The Novel

Lyrics
The crows are flying above the foyer of summer. The winds batter it. The water curls. The leaves Return to their original illusion. The sun stands like a Spaniard as he departs, Stepping from the foyer of summer into that Of the past, the rodomontadean emptiness. Mother was afraid I should freeze in the Parisian hotels. She had heard of the fate of an Argentine writer. At night, He would go to bed, cover himsеlf with blankets— Protruding from the pile of wool, a hand. In a black glovе, holds a novel by Camus. She begged That I stay away. These are the words of Jos6 . . . He is sitting by the fidgets of a fire. The first red of red winter, winter-red. The late, least foyer in a qualm of cold. How tranquil it was at vividest Varadero, While the water kept running through the mouth of the speaker. Saying: Olalla blanca en el bianco, Lol-lolling the endlessness of poetry. But here tranquillity is what one thinks. The fire burns as the novel taught it how. The mirror melts and moulds itself and moves And catches from nowhere brightly-burning breath. It blows a glassy brightness on the fire And makes flame flame and makes it bite the wood And bite the hard-bite, barking as it bites. The arrangement of the chairs is so and so, Not as one would have arranged them for oneself, But in the style of the novel, its tracing Of an unfamiliar in the familiar room, A retrato that is strong because it is like, A second that grows first, a black unreal In which a real lies hidden and alive. Day's arches are crumbling into the autumn night. The fire falls a little and the book is done. The stillness is the stillness of the mind. Slowly the room grows dark. It is odd about That Argentine. Only the real can be Unreal today, be hidden and alive. It is odd, too, how that Argentine is oneself. Feeling the fear that creeps beneath the wool. Lies on the breast and pierces into the heart. Straight from the Arcadian imagination, Its being beating heavily in the veins, Its knowledge cold within one as one's ovra; And one trembles to be so understood and, at last, To understand, as if to know became The fatality of seeing things too well.
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Credits
- Writers
- Wallace Stevens