THE CORNER OF THE EYE
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The poem is just beyond the corner of the eye
You cannot see it not yet but sense the first gleam,
Or stir. It may be like a poor little shivering fieldmouse,
One tiny paw lifted from snow while, far off, the owl
Utters. Or like beakers, far off, almost as soundless as dream.
Or the rhythmic rasp of your father's last breath, harsh
As the grind of a great file the blacksmith sets to hoof.
Or the whispering slither the torn morning newspaper makes,
Blown down an empty slum street in New York, as midnight,
Past dog shit and garbage cans, while the full moon,
Phthisic and wan, above the East River, presides
Over that last fragment of history which is
Our lives. Or the foggy glint of old eyes of
The sleepless patient who no longer wonders
If he will once more see in that window the dun-
Bleached dawn that promises what. Or the street corner
Where always, for years, in passing you felt, unexplained, a pang
Of despair, like nausea, till one night, late, late on that spot
You were struck stock-still and again remembered felt
Her head thrust to your shoulder, she clinging, while you
Mechanically pat the fur coat, hear sobs, and stare up
Where tall buildings, frailer than reed-stalks, reel among stars.
Yes, something there at eye-edge lurks, hears ball creak in socket,
Knows, before you do, tension of muscle, change
Of blood pressure, heart-heave of sadness, foot's falter, for
It has stalked you all day, or years, breath rarely heard, fangs dripping.
And now, any moment, great hindquarters may hunch, ready
Or is it merely a poem, after all?
1985
© Robert Penn Warren
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© E-publisher LiterNet, 18.01.2010
The Sun Is but a Morning Star. Anthology of American Literature. Edited by Albena
Bakratcheva. Varna: LiterNet, 2008-2010.