The Verse of Alfred Lichtenstein by Alfred Lichtenstein
page 23 of 66 (34%)
page 23 of 66 (34%)
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And broad shadows, which lead to blue corners...
And somewhere a sound that clinks like a Champagne glass. On a fragile rug lies a wide picture book, Distorted and exaggerated by a green ceiling light. How--soft little cats--piously white girls make love! In the background an old man and a silk handkerchief. Morning ... And all the streets lie smooth and shining there. Only occasionally does a solid citizen hurry along them. A swell girl argues violently with Papa. A baker happens to be looking at the lovely sky. The dead sun, wide and thick, hangs on the houses. Four fat wives screech in front of a bar. A carriage driver falls and breaks his neck. And everything is boringly bright, healthy and clear. A gentleman with wise eyes hovers, confused, in the dark, A failing god... in this picture, that he forgot, Perhaps did not notice--he mutters this and that. Dies. And laughs. Dreams of a stroke, paralysis, osteoporosis. Landscape |
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