yourself in the mirror
What good would questions do? . . .
the silence between extremes
leaving the madness of March
with index finger pointing to ring finger . . .
You buy time . . . walking through replays
that slam dunk you awake
in the middle of yet another dream
of being called out for texting plagiarisms . . .
You're thinking of taking the day off . . .
wanting to call in sick
when sick has nothing to do with it . . .
besides there's no one to call in to . . .
You should know this by now . . .
You should know that the gallerist
reviewing your work has run out of excuses
trying to make something to find out
what it means to make something . . .

Antonio Palmerini




Saturday, April 1, 2023

30 days . . . 30 poets . . . 30 poems . . .

Rensselaerville Library’s Seventh Annual Poem-A-Day Project
celebrates National Poetry Month
with a new poem by a local poet each day for April’s 30 days.
With this year’s entries, PAD will have showcased
210 poems by 120 poets.
Stop by PADYES for your daily poetry fix!

Friday, March 24, 2023

Screen Dump 709

You're grappling so as not to forget what you want
to remember . . . a whoosh as if the surf crashes the cliff
with you floating above . . . You have decided
to practice narrowing your focus to eliminate
the superfluous from your walks . . . the day, deftly unraveling,
seems almost to disappear . . . so many thoughts
vying for your attention . . . then this idea of the texture
of it all . . . everything everyone seemingly connected
with tabs for those nestled in the cleft of your memory . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Thursday, March 23, 2023

Screen Dump 708

You recount how touch initiates the sense of "I" . . .
how it costumes the body on misty mornings
and waits at the bus stop for passengers to resume their lives . . .
A test email breaks the silence . . .
The number of people passing through the portal increases . . .
And so it begins . . . parsing the engagement
with you in the soup aisle at the supermarket
swiping your phone for texts, checking the message
you took great care to get just right,
elbowing through inundations
amid the wearisome floundering of the spinning orb,
harvesting the future for meaning
while standing at the edge of a cliff for however long . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Monday, March 20, 2023

Screen Dump 707

You leave the gallery and long-limbed bronzes
which is OK since it's being streamed
with gaps for reconciliation
by people filing in . . . as what? . . .
let's call them inadvertents . . .
visiting the exhibition retrospectively,
following Zoomed corridors
through an opening in the text
and into the next scene
of customers at the counter in a diner
rewritten while obsessing the commonplace
with thoughts of odysseyites
going round and round the roundabout
in your old neighborhood
resonating with the rhythmic beat
of a blacksmith's hammer on an anvil
shaping steel red-hot from the fire
as if it were planned . . . 
as if it were the answer to the blue question
glued to the ATM . . . empty, unused
on a one-way street
informing each and every touch of the day . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Friday, March 10, 2023

My poem, The Mathematician's Daughter, was a finalist from among 468 entries from 44 countries in the 2023 Stephen A. DiBiase International Poetry Contest. Bravo to the other poets, & many thanks to curator Bob Sharkey & his team for a super event!

The Mathematician’s Daughter

But what of the cul-de-sac of her childhood?
The slow circling of bases on the dusty diamond,
calculator in hand?
The unraveling of ribbons on warm Saturday afternoons?
Her knack, yes, for movie theaters
and the sheer pagination of her intellect.
Her ability to plumb the depths of bodies in motion
to retrieve artifacts long forgotten
pinning onlookers to the mast with her proofs
as she practiced higher-order equations
on the sweet-smelling turf
under autumn’s orange sky.
Forget as well that she knew by heart
the names of Leibniz’s monads
the mass appeal of transits
the high rise of sorts with the stop sign in front
the vase of freshly-cut delphinium.
I once found her calibrating the pulsating, scratchy music
of stoops, wearing a smile filled with late hours -
hours spent spread-eagled over reams of graph paper
lined with doodles and obscure footnotes
from the sixteenth century -
her first four words as illuminating as ever.
She tried hard to find happiness in coefficients
in the beauty of imaginary numbers
staying the required course despite the odds
instead of shortcutting to the breakfast nook without a word -
an unmade bed, some fast food bristling in the wastebasket
the canned soups in her cupboard
arranged as they were in powers of ten.
In the end, she returned to the lecture hall
where, amid furious note-taking, she had once plotted our future
filling the whiteboard and the air
with intricate drawings of the Interstate at dawn
calculating the logarithmic distance from x to y to z.

Thursday, February 23, 2023

Backstory Alice Deposed

Numbers. Their coming-together.
Their commingling. I loved it.
Positive and negative numbers.
Big and small numbers. Real and
imaginary numbers. The purity
of primes. Testing their solitude,
their robustness, their
resistance to proof.
Walking them through the
nightmare of dreams. It was
seductive, addictive . . .
not only on the page
or the whiteboard
but also in the day-to-day.
My days throbbed with them.
I was lost to them. Then
I collided with Dear Luddy.
And I abandoned them.
Just like that. I stopped.
I stopped playing with them.
I stopped sleeping with them.
Nada. But they pursued me.
Their images pursued me,
haunted me. Infiltrating
my fibers. Cavorting
as they did. Yes, there
was a Wonderland of sorts,
but it was finite.
Then the lines began
rewriting themselves
and it was as if I was shoved
through a firewall
into an alternate reality.
The images squeezed
through . . . along with a solo
accordion. I filled my journal
with admonitions . . . not
bothering to correct
misspellings. I began
trafficking in consumables.
Packaged as in . . .
As You Like It. I held
the aces. Controlled the
scene. Flipped the roles.
But always far from the
madding crowd. My height
intimidated them. They loved 
it! Especially after googling
wine lists. Always the same
sluggish words . . . blah
blah blah . . . as if . . .
as if . . . I never anticipated
having to count ceiling tiles.
I always made the most
of a (sometimes) pathetic
situation. Do the math. Run
the numbers. Pair the
primaries! Olly, olly, in-free!
Ready or not, I always came.



Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Screen Dump 706

You practice a disciplined indifference
trying hard to seem not to be trying too hard
plagiarizing Seduction Theory
eyes on angularities
racking up odysseyites for a casual game of nine-ball
in the diamond formation on the subway
where it's all tag-team fashion show
for the clock's hand-wringing . . .
Trying to stay awake amid the blizzard of YouTubes
you reach back for the metric of then . . .
bundles of literary allusions
misquoted misspelled misplaced
in the rare book section of the museum . . .
spending nights alone in a dark room
teaching yourself to draw as if blindfolded . . .
learning to unlearn . . .
the fascination when the game is afoot . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Friday, February 3, 2023

Screen Dump 705

You hop into bed with happenstance . . .
scenes of endearment in black and white
on a doilied Stromberg-Carlson
in a room reminiscent of Miss Havisham's
crammed with memories of home-schoolers . . .
The boulevards distract with light reading . . .
odysseyites await first dibs
their landing craft reassembled
with the same worn colored pencils
from a gallerist's backroom . . .
Renderings . . . mounted in amber
slip past the watchers at the gate
satisfy the elements of someone's style . . .
You google factorials
applying exclamation points
to escape to the garden . . .
head filled with Mahler's doom-laden Ninth
its twenty-seven bars for strings . . .
transcendent . . . a prototypical specter
redacts your clang associations . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Thursday, February 2, 2023

Screen Dump 704

Of course one could ask, What options? . . .
Imposing complexity on a single piece of prose
as if the flat darkness
demands a gathering of sorts . . .
You are now here . . . on your way there . . .
The permutations of if drone on
debulking the synthesizers and spandex
of a second Stone Age
at times engaging the rhapsodic
with a view from within . . .
risking enormity with its attendant salads and sadness
yellowed pages of indecipherable scribbles
appear late at night at the foot of your bed . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Wednesday, February 1, 2023

Screen Dump 703

You favor transmutations . . . real and imagined . . .
passersby cosplay odysseyites
follow dotted lines . . . the consciousness of overcast days
delivering overcast shadows
acknowledging overcast notations
as if in the tunnel of unread words
appearing again and again in dreams
of morning shows throughout . . .
You try to recall days when in the middle of nothing
you were handed a different script
a different unfinished script
winging it with nothing more
than semiotic regurgitations
connecting the dots to an overgrown apple orchard
from someone's childhood secrets . . .
the one your friend let go of when his parents disappeared . . .
The knack of going back intimidates you . . .
as if riding through storm clouds of white chickens
on a red wheelbarrow . . . overly-anthologised
beyond recognition . . .

Antonio Palmerini



Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Screen Dump 702

A diorama shadows your blue-penciled autofiction . . .
The day wanders through snowflake-dotted buildings
leaning against one another
as if the whole world is about to entropy . . .
You enter a wormhole
parlaying archival footage
for an afterlife with benefits . . .
the deck stacked with thumbnail sketches
of odysseyites seduced by Sirens of Dissonance . . .
The eons avalanche . . .
there are so many you've lost track . . .
A downsized news anchor holed-up for days in her room
bangs out magic on an ancient ribbonless Remington
over and over and over . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Screen Dump 701

The instability that looms . . .
like arriving at insight through revision
so you keep rethinking the path
and it turns out to be illuminating
even when you feel on the brink
or fear going over the edge . . .
the stick-to-ittiveness . . .
Sorting through old photographs . . .
your past lives . . . your past choices . . .
the anything as everything . . .
regrets at the last station . . .
doubts . . . insinuations . . . 
ghosts recapping playthroughs
dance across rooftops . . .
How often have you been slammed with less
despite costume changes promising more? . . .
despite the correct passcode? . . .
I know you know this from past table reads . . .

Antonio Palmerini





Tuesday, January 17, 2023

Screen Dump 700

You're dicking around with comma splices
trying to flesh out the ambiguity of appositives
checking prices of navel oranges and fuel oil . . .
The books on the shelf in fracture mode
stare you down, threaten to open . . .
There's a diagrammable certainty to all this
but you're having trouble putting your finger on it . . .
It's just so intricate and deliberate . . .
like winter's grip . . .
Traffic at the tray feeders jams
dislodging with a bright palette
the ennui of second-growth trees . . .
This could be about me, you, or someone else . . .
This hodgepodge of injecting meaning into the day . . .
the value of your words plummeting
given the seeming insouciance of event parking . . .
The relapse is about to relapse
with its refusal to countenance
any change in policy governing rules of grammar . . .
No doubt we'll hear more about this . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Saturday, January 14, 2023

Screen Dump 699

A dropdown menu of grayed-out options
is about to announce your seeming willingness
to engage theater as theater . . .
After all, it’s all theater, yes? . . .
Even the garnish on your takeout . . .
So how about a share plate of edibles
selected with care
by your favorite chef-de-cuisine-du-jour? . . .
enough to dampen the gratuitous hostility
of your joystick with the rag-dolled strangers
backstage urging hardtail fat bikes
down gravel paths with night moves
going meta . . . stretching like taffy
along the yellow brick road of imagination . . .
Everyone memorialized in the softcovers
cluttering your backroom
is a person of disinterest
kneejerking golden rings in fables
transcribing the blank pages of the novel
you inhabit . . . while you reach
for your autofiction trying to forget
what you saw, who you were,
fashioning orphaned marionettes to retreat
into the theme parks of your fragmented mind . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Thursday, January 5, 2023

Screen Dump 698

Many were inexperienced . . . time and again
misinterpreting hand-holding as condescension
revisiting the cul-de-sac with the passcode
at the wheel of your nightmare . . .
So you would proceed . . . slowly . . .
encouraging them to ask questions . . . take notes . . .
The strangeness of the encounter . . . a given . . .
both of you stepping out of your comfort zones
as if shooting with a green screen . . .
And what about postproduction at the tea shop
with work-a-day costumes oozing hilarity in retrospect? . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Screen Dump 697

Voices from the air elbow in with the insistence
of Crayolas pocketed from the early days
when naïveté colored your renderings
with eyes wide shut
dumbing down the circumstances
for palatability's sake . . .
A breeze through an open window
with images of past lives
swells thought bubbles into the full catastrophe . . .
You as confused as I . . .
Yes, add that to your write-up . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Friday, December 23, 2022

Screen Dump 696

Seasonal hymns carry you aloft
the small print assuring you that the exaltation
in the fuzziness of the rearview mirror
is evidence of your coming-of-age . . .
Reams of prayer repurpose happiness
on the street where you live
and alter the topography of your brain . . .
You day-trip backstory practice
mimicking the chamber group in Pictures at an Exhibition . . .
the momentum enough to spearhead you into the beyond . . .
Isn't it magical? . . . intimacy's joggle? . . .
The candles flickering their excitement . . .
puzzling amusement . . . dynamic
in their medievalism . . . in their ability
to quell supermarket stalkers
comparing notes on extended techniques
with odysseyites dabbling in noise . . .
The snow is indeed over the top
but, look, the wonderment of this winter wonderland
is a dotted line to the divine
prompting players to sort through their collections
of unfinished symphonies
sorted on imaginary number . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Monday, December 19, 2022

Screen Dump 695

Odysseyites curry favor with Johnny-come-latelies
homeless in email . . . palming handouts
and a free pass to the Lone Star Steakhouse
where buy-ones get-ones feature . . .
A Shakespearean interface perplexes you far and away
your memory skewed by the cacophony
of the signal-to-noise ratio
filling the first movement with incomprehensible snow . . .
You have come to appreciate nautical wherewithals
and manage to navigate the second movement
mindful of the snow whose melodic drifts
you later learn was what everyone
had slogged through the snowstorm to hear . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Friday, December 9, 2022

Screen Dump 694

Sometimes in her sleep Albertine throws off her kimono and lies naked.
          - Anne Carson, The Albertine Workout

Hence, your fascination with sleep
and with Proust's Questionnaire
alluded to in the opening scene . . .
This, of course, made to seem inconsequential . . .
Alone now in the wilderness
in a blizzard . . .
OK, a good start . . .
Tweak it a bit to fit
into the Islets of Langerhans . . .
That can't be right . . .
Nonetheless, continue . . .
Act Two is much the same
prompting your comment on the formulaic . . .
The cluster fills with posers . . .
That it works is insidious, I mean, incredulous . . .
Are you sure you want to proceed? . . .
If you do, you'll have to walk us through
the proof specing falsehoods within
a narrow margin of error . . .
Think an endangered Snow Leopard
in one of the most remote areas on earth . . .
You are with yourself
you are within yourself
not unlike the unnamed monster
in Mary Shelley's novel
with Victor Frankenstein near death
on an ice floe relating his terror
to explorer Robert Walton . . .
this excursion into horror
by an 18-year-old's nightmare
two years after she became pregnant
with her first child, also unnamed . . .
The monster like all seeks love and recognition
but suffers misunderstanding, rejection, hatred . . .
Enter TikTok:
a world out of balance scored by Philip Glass
whose teacher Nadia Boulanger
arguably the greatest music teacher of all time
fueled his one-upmanship
with fellow composer Steve Reich . . .
and so the world as House of Crazy
forcing us to dip our quills
into rose-colored liquid
to palatabalize appropriating a one-way ticket
to elsewhere . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Monday, December 5, 2022

Screen Dump 693

He has left nothing to say about nothing or anything . . .
          - John Keats

Images of your former self fill the air with commiserations . . .
Videos spiral into collages of departure
and go viral . . . assembling words to say something
about something you know something about
but then stop . . . This happens, yes? . . .
It's as if you were told about the last time . . .
It's as if you were told this will be the last time . . .
It's as if you were told this is the last time . . .
Imagining the confusion when the code bombs
and regs are swapped out for neologisms . . .
You have tried to set the record straight . . .
There will be no setting the record straight . . .
Who told you you would be able to set the record straight? . . .
The record is gone . . . last seen entering Hannaford . . .
You have tried to pick up where you left off . . .
Just where did you leave off? . . .
Too much information . . .
You have submitted the paperwork, and rejoined your age-mates
who pump air and will continue to pump air
into the silence of anechoic chambers . . .
It's as if you were glued to YouTube . . .
It's as if you knew all along you would be muted . . .
It's as if you were recognized for who you are . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Friday, December 2, 2022

Screen Dump 692

Maybe they're coded into the graphic versions
of Stephen Hawking’s Time
hawked by junkyard dogs and other ne'er-do-wells . . .
Or Proust? . . . maybe Proust? . . .
Regardless, time passes . . .
Fashion plates spin . . .
Turntablists go on record to transfuse vinyl . . .
Anything to keep out of hock . . .
Anything to stave off the due date . . .
The life of a court jester juggling, what,
five, six, seven balls
in the days of bungee jumps
accelerates the metabolism
sets loose change jingling
pockets fluttering with delight . . .
This is good, yes? . . .
Dishpan dilemmas melt away . . .
You wake in a Beckettian diorama
locks unchanged, doors ajar
showcasing reticence, ambiguity, and
humorous deflationary counterpoint . . .
Who said that? . . . Did you say that? . . .
Dusty volumes doze on podiums, awaiting magic fingers . . .
Everyone is in fine fettle . . .
And after? . . . Who knows? . . .
At the very least you’ll be penciled in
somewhere ages and ages hence . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Screen Dump 691

You do your best to weather a strange ineptitude
the discoloration of the senses
that follows a fragmented conversation
but before you know it
a triviality arrives
with its own list of demands . . . 
Later, several strangely-costumed leads
appear seemingly on cue from installations
and reappear one by one
as if in an infinite loop
offering monologues and soliloquies
odds and check-out times
well-wrought and well-received
thorough in their encryption
yet lacking in payback . . .
while outside an out-of-sorts vehicle
makes its way along the narrow one-way street
depositing memories
on one chipped stoop after another . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Screen Dump 690

Long haulers reconfigure goodbyes . . .
There is no other life . . .
Promises are scanned . . . some shredded . . .
Irrevocability is tabled . . .
The difference jolts you awake
in the middle of your soliloquy
filled with hounds
nipping at the darkness . . .
Your lines recall with impunity
late night walks through scripts
costumed in OCD . . .
baiting your next subject . . .
reporting the outcome to the moms and pops
infiltrating the neighborhood
after word got out
that the sidewalks are paved
with deleted TikToks . . .
The world fills with dubious auditionees . . .
 
Antonio Palmerini


Wednesday, November 23, 2022

Screen Dump 689

You're onstage translating blue book innuendos . . .
Graffiti artists recruit Zamboni drivers
for the latest in homespun contortions . . .
Every day you write down a color for emphasis . . .
It sometimes works . . .
especially with underdeveloped photographs
and smokeless candles
from Bed Bath and Beyond . . .
You admit to appropriating yourself . . .
About the dog's dutiful permanence
within the purview of the cat's tall tail
wedded to your spot-on translations
you reluctantly relinquish reserve . . .
The day is recalled for safety violations . . .
Knowing full well desire's amplitude
fuels your compassion
for one-armed bandits with performance anxiety . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Monday, November 21, 2022

Screen Dump 688

The day quibbles intensity
climbing in a hot air balloon . . . belching symbols . . .
the same 32 symbols with few exceptions
scribbled by ancients on cave walls . . .
Your visions incubate playoffs
as odysseyites seek shelter
from misappropriations . . .
A free ride with Thanksgiving looms . . .
There is something about something, but . . .
the dumplings, ah, yes, the dumplings
continue to steam . . .
You return remarkably from your incision
into hubris which unchecked
could forego Chromebook's immensity . . .
Blueness strolls elsewhere
while a disaffected second assistant director
toggles a capacity
for resilience against despair . . .
He too will . . . eventually . . .
Rinsing your mouth after using a puffer
impresses a starlet known for her brake pad bails . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Sunday, November 20, 2022

Screen Dump 687

You're using a random text generator
to fill in memory gaps . . .
How back from  elsewhere in blue suede shoes
you loitered to grab caffeine
with a camera obscurist lost in plate tectonics . . .
Misplacing the memo
you practiced night sweats
with a minor leaguer
who had to follow an instruction sheet
for stonermasons . . .
Fast forwarding 40 years you find yourself
among the original cast members
bloating come-ons for moving-up day
in a city of somnambulists . . .
The sky cloudless (which here means nothing) . . .
Memorable hamlets . . . and ink . . .
quid-pro-quo under the skin of a woolly mammoth
mooring across a Russian novel
with a grandmother inviting you in
for voodka and borscht . . .
Your high heels catch-as-catch-can . . .
your hemming and hawing
make it into the finals
with a jump shot paradigm shift
while sniggling softly in tantric rapture . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Wednesday, November 9, 2022

Screen Dump 686

It was time . . . but time for what? . . .
There are too many times
and the clock is of no help . . .
You don't know what to do . . .
You fill with indecision . . .
A keyboardist taps for a return to Wordstar . . .
You find yourself waiting in a waiting line . . .
You decide to throw caution to the wind
and go food shopping . . .
The aisles speak to you in foreign tongues . . .
You feel alien . . .
Free samples are thrust upon you . . .
You begin reciting aloud a monologue
you thought you had forgotten
but then it popped into your head
just now in the condiment aisle . . .
a monologue from your faux halcyon days
when you looked forward
to nights of how-tos and what-ifs
in storefronts stuffed with tchotchkes
piled high by functioning hoarders . . .
You love the pig mug . . . and the designer toilet paper . . .
There's more but it won't let go
of the tip of your tongue . . .
Shoppers stare at you . . . aim their iPhones at you . . .
The supermarket begins to close in on you . . .
an experience reminiscent of your time served
in boostered state office cubicles . . .
You press the Escape key . . .

Antonio Palmerini


Tuesday, November 8, 2022

Screen Dump 685

You displayed inscrutable dexterities
in the moment and thereafter . . .
isolating the ambience for later study . . .
dating entries as a method
of keeping track
of where you left off . . .
There was little sense in doing the math . . .
Enough came too soon . . . the pleasure
climbing but falling off before peaking
as incomplete as the scribbled code
bobbing in the runoff . . .
Your experience with choral groups
seemed endlessly renewable
endlessly enjoyable
as rare as colorways in bipolarity . . .
Your attempt to encounter afresh 
the waveform action of syntax
led to a diatribe of dead ends
directing you to return to the streets
marked One Way with all the trappings
of cutting, splitting, and stacking wood
impressing the making and unmaking of sense,
the how not the what of knowing . . .

Antonio Palmerini