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"renoir" poems
A small skiff drifted in the harbor guided by the eazy oars of a fisherman standing in the hull to better view the shimmering reflection of the orange circle hovering overhead- dancing with the gentle waves in the morning mist. Monet had to name it something so he called it what it was:           "Impression, soleil levant." A critic, wanting poison for his pen, seized Monet's title to squeeze a lethal dose into the radical veins of the artist and his fellows of the gallery           (Renoir, Pissarro, Cezanne). With scathing indignation he dubbed the lot of them,            "Mere Impressionists." The label endures (minus one word) but how many recall or care to know the righteous critic's name? November, 2011
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Jul 7, 2015
Jul 7, 2015 at 4:40 AM UTC
Monet's Harbor Sunrise
Standing before her on one foot, as though surveying a Renoir, he is overwhelmed by splashes of red from her nails, her lips. Shifting to level he is entranced by her blue, twinkling eyes, His gaze is one of awe. Uncritical he hears her hair sweep across her shoulder, as rustling wind blown across West Texas fields of barley. Her words cool his bare toes as though dipped in Box Elder creek’ s flow through rocks, eddies and fallen limbs. Her moves have the grace of cirrus skies, he thinks this is my picnic spot, my settling spot fit to build a cabin. Then he knows, love is here.
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Nov 18, 2014
Nov 18, 2014 at 7:38 PM UTC
Do I Love Her?
She’s lovely and petite, Long flowing blonde hair, The target of constant Unwanted attention, The **** of many crude jokes. Though you can’t deny it There is a kernel of truth To every stereotype. Shallow. Yes she is shallow. Shallow as the flood waters Three inches deep, powerful Enough to sweep your car Into a watery grave. Superficial. Yes she is superficial. Superficial as the thin layer Of paint on a Renoir or Monet Colors translucent and divine Deep and lustrous Transporting the imagination To a world of romance and joy. Clueless. Yes she is clueless. Clueless as Sherlock Holmes As he solves a mystery as dark And complex as any labyrinth With nary a clue, save for a trail Of breadcrumbs and a scent of Gardenia. Airhead. Yes she is an airhead. An airhead like the thinnest of air Atop the mighty Himalayas where Holy men choose to transcend the Mundane and commune with Spirits subtle and ethereal and ultimately Unknowable. The world sees her beauty and perhaps Only her beauty, but they are blinded By their shallowness, superficiality, Cluelessness and a brain wallowing In the clouds of misty ignorance. Therein lies the joke.
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Oct 26, 2015
Oct 26, 2015 at 11:48 PM UTC
Blonde Joke
Aye, Montecelli, that's the name. You may have heard of him perhaps. Yet though he never savoured fame, Of those impressionistic chaps, Monet and Manet and Renoir He was the avatar. He festered in a Marseilles slum, A starving genius, god-inspired. You'd take him for a lousy *** Tho' poetry of paint he lyred, In dreamy pastels each a gem: . . . How people laughed at them! He peddled paint from bar to bar; From sordid rags a jewel shone, A glow of joy and colour far From filth of fortune woe-begone. 'Just twenty francs,' he shyly said, 'To take me drunk to bed.' Of Van Gogh and Cezanne a peer; In dreams of ecstasy enskied, A genius and a pioneer, Poor, paralysed and mad he died: Yet by all who hold Beauty dear May he be glorified!
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2.6k
A Canvas For A Crust
Brushing off not others but my old self my true calling I found how my past did confound in ignorance and futility- the next chapter would just be: no strife nor contention but life stripped of its artificialities self-deception lies and false images- why hang up a mirror (so well-kept polished and precious) yourself to admire? discard smash it you aren't a little child! ah, what dross that needs to be separated from the grain! self and self-occupation is the most grievous pain- cast away your books leave your study-room remove your sun-glasses sweep away the dust with a self-made humble broom forget your Visa or Master-Card (do you really need such?) a cup of coffee or a piece of bread it doesn't cost much-- throw away your pack of *** (smoking causes cancer it's really bad) don't get drunk just because you are sad you are still alive be glad- ride your old bike it's dusty in the shed it will bring back readily happy memories of growing-up years when life was never frets or tears do without your mobile phone the Frankenstein that plagues and would never leave you alone- go out there--it's spring! in the glorious green flowers are bursting more alluring and enticing than a Renoir or Monet's painting the birds are chanting the trees are dancing birds are at full-throated singing gentle breezes are caressing lovers at the quiet corner are kissing old couples hand-in-hand they are walking and talking in the park as the sun is shining children are one another chasing while their mothers are watching the world seems well and thriving and nothing seems wanting-- there I am by the tranquil stream not thinking not contemplating not reminiscing self-forgetting an experience life-transforming in a half-dream as though in the cosmic scheme of things I have come to my own being- my awakening.
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Oct 7, 2018
Oct 7, 2018 at 8:08 PM UTC
THE AWAKENING*
Brushing off not others but my old self my true calling I found how my past did confound in ignorance and futility- the next chapter would just be: no strife nor contention but life stripped of its artificialities self-deception lies and false images- why hang up a mirror (so well-kept polished and precious) yourself to admire? discard smash it you aren't a little child! ah, what dross that needs to be separated from the grain! self and self-occupation is the most grievous pain- cast away your books leave your study-room remove your sun-glasses sweep away the dust with a self-made humble broom forget your Visa or Master-Card (do you really need such?) a cup of coffee or a piece of bread it doesn't cost much-- throw away your pack of *** (smoking causes cancer it's really bad) don't get drunk just because you are sad you are still alive be glad- ride your old bike it's dusty in the shed it will bring back readily happy memories of growing-up years when life was never frets or tears do without your mobile phone the Frankenstein that plagues and would never leave you alone- go out there--it's spring! in the glorious green flowers are bursting more alluring and enticing than a Renoir or Monet's painting the birds are chanting the trees are dancing birds are at full-throated singing gentle breezes are caressing lovers at the quiet corner are kissing old couples hand-in-hand they are walking and talking in the park as the sun is shining children are one another chasing while their mothers are watching the world seems well and thriving and nothing seems wanting-- there I am by the tranquil stream not thinking not contemplating not reminiscing self-forgetting an experience life-transforming in a half-dream as though in the cosmic scheme of things I have come to my own being- my awakening.
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93
you stand tall facing the works of art, Monet and Renoir and Van Gogh all slowly consuming your thoughts color by color, brushstroke by brushstroke and you have the nerve to ask me to point towards my favorite masterpiece; you pessimist, you train wreck, it's always been you. Copyright © 2015 Alyssa Packard All Rights Reserved
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May 24, 2015
May 24, 2015 at 12:02 AM UTC
favorites
Disini aku masih di bawah langit milik bumiku Tapi berbeda tempat dan aroma tanah Aku merasa di atmosfer era abad pertengahan Melihat banyak kastil dengan arsitektur tua Pemandangan yang indah di Montmartre, sebuah kerajaan seni yang siap memanjakan mataku seketika Musim gugur menciptakan lukisan indah secara alami Tempat itu seperti kanvas Diciptakan oleh kuas ajaib anugrah yang kuasa Meski Claude Monete dan Renoir sudah tidak ada lagi Aku bisa melihat perpaduan warna cantik di musim gugur dengan mata telanjang kuning, oranye, merah dan coklat Lukisan yang begitu indah Biarkan aku memakai jaket hari ini Sebab udara membuatku cukup dingin Aku berjalan-jalan di pedesaan Prancis Pohon-pohon gugur di sepanjang jalan ditemani oleh nyanyian burung yang menyemarakan hariku Ini sudah waktunya panen Aku menyukai labu di ladang Memilih apel dan pir di kebun dekat benteng Talcy Prancis seperti harta karun emas Paris di musim gugur bulan ini Menara Eiffel sudah menungguku kali ini aku berjalan di atas dedaunan Begitu renyah di bawah kakiku Pohon maple di atas saya memayungi meski hari tak hujan Daunnya yang tersentuh angin berputar-putar Mengirim mereka untuk menari di udara Sangat romantis Aku sedang duduk di bangku kayu Ah jika September tiba...
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Aug 20, 2017
Aug 20, 2017 at 12:24 PM UTC
Jika September tiba
Standing on the intersection of a Monet, a van Gogh, and a Picasso Nice piece of real estate! Water lilies ~ Charrette de boeuf ~ Tete d'homme Let's start with the lilies: I'm impressionable and I gaze lovingly into the pool I see my reflection slowly unfurl in the shimmer of the pink petals As in a dream ... I float on The watchmaker sends an instruction: rotate clockwise Now an ox cart: I seem to be walking in Poe's imagination Crows flitting about as the ox champions His burden on a drafty day Another instruction from the watchmaker: continue clockwise And now Tete d'homme ~ cubism: My world deconstructs Line by line, shapes and forms Fracture into the subterranean unconsciousness of my mind Leading to another instruction: close your eyes Shift Your Perspective Watchmaker says: open your eyes Uncentre Misalign Unhitch Watchmaker says: ens causa sui: 'a being that causes itself' Now I've got Dali giving me niggling doubts about the nature of time Sartre with a side of Darwin and I'm being and nothingness Ground yourself Mullin! Open your eyes ... this is reality There's Rodin in a battle of good versus evil Munch and no screams! This is good Gaugin sharing his garden view I'm in my happy place again ... That's better And here's Cezanne, Degas, Renoir, and Pissarro Bringing me back into a recognizable reality My eyes and my mind are in alignment here But I can feel that watchmaker winding me back up My iris constricts and my pineal widen Third eye ain't blind Hope someone is around to catch me No worries, I'm sailing with Renoir and I've found A Muse (Constantin Brancusi) Ain't life a musing?
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Nov 12, 2014
Nov 12, 2014 at 10:34 AM UTC
Triangulation
Standing on the intersection of a Monet, a van Gogh, and a Picasso Nice piece of real estate! Water lilies ~ Charrette de boeuf ~ Tete d'homme Let's start with the lilies: I'm impressionable and I gaze lovingly into the pool I see my reflection slowly unfurl in the shimmer of the pink petals As in a dream ... I float on The watchmaker sends an instruction: rotate clockwise Now an ox cart: I seem to be walking in Poe's imagination Crows flitting about as the ox champions His burden on a drafty day Another instruction from the watchmaker: continue clockwise And now Tete d'homme ~ cubism: My world deconstructs Line by line, shapes and forms Fracture into the subterranean unconsciousness of my mind Leading to another instruction: close your eyes Shift Your Perspective Watchmaker says: open your eyes Uncentre Misalign Unhitch Watchmaker says: ens causa sui: 'a being that causes itself' Now I've got Dali giving me niggling doubts about the nature of time Sartre with a side of Darwin and I'm being and nothingness Ground yourself Mullin! Open your eyes ... this is reality There's Rodin in a battle of good versus evil Munch and no screams! This is good Gaugin sharing his garden view I'm in my happy place again ... That's better And here's Cezanne, Degas, Renoir, and Pissarro Bringing me back into a recognizable reality My eyes and my mind are in alignment here But I can feel that watchmaker winding me back up My iris constricts and my pineal widen Third eye ain't blind Hope someone is around to catch me No worries, I'm sailing with Renoir and I've found A Muse (Constantin Brancusi) Ain't life a musing?
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46
The elevator opened on the 46th floor, to a small foyer and one plain, grey door The door opened and a young girl, 10ish, in a blue, polo, tennis dress, said, “Hi! I’m Karen, you must be Anais. Will is around here somewhere. Aren’t you pretty, though? You go to school with Lisa? No wonder Will likes you.” She skippingly ushered me from a bright, windowed, off-white, staircase entryway, into a deep-red, mahogany paneled library. A persian cat was soon underfoot, purring and winding around my legs.”That’s Misha,” Karen said, “just shoo her away if you don’t like cats.” I stooped down to pet Misha who eagerly offered herself to be petted and admired. As I stroked her charcoal fur, Karen said, “Let me get Will,” as she scampered off. A gold framed, impressionistic painting, pin-lit in bright crystalline light, hung over a fireplace. In the painting, two girls, in summer hats bright with startling red bows and yellow flowers, were sharing a book. The colors were rich, deep and swirling - it looked very much like a Renoir (I know my French artists). He’d done a whole “two girls” series. I drew closer - it wasn’t a print. Though dazed by the opulence, I hadn’t missed what Karen had said. Will liked me. I longed to interrogate her about how exactly she knew Will liked me, and what form, exactly, Will’s liking took. I know Will and Lisa (who would be joining us in a minute) are just friends. Not that it matters, we’re heading back to New Haven later - but Karen’s statements were capable of activating a girl's guy-dar. Karen, wearing socks but no shoes, came to a sliding halt, on the wooden floor, by grabbing the door frame to stop an otherwise complete slide into the library. “You guys are going to the Ritz for lunch?” she asked, looking back over her shoulder, in a way that indicated that she knew the answer quite well. The Ritz Carlton is a block away and our mission was to grab the food and bring it back here to eat. “Mind if I join?” she said, before I could answer her first question, all wide-eyed, blinking impatience. “I don’t mind at ALL.” I said, Karen whooped and was off again down the hall. “I’M COMING TOO!” she yelled. I chuckled, knowingly - I’ve been there - I’m a little sister too.
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Nov 27, 2021
Nov 27, 2021 at 12:41 PM UTC
picking up lunch
The elevator opened on the 46th floor, to a small foyer and one plain, grey door The door opened and a young girl, 10ish, in a blue, polo, tennis dress, said, “Hi! I’m Karen, you must be Anais. Will is around here somewhere. Aren’t you pretty, though? You go to school with Lisa? No wonder Will likes you.” She skippingly ushered me from a bright, windowed, off-white, staircase entryway, into a deep-red, mahogany paneled library. A persian cat was soon underfoot, purring and winding around my legs.”That’s Misha,” Karen said, “just shoo her away if you don’t like cats.” I stooped down to pet Misha who eagerly offered herself to be petted and admired. As I stroked her charcoal fur, Karen said, “Let me get Will,” as she scampered off. A gold framed, impressionistic painting, pin-lit in bright crystalline light, hung over a fireplace. In the painting, two girls, in summer hats bright with startling red bows and yellow flowers, were sharing a book. The colors were rich, deep and swirling - it looked very much like a Renoir (I know my French artists). He’d done a whole “two girls” series. I drew closer - it wasn’t a print. Though dazed by the opulence, I hadn’t missed what Karen had said. Will liked me. I longed to interrogate her about how exactly she knew Will liked me, and what form, exactly, Will’s liking took. I know Will and Lisa (who would be joining us in a minute) are just friends. Not that it matters, we’re heading back to New Haven later - but Karen’s statements were capable of activating a girl's guy-dar. Karen, wearing socks but no shoes, came to a sliding halt, on the wooden floor, by grabbing the door frame to stop an otherwise complete slide into the library. “You guys are going to the Ritz for lunch?” she asked, looking back over her shoulder, in a way that indicated that she knew the answer quite well. The Ritz Carlton is a block away and our mission was to grab the food and bring it back here to eat. “Mind if I join?” she said, before I could answer her first question, all wide-eyed, blinking impatience. “I don’t mind at ALL.” I said, Karen whooped and was off again down the hall. “I’M COMING TOO!” she yelled. I chuckled, knowingly - I’ve been there - I’m a little sister too.
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10
I have in me a bit of Tuscan sun The wildness of mistral The calmness of a Cezanne village I often walk around the countryside of Pissaro And see the colors, still abundant, undefeated I stroll around the lilies and the harbor of France where Manet painted being thrown out of his house, not able to pay the rent I dance with the beautiful girls in high society Parisian parties of whom from Zola to Maugham spoke about I learn art in silence, in the bright orange color of the day drawing the French young girl Whose face is like Madonna Her innocence, her laughter, her flawless body Excite me, breaks me, creates me I walk with clean head and red wine in the streets of Montmartre Searching the gone and dusted studio of Renoir, Picasso, Monet I stand exactly there where there is nothing old except the moon And the Sacre Couer In the morning I take the first train to Auvers Sur Oise And walk into the cemetery Where lie in the gorgeous French sun Vincent and Theo Van Gogh I utter to them, "Can dream ever be false?" It is when I heard the footsteps I turned The girl in the yellow dress stands at the gate of the cemetery Whom I draw every day but never captured her beauty The French girl We both stand there as it is As if  framed paused  Frozen We, the Impressionists!
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Aug 8, 2020
Aug 8, 2020 at 8:45 AM UTC
We, the Impressionists
Here.. I'm still under the sky but different place and ground I feel in medieval era atmosphere Seeing lots of castles with old architecture Beautiful view in Montmartre, the custom of art Pampering my eyes Autumn creates a wonderful art naturally This place like a natural canvas created by a magical brush from God's hand Though Claude Monete and Renoir aren't exist anymore I can see the blend colors of autumn with my naked eyes There is yellow, orange, red and brown such a lovely painting Let me wear jacket this day Cause the air makes me pretty cold Strolling a countryside of French Deciduous trees along village street With bird song around It's time to harvest I like pumpkins in the field Picking apples and pears in the orchard near Talcy castle French is like a gold treasure Paris in autumn this month Eiffel tower is waiting me I'm walking on the leaves carpet So crisp under my feet The maple trees above me shadowing The leaves twirling send them to dance in the air Exceedingly romantic I was sitting on bench wood Oh.. if September comes NA.2016
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Jul 26, 2016
Jul 26, 2016 at 8:48 PM UTC
If September Comes
The evening sipped Its golden bright, as the sun spilled it's yellow stomach spoke in streams of babbled havoc. Slinging a silvery palm along the slender hip of wanton youth in wishful grip. O' to be young, to be young without the cares of the infirm full, of knar's and knot like the desires of an old oak tree. To touch, the velvet rose light of the beauty in her skin, lovingly caressed of wistful eye and age of bristle.
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Jun 16, 2015
Jun 16, 2015 at 7:36 PM UTC
Renoir
She sat down with you by the pond the summer heat and dragonflies skimming across the water’s skin and the odd duck or so setting down there and she said I want to have kids one day and be a good mother and make my kids happy and meet their needs and not be a moaning mum like my own and you looked at her taking your eyes off the ducks and dragonflies and letting them rest upon her face and wondered how Rubens would catch her or maybe Renoir and you said I’m sure you will some day and they’ll be lucky kids and maybe you won’t moan or chide too much and then silence as you swam over her features her eyes her nose her rose kissed cheeks the way she sat her elbows on her knees the summer skirt showing a little thigh and she said pointing to the water we used to swim in there when we were young before mother caught us with that Barber boy but it was fun and innocent but she never saw things that way and then she smiled at you and you said wish we could go swim there like that today while the sun’s out and the dragonflies are skimming and the ducks are here but she just shook her head and laughed and ducks flew off but dragonflies stayed where you sat with her by the pond in cool of shade.
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Mar 31, 2012
Mar 31, 2012 at 4:14 AM UTC
BY THE POND IN SHADE.
He stands before her as surveying a Renoir, overwhelmed by red splashes from her nails, her lips Entranced by her sparkling blue eyes and hair swept across her shoulders its crackle, as wind blown fields of barley Her words cool him as though dipped in Box Elder Creek Her moves have the grace of cirrus skies He thinks this is a settling place fit to build a homestead
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Jul 18, 2015
Jul 18, 2015 at 2:41 PM UTC
Homestead*
My muse, my muse, She’s here right now She just took a shower and her hair is still wet. She's wearing a bathrobe, she walks up to the bed and sits When she crosses one leg over the other I catch a flash of her thighs Inviting thighs, long legs She has pretty feet And pretty ankles, I always look at feet. She has delicate wrists She has long thumbs, here she is Now leafing through a magazine With those long thumbs, Long fingernails. Her shoes are on the floor, shoes that she wore last night They've fallen over on the carpet, My eyes find my way back to her She seems to have found something interesting in the magazine Here she is, concentrated on it, her back is straight In this light, this natural light, Without make up, She looks impossibly lovely, Renoir would paint her. I get out of bed and walk into the shower. There’s something strangely intimate About taking a shower in a girl’s bathroom, Shampoo bottles and hair conditioners all around me Water cascading down my bare chest Recollecting and replaying scenes from the night before: Unbuttoning her jeans, pulling them off Seeing her Hello Kitty underwear And laughing, and thinking it was cute And saying, umm… so how old are you again? Humour always works, yes, humour always works. I love ********** this girl. It seems as though I'm always ********** her. At night in the living room, on the sofa Unfastening her stockings and slowly rolling them off, Next her skirt, then her underwear… Sweet parting flesh I begin thinking of how it’ll be, how it’ll go down She's always in something classy, But man, it seems as though I'm always ********** her. Sometimes I strip everything off her body, But I ask her to leave her earrings and heels on; they confirm her nakedness Hoop earrings Red lipstick Red heels I lie in the middle of the bed, lights are dim, she climbs onto the bed Curls up between my legs, begins by kissing on my stomach... Great lovers lie in hell, the poet says. Great lovers lie in hell. I'm falling asleep afterwards, but not her *** invigorates me,* she says, tying her hair in a ponytail This girl, she has the effect of lighting a matchstick in the dark. She lays beside me and begins to read Jeanette Winterson And just before I succumb to a deep slumber I remember something and tell her, Baby, baby, baby, your Morse code interferes with my heartbeat.
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Nov 3, 2013
Nov 3, 2013 at 4:45 PM UTC
My Muse
My muse, my muse, She’s here right now She just took a shower and her hair is still wet. She's wearing a bathrobe, she walks up to the bed and sits When she crosses one leg over the other I catch a flash of her thighs Inviting thighs, long legs She has pretty feet And pretty ankles, I always look at feet. She has delicate wrists She has long thumbs, here she is Now leafing through a magazine With those long thumbs, Long fingernails. Her shoes are on the floor, shoes that she wore last night They've fallen over on the carpet, My eyes find my way back to her She seems to have found something interesting in the magazine Here she is, concentrated on it, her back is straight In this light, this natural light, Without make up, She looks impossibly lovely, Renoir would paint her. I get out of bed and walk into the shower. There’s something strangely intimate About taking a shower in a girl’s bathroom, Shampoo bottles and hair conditioners all around me Water cascading down my bare chest Recollecting and replaying scenes from the night before: Unbuttoning her jeans, pulling them off Seeing her Hello Kitty underwear And laughing, and thinking it was cute And saying, umm… so how old are you again? Humour always works, yes, humour always works. I love ********** this girl. It seems as though I'm always ********** her. At night in the living room, on the sofa Unfastening her stockings and slowly rolling them off, Next her skirt, then her underwear… Sweet parting flesh I begin thinking of how it’ll be, how it’ll go down She's always in something classy, But man, it seems as though I'm always ********** her. Sometimes I strip everything off her body, But I ask her to leave her earrings and heels on; they confirm her nakedness Hoop earrings Red lipstick Red heels I lie in the middle of the bed, lights are dim, she climbs onto the bed Curls up between my legs, begins by kissing on my stomach... Great lovers lie in hell, the poet says. Great lovers lie in hell. I'm falling asleep afterwards, but not her *** invigorates me,* she says, tying her hair in a ponytail This girl, she has the effect of lighting a matchstick in the dark. She lays beside me and begins to read Jeanette Winterson And just before I succumb to a deep slumber I remember something and tell her, Baby, baby, baby, your Morse code interferes with my heartbeat.
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*Do you like art? Does Renoir sit in a frame above your bed? Are you alone? What does this painting look like to you? I use dots to portray events in my life as described by others. Van Gogh never cut his ear off. Georgia O’Keeffe loved painting vaginas, and so do I. Want to be a model in my next work? I met Bosch at Starbucks a few years back. This took me twenty-two hours to paint. Buy this, buy that. Andy Warhol is my dad.*
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Jul 9, 2014
Jul 9, 2014 at 10:12 PM UTC
Andy Warhol is my Dad
Double checking, Last minute Xmas Shopping list, Spent a whole day at MUSÉE D'ORSAY, with eyes and curiosity, Renoir: Father and Son, Painting and Cinema two Renoirs, Pierre-Auguste and Jean Renoir, Renowned Impressionist painter inspired, his son, Jean Renoir ‘ A day in country’ one of his Famous Film, They shared models and shared sensitives Like father, like son.
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Dec 30, 2018
Dec 30, 2018 at 2:18 PM UTC
Father and Son
renoir black canvas crook bag after breaks apart and drifts a nothing warmth o’v the carpet open drapes renoir contemplating death //closed loop: <over> <over> <over> <over>// renee skirts breaks brittle dash ******* blood flesh **** all down the road [schizophrenic laughter as i bleed into my dead phone] and pieces of light opening scattering—no end! no end! no end! no end! no end!—holding her hand keep the wetness out the pieces of hair the cold sprawl the hollowed bones the old tradition the new teeth (across the road children gather and renee breaks into sobs uncontrollably); now Y2K turned and renee tucks a golden coin so deep into the ER room barely breathing first with asthma now renoir.
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Jun 27, 2017
Jun 27, 2017 at 2:04 PM UTC
renoir
An unethical practice to fully comprehend my existence in space and time, I took the world hostage and prodded its inhabitants with probes and electrodes only to find myself conducting self-lobotomies in front of the bathroom mirror; Gazing through the eyes of McCrae, I ****** my hands into pristine soil, tore up roots and soldier bones, creating a garden of chaos only to find myself amongst red petals and marrow strewn across green vision fields, but the larks still bravely singing fly! I splattered ******* across impressions of Monet and Renoir only to find myself dripping like Dali, screaming like Munch, is this what beauty looks like?! I passed up a hitch on a Heart of Gold only to find myself in the mire of a Brave New World, kicking at the dirt that sent electroconvulsive shocks up my spine, is that a headlight reflection in my Bell Jar?! I looked down the barrel of my fingertip guns, still smoking and listened to the hollow wind of my self-inflicted universal entropy... run. Through a wormhole, into the forest of wisdom where I reviewed observational data of my chaotic string theories, there I found myself, rejecting the null and assembling a fire of new Hope using the burrs and thistles burrowed under my skin, scratching and clawing at unethical practice.
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Mar 13, 2014
Mar 13, 2014 at 12:21 AM UTC
A Frantic Search for Meaning: Logotherapy with Viktor Frankl
I have no appetite for pronouncements, platitudes declarations, meditations and revelations no patience for wisdom and cogitations and much worse regurgitations no stomach for moanings and groanings musings, and working out meanings much less about how your groin is today I'd just like to (like Renoir,  if I may, just focus and work) not to be anything,  no attempt to be just what is natural and easy play and laugh and when it's time just yawn and sleep
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Jun 8, 2014
Jun 8, 2014 at 6:29 PM UTC
pronouncements
In the spectral mausoleum Wherein the human's left me deserted; I still wilt writeth transcendent poesy Mine blood as the word's to be posted. An anointed omnipresent To luster her anticipation of mine proclivity; She awaiteth me, behind the benevolence As her optical's art painting's in Renoir relevance . I revamp mine apparition To maketh mineself to her more known; She seeith mine black suit, unbuttoned shirt She feeleth mine flesh, and strokes mine old bones. All mine bad misgivings, she erases like as if at school She's the teacher, I'm her student, though tis I breaketh rules; Yet I do payeth attention, to this queen whoever she is Yet thou must remember, this is all a dream, spurious wish! Though tis just an illusion, I still hath highest Hope's Because I'm not the other men, proudly others seeith that most; As tis I shalt continue on, writing amour for one not around Whoever she is, and who she might be, please release me from.. The ground................ ©Brandon nagley ©Lonesome poet's poetry
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Aug 1, 2015
Aug 1, 2015 at 8:42 PM UTC
Ubi est amantis Quidve release? ubi es regina? ( Where is that lover release? where art thou queen?) Latin tongue
These lanes are very narrow you said walking with Jane from the parsonage where she lived to where the farm road began Are they? she replied I’ve never thought about it just that the hedges are high and the birds chock full in them and their songs Yes you said They are and in London there are no hedges or narrow lanes and the only birds are sparrows and pigeons and you wanted to take hold of her hand and squeeze gently the flesh and sense her pulse but you didn’t you put your hands in your jean pockets and gazed sideways on at her and her dark hair and her profile and the scent of her like lavender as if she’d dived into a wide field of it and embraced the flowers and stalks What bird song is that? she asked No idea you replied moving closer to her the scent getting stronger the desire to be closer taking hold but still at bay It’s a blackbird she said You’ll learn them all the birdsongs and where and how they nest and in what months and you nodded and saw how the summery dress moved and swayed as she walked the flowered pattern like a field moved by a soft breeze and her sandaled feet touching the gravelled lane and you thinking how it would be for them to be held and kissed by you if she were beside you lying in a field or in one of those tall woods and you pursed your lips and she looked up at the sky her eyes gathering the blueness and whiteness of clouds and she said Monet would have captured that so well and You you muttered He would capture you well each aspect of your face and hair and eyes and she smiled and looked at you and said I’d want to be captured by Renoir have his arthritic fingers clutching brush and capture me and maybe secretly lust after me and she blushed and turned away and you thought   Oh yes yes yes but said nothing just gazed and breathed in her being her beauty all there for you to view the eyes the hair the profile the way her lips smiled and sway of walk and the tall hedges seemed to explode with the wild bird’s talk.
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Apr 17, 2012
Apr 17, 2012 at 2:03 AM UTC
AS YOU WALKED ONE SUMMER DAY
These lanes are very narrow you said walking with Jane from the parsonage where she lived to where the farm road began Are they? she replied I’ve never thought about it just that the hedges are high and the birds chock full in them and their songs Yes you said They are and in London there are no hedges or narrow lanes and the only birds are sparrows and pigeons and you wanted to take hold of her hand and squeeze gently the flesh and sense her pulse but you didn’t you put your hands in your jean pockets and gazed sideways on at her and her dark hair and her profile and the scent of her like lavender as if she’d dived into a wide field of it and embraced the flowers and stalks What bird song is that? she asked No idea you replied moving closer to her the scent getting stronger the desire to be closer taking hold but still at bay It’s a blackbird she said You’ll learn them all the birdsongs and where and how they nest and in what months and you nodded and saw how the summery dress moved and swayed as she walked the flowered pattern like a field moved by a soft breeze and her sandaled feet touching the gravelled lane and you thinking how it would be for them to be held and kissed by you if she were beside you lying in a field or in one of those tall woods and you pursed your lips and she looked up at the sky her eyes gathering the blueness and whiteness of clouds and she said Monet would have captured that so well and You you muttered He would capture you well each aspect of your face and hair and eyes and she smiled and looked at you and said I’d want to be captured by Renoir have his arthritic fingers clutching brush and capture me and maybe secretly lust after me and she blushed and turned away and you thought   Oh yes yes yes but said nothing just gazed and breathed in her being her beauty all there for you to view the eyes the hair the profile the way her lips smiled and sway of walk and the tall hedges seemed to explode with the wild bird’s talk.
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Triscuits and hummus with olives and wine Miles and Coltrane in four four time salmon and salad rosemary and thyme Rohmer and Renoir at Hollywood and Vine Haruki Murakami and Mark Twain these are some of the   favorite things of mine
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Sep 27, 2016
Sep 27, 2016 at 9:35 PM UTC
Things of Mine
Christina sat next to you on the school playing fields the summer day was hot and she sat there cross-legged her school skirt touching on her knees and you looked beyond her wondering if the girl who had kissed you at Christmas while carol singing was looking over at you from a group of girls across the way I wish I had my bathing costume on Christina said so do I you said looking back at her taking in her white knees catching the summer sun she giggled and looked away did Cedric tell you about me and what I told him? she asked her profile like some Renoir girl yes you said remembering Cedric’s words and his blushing face he seemed put out you added you don’t want to worry about Cedric she said he hates me getting into boys as she said this you looked over at the girl who kissed you and she was staring over at you and Christina and seemed annoyed and as you gazed at her you still felt that kiss on your lips and that embrace in the moonlight and Christina touched your knee and said if you want privacy we can always go up into the woods by the fence and you said did you hear about Brilton the teacher of English? No she said what? he’s been sacked why? she asked running her hand along your thigh for taking boys home in the lunch period you said oh she said removing her hand what for? You looked at her knees in the sunlight how the light seemed to warm them no idea you said and you looked away with a picture of her knees carried in your head.
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Feb 25, 2012
Feb 25, 2012 at 3:34 AM UTC
ONE SUMMER 1962.