.
The path of least resistance
is a straight line
but once you deviate
even slightly
the path of least
resistance becomes
that of greater
and greater
deviation
is a straight line
but once you deviate
even slightly
the path of least
resistance becomes
that of greater
and greater
deviation
Egg of Columbus: photo by Jacper "Kangel" Aniolek, 27 January 2007
13 comments:
February 4, 2012—Le Poet Mauvais having his say:
“The codes know more about us than we ourselves know. They think we are the virus. Only a deviant would dare deviate.
Word verifications are the bad poetry of the future that wasn't... still probably superior, however, to the bad poetry of the present that isn't. Or is. All around us. And closing in.”
Tom,
Happy Easter to you & A !
3.31
light coming into fog against invisible
top of ridge, robin calling from branch
in foreground, sound of wave in channel
period not along in feeling
such events, possibly
revision of seeing reversed,
picture shifts, scene
triangular white peak in blue white sky,
sunlit green of trees on ridge below it
Egg-zackly!
Here's to all the wrong turns.
Ever try to draw a perfect circle freehand?
Deviation is a consequence of unregulated genetic mutation. The test of its viability is the success of the reproduced consequence. Favorable traits may achieve continuity.
Sounds poetic, doesn't it.
4.1.13
dawn cracks skull open with sound of
garbage truck idling at curb, crows
rip into black plastic container as
first rays peek over brushy suburban
ridge, evaporating morning mist into ether
dribble of scalding coffee sliding down
edge of cup threatens rough draft
salvaged by tongue from mortal
human stain, priceless annotation
Thanks, friends.
By the by, Curtis, as a noted gourmand, you'll perhaps appreciate this.
Whalen drew a perfect circle, a bubble with a feather in it.
oh and this, that almost passed me by. i was speaking with mom on Easter Sunday and we got to talking, and as i have been in the process of moving (again and again, always and always.) the books are kinda out of place. but there in the place of perfection, somehow it had landed, (through occurence & happenstance) your book Easter Sunday, right there, almost like a miracle on Easter Sunday.
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