Beboparebopawoebot

Worst may happen words will be wasted
but when the Old Kingdom cattle count
comes around you’ll be taxed every one
so omit unnecessary parts of speech
and craft each comment in mindfulness

As for punctuation use sparsely as if
on a desert plain flat and dry and open
for readers are offended by periods1
while snowflakes fall like plumules
to cover the withered words of summer

Do not read for meaning but for beauty
for you cannot stop the flow of words
the catastrophe of thought fills space
with light and shadow dappled colors
The purpose of poetry is clerestory

a window you can’t see out allows
light to fill the air enclosed inside
worthy even if you have to hear organs
groan like donkeys through the lovely
indoor sky and nothing you suspicion

1“Woebot tends to avoid periods at the end of texts, because user research has suggested that people experience them as aggressive”

The New Yorker, “Can A.I. Treat Mental Illness? New computer systems aim to peer inside our heads—and to help us fix what they find there.” By Dhruv Khullar. February 27, 2023.

Categories:

Tag Cloud

"Penina's Letters" #WPLongform Aging Alma Lolloon argument Art Audio Ball Lightning Baseball berfrois Blogging Blues Bob Dylan Book Pages book review Buckminster Fuller Caleb Crain Cats Christmas Comics Conceptual Writing Concrete Poetry Discuss Doodle Drawing Drawing & Painting E. B. White El Porto Essay Existentialism Fall Fiction Film Flannery O'Connor Global Warming Grammar Guitar Happiness Health Care Hemingway Intermissions Inventories James Joyce Jazz John Cage Language Line 15 Lists Literary Criticism Literature Louis Menand Love McLuhan Mechanics memory moon Music Nature Neuroscience Newspapers Norman O. Brown Novel Ocean Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth Painting Photo Essay Plumbing Politics Punctuation Reading Crisis road trip Roddy Doyle Samuel Beckett satire Sestina Shakespeare song Spring summer Surfing The Believer The New Yorker The Ocean Theory The Variable Trio Thoreau Twenty Love Poems Twitter Universe Walden walking Wallace Stevens weather William Blake William Carlos Williams Winter Women Words Work Writing