Lamont Palmer (Lamont Palmer)

Lamont Palmer (Lamont Palmer) Poems

1.

There is peace in the house, a huge, bright thing.
There are sleeping people, brave memories,
drawn to the hope of hopes, the fireside of calm.
You can remember when family was intact.
...

Fathers get stones for their gardens there,
near Marriotsville, where the peaks are demure.

The gradual vegetables spring to the front,
...

Death is the center of compromised bark.
We see the stark night,
not as beauty sprawled on frozen ground,
...

'Earth's the right place for love: I don't know where it's likely to go better.' - Robert Frost, 'Birches'.


For Renee Driver
...

As she lays, now, on that couch of small hopes,
she is the mate, draped in a complex type
of yearning, attempting to counter my blank gaze.
...

The Best Poem Of Lamont Palmer (Lamont Palmer)

Dawn

There is peace in the house, a huge, bright thing.
There are sleeping people, brave memories,
drawn to the hope of hopes, the fireside of calm.
You can remember when family was intact.
You remember the judgment of bearded scribes.
Over the raw hills of Annellen Rd, and Kings Point Rd,
The bluster of urban hubris, gives way
To soft trees and inner city roofs with
inner integrity, as homeowners breathe in
Chase and Sanborn granules, boiled in silver
pots in which reflection shows everything,
the underbelly of progress and parity.
You think of chocolate milk and donuts
In a silver milkbox. You think how late it is
to be so early. It is a new origin.
Ebullience is for the masses. Through the
cacophony of blue/gray awareness, movement is
heard but not seen. It can never be seen. It is an aura,
ideas of color, stored in history's cold storehouse.
Where do I see this? In praise from the dead
Which arrives like dusty, sporadic trains.
You wonder if Calvary speaks like storms,
(or if it was mere dreams among mere pews)
when the sky is an empty hole, a soundless group of
disturbances, mimicking large figures.
(one with a spear, seemingly alive) .
An aunt may seem to live forever, in the smoke
of life, where groceries are well bagged
in dining rooms, where dining is rare,
under the moon, and its white death throes. Darkness dies,
like natural seething and all natural things,
when windows are portals, beyond eggshell white
which peels and is diminished on beaten sills,
diminished on feathered pillows, ghosts too, rise from.
We are nothing if not an army; soft, strategic: here,
limited in the brief limitation of life,
fresher than a spirit hiding in
simple grass, watching suns, that distant awe.

Lamont Palmer (Lamont Palmer) Comments

Doris Cornago 01 April 2014

Do you mind if I pass that on to another person he's still fawning over from PH? Make a guess LP.

0 0 Reply
Doris Cornago 09 January 2014

Hi LP. What is taking you so long? I am all primed up and nowhere to go. The poem Tiring Day is really for you to serve as a warning. I am really a crazy woman - you just don't know how much. I am sparing you the trouble of encountering the crazy side of me. I want you on the table, your polite self, passing the dishes to me for my inspection and delectation. But we can eat with our bare hands, I would allow you that informality. I thoroughly understand the exasperation of this: Childhood sank: sun into sea. An inner child breathes, has his way, and the days roll, moved by direction.. It is really a delight to be misunderstood, is it not? Just as GV says below, he does not understand one line of your poem, I believe you are ecstatic. When we say something that ordinary people do not understand, they quip, Ah, a poet! That becomes your signature, to be misunderstood. I would like to ask you about what Mr Giorgio Veneto in this regard, Are you an inexperienced poet by his measuring stick? (Please forgive the pun.)

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