It's all warmed up for you, Donny. All used up's more like it.
Paterson
26.8s
You OK? Well, since you asked, no, not really. My mother-in-law is moving in. The cat got diagnosed with cat diabetes. And the medicine, you know, it's all so expensive. And now, my daughter started taking violin lessons and I'm losing my mind with the sound of that. What can I say, Paterson? - Oh, sorry. - Oh, just my burden, I guess. - My particular burden. - OK. I'll see you tomorrow.
Paterson
31.9s
"Water Falls", OK. OK. "Water Falls". "Water falls from the bright air. "It falls like hair, "falling across a young girl's shoulders. "Water falls, "making pools in the asphalt, "dirty mirrors with clouds and buildings inside. "It falls on the roof of my house. "It falls on my mother, and on my hair. "Most people call it rain."
Paterson
18.9s
Look, Lou Costello has got to be the most famous person from Paterson. Yeah, probably, yeah. I mean, he... he's got that statue and he's got his own park. Right, I mean, Alexander Hamilton has a statue, others got statues but not their own park! Hell, even Fetty Wap don't have no park.
Paterson
19s
That's a beautiful poem. - You really liked it? - Yeah, I really do. I think it's beautiful. "Water Falls". Thank you. It doesn't rhyme exactly. No, but the first two lines do, in a nice way. And some nice little internal rhymes too, I think. Internal rhymes.
Paterson
15.4s
Excuse me. Are you OK here, all alone? I'm fine. I'm just waiting for my mom and my sister. She's upstairs, in that building over there. Do you mind if I sit down till your mom comes down? Sure. - Yeah? - Yeah.
Paterson
12.1s
I wonder where Bud Abbott was born? Uhh, that I know. Jersey, also. Asbury Park. Uh, 1895, maybe. - You knew that? - Oh, hell, yeah, man. I know a lot of shit about a lot of shit.
Paterson
9.9s
Our own Romeo and Juliet. Or, maybe, more like Antony and Cleopatra? Speaking of Romeo and Juliet, Abbott and Costello.
Paterson
11.2s
Are you, uh, interested in poetry? - Uh, actually, I am, kind of. - Really? - Yeah. - I write poetry. I keep it all in this notebook.
Paterson
4.3s
Nice. Almost like one of yours.
Paterson
11.7s
I just remember how it started. "Water falls from the bright air, "falls like hair, "falling across a young girl's shoulders."
Paterson
4.1s
Yeah, exactly. The picture of the falls made me think of it.
Paterson
24.4s
A girl you met? Yeah, no, like a little girl. Like a t... like a ten-year-old girl. Oh! She was on the bus? No, I met her on my way home from work, near the old factories. She was waiting for her mom and her sister and... and I noticed she had a notebook of poems, and she read one to me. From her own secret notebook?
Paterson
20s
So why don't you recite me something? Just a few little lines, maybe from the love poem. Well I- I can give you a few lines I didn't write. Are they by your hero, Carlo William Carlos? William Carlos Williams. I know, darling. I was teasing.
Paterson
16s
I'm not sure. Yeah, it's nice there. So remember, you promised to finally make copies of your poems this weekend. I will, as soon as I have some free time. You promised me. This weekend. I will, no, I-I promised.
Paterson
4s
Do you like it there? It's the waterfalls, your favourite place.
Paterson
33.9s
- What? - Did you ever hear of the old Italian poet called Pet-ra-rch, is that it? Mm, Petrarch. He perfected the sonnet. Um, I read online that one of his early books of poems was called The Secret Book. Just like yours. I didn't know that. You read that? You just happened upon it online? And also that he wrote all his love poems to a beautiful girl called, ta-dah, Laura. That's true. So you have many things in common with other great and famous poets, you see.
Paterson
5.3s
Speaking of secret pie, I wanted to tell you something about your secret notebook.