Skip to content

Polymania

Sections
Personal tools
You are here: Home » Poems of My Climate » Wallace Stevens » Evening Without Angels

Evening Without Angels

Document Actions
the great interests of man: air and light, the joy of having a body, the voluptuousness of looking. Mario Rossi
Why seraphim like lutanists arranged Above the trees? And why the poet as Eternal chef d'orchestre? Air is air, Its vacancy glitters round us everywhere. Its sounds are not angelic syllables But our unfashioned spirits realized More sharply in more furious selves. And light That fosters seraphim and is to them Coiffeur of haloes, fecund jeweller--- Was the sun concoct for angels or for men? Sad men made angels of the sun, and of The moon they made their own attendant ghosts, Which led them back to angels, after death. Let this be clear that we are men of sun And men of day and never of pointed night, Men that repeat antiquest sounds of air In an accord of repetitions. Yet, If we repeat, it is because the wind Encircling us, speaks always with our speech. Light, too, encrusts us making visible The motions of the mind and giving form To moodiest nothings, as, desire for day Accomplished in the immensely flashing East, Desire for rest, in that descending sea Of dark, which in its very darkening Is rest and silence spreading into sleep. ... Evening, when the measure skips a beat And then another, one by one, and all To a seething minor swiftly modulate. Bare night is best. Bare earth is best. Bare, bare, Except for our own houses, huddled low Beneath the arches and their spangled air, Beneath the rhapsodies of fire and fire, Where the voice that is in us makes a true response, Where the voice that is great within us rises up, As we stand gazing at the rounded moon.
Created by guccipiggy
Last modified 2006-01-26 03:04 AM
 

Powered by Plone

This site conforms to the following standards: