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Saturday, October 30, 2010

Esthétique du Mal / Wallace Stevens (I)

 
Esthétique du Mal

I


He was at Naples writing letters home
And, between letters, reading paragraphs
On the sublime. Vesuvius had groaned
For a month. It was pleasant to be sitting there
While the sultriest fulgurations, flickering,
Cast corners in the glass. He could describe
The terror of the sound because the sound
Was ancient. He tried to remember the phrases: pain
Audible at noon, pain torturing itself,
Pain killing pain on the very point of pain.
The volcano trembled in another ether,
As the body trembles at the end of life.

It was almost time for lunch. Pain is human.
There were roses in the cool café. His book
Made sure of the most correct catastrophe.
Except for us, Vesuvius might consume
In solid fire the utmost earth and know
No pain (ignoring the cocks that crow us up
To die). This is a part of the sublime
From which we shrink. And yet, except for us,
The total past felt nothing when destroyed.

[...]

[Poem is in the public domain in Canada]
To view the complete poem, click here.

1 comment:

  1. I did an English term paper on this great poem and it is only now that I realized w s had some involvement with fascism but was still my favorite poem as well as thirteen ways of looking…at a blackbird.

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