Mecanografia 1 · Fresh & Legit

This leads to the poem’s most daring and unsettling dimension: the mechanization of Eros. The repeated phrase “I typewrite you” ( Datilógrafo-te ) blurs the line between typing and sexual possession. Each keystroke is a small, rhythmic penetration; the carriage return is a violent, breathless reset. The paper that advances is a body that receives the imprint. The poem’s famous final tercet crystallizes this cold eroticism: “And my poem will be the perfect machine / that will typewrite our kiss.” Here, the kiss—the ultimate symbol of spontaneous, intimate human connection—is no longer an act of the mouth, but an output of a machine. Passion is engineered. Love is a program run on a mechanical device. The “perfect machine” is both an object of Futurist admiration and a terrifying image of emotional sterility. The kiss is not felt; it is typed. It is reproducible, precise, and utterly devoid of warmth.

The poem’s formal structure immediately establishes this conflict. It is a sonnet—a quintessentially human, lyrical form associated with Renaissance love poetry and emotional outpouring. However, this classical vessel is filled with the jagged, onomatopoeic lexicon of industrial noise. Words like estalos (cracks), marteladas (hammer blows), and the rhythmic repetition of the letter “t” and “c” mimic the percussive sound of typewriter keys striking paper. The speaker does not “write” or “compose”; he “typewrites” ( datilografa ). The act of poetic creation is thus stripped of its organic, contemplative quality and recast as a mechanical, repetitive action. The sonnet’s rigid meter and rhyme scheme (ABBA ABBA in the octave) ironically mirror the fixed, unyielding grid of the typewriter’s keyboard and the carriage’s return. Form becomes function: the poem is a machine that produces poetry about its own machinery. Mecanografia 1

Central to the essay’s thesis is the poem’s treatment of the body. In “Mecanografia 1,” the human body—particularly the female body, the traditional object of lyric poetry—is dismembered and re-imagined as a set of typewriter parts. The speaker’s hands become “mallets,” his fingers “rods” that “strike” the keys. The beloved is not described in terms of eyes, lips, or hair, but as the paper receiving the imprint: a virgin, white surface waiting to be marked. The act of writing love becomes an act of violence: “I hammer you on the cold steel / of the rigid rules.” This is not the gentle caress of a pen, but the percussive, insistent punch of a key hitting an inked ribbon. Almeida subverts the romantic trope of the poet leaving a trace of his soul; instead, the speaker leaves a mechanical, impersonal, and indelible dent. This leads to the poem’s most daring and