A Perfect Waste of Sheets

perfect-waste-of-sheets

On the morning of my sister’s wedding, my brother, mother and I watched a fleet of hot-air balloons ascend over Napa Valley. I remember thinking, “If only I had a camera.” This will have to do. 

From the half-light inside the dell,
And Napa’s early morning chill, 
Dirigibles with wicker rims, 
O’ershadowed by quilted Harlequin, 
Enter the thick, obscuring mist 
    As fumarolic pillows 
    Flecked with amethyst. 
Then like celestial orbs off course 
From their accustomed universe, 
Above the fogbank they protrude — 
Darkened by the altitude. 
Still the expanding helium, 
Uplifts them to the upper wind, 
Where higher yet they ascend … 
    Floating, 
        Floating, 
 
Till on the ground a child’s thumb, 
Can full eclipse all but the sun.
 


Mountain Caviar

mountain-caviar

There’s nothing quite like blueberry pancakes on a Sunday morning. The expression “mountain caviar” came to me in a dream. 

Two pours of batter, 
tipped by a steady hand, 
round into perfect plump circles,  
    yet still they demand 
 
a fistful of hand-picked, 
mountain caviar — 
tiny black dots scooped and sprinkled, 
from six inches afar.


Overarching Beauty

I was flipping through the dictionary one night, through the P’s, and I saw a picture of a “lacquered paper parasol” in the left-hand margin. I thought it really rolled off the tongue nicely. Presto! “Overarching Beauty” was born.

Never did I imagine,
An object that could enthrall,
Like the keeper of the inn’s,
Lacquered paper parasol.
With intersecting lines,
And subtle traceries,
‘Twas more a Gothic window,
   Than human canopy!
Yet when the sun came beating,
Its rays were still displaced, by
     The overarching beauty,
Composed upon its face.
Oh, and when she twirled it,
When she flickt her supple wrist,
Could a more hypnotic top,
In the world ever exist?—

A kaleidoscope of colors,
In symmetrical design,
Revolved with blazing speed,
Above her dainty glide.


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The Stroke of 7

Absolutely love this title … but it just as easily could’ve been called, “Ode to the Signmaker.” It’s a tribute to the artists we all appreciate on a daily basis. 

The art that I appreciate on a daily basis 
isn’t found in a museum or painted on a cathedral wall. 
It doesn’t come from the hand of Cezanne. 
It isn’t a cloudless night immortalized by Van Gogh. 
And it most certainly isn’t a monstrous Italian fresco, 
paying homage to some 12th century recluse. 
 
Nope, the art that I appreciate on a daily basis 
is far more mundane, and its maker far more boring. 
He doesn’t live a hermit’s life. 
He’s not repulsed by the sins of rampant vice. 
And his confidence doesn’t sag 
when inspiration fails to swing by for tea. 
 
He is the signmaker: King of Digits, Lord of Letters. 
And his art is the roadside marker tipped in royal blue, 
announcing the presence of a stuccoed insurance building. 
 
My favorite is a bright white sign at 76 State Street.  
The numbers are so full of life, so regal. 
The seven’s post, strappingly tall,  
angles ever-so-slightly and broadens at the bottom  
to provide a more dependable base  
for its top-heavy, unbalanced brim. 
And the six, undeniably female,  
with all her curves and loops, 
swoops back around deep into herself, then 
tries to brush her backside against the  
object of her affection, pining for a little love. 
 
But the seven just looks stoically away, 
    shunning her advances. 
Of course, he’s no fool: His act only ensures 
the flirtation will continue long into the night, 
long after the headlights have all whizzed by. 
 
To this day, every time I drive by that sign,
I still look at those two,  
still playing their games on their polyvinyl chloride canvas, 
and wonder if the signmaker knows he 
created something far more emotional to me 
than a giant monk on a wall.


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X-Ray Eyes

My very first poem. Back in 1987, I entered the annual poetry contest at Merrimack College … first prize: $50. I had no interest in poetry, but I needed the money. While my motives weren’t pure, my strategy was a success. (Think I spent the $50 on a couple of KISS albums.)  

I want a white shirt, 

Baggy, 
 
With buttons down the front. 
 
 
 
Pinched at the waist, 
 
It casts off shadows, 
 
Into a natural splendor of impossible angles. 
 
 
 
I want a white shirt, 
 
Clean, 
 
With an upright collar hidden by hair. 
 
 
 
Illuminating in the light, 
 
It smells like a rose, 
 
Picked by a girl in May. 
 
 
 
It takes X-ray eyes 
 
To find a real white shirt 
 
In this world of designer clothes.


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Contact the Author: j_cacciatore@yahoo.com
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