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A Dish of Peaches in Russia

With my whole body I taste these peaches,

I touch them and smell them. Who speaks?

 

I absorb them as the Angevine

Absorbs Anjou. I see them as a lover sees,

 

As a young lover sees the first buds of spring

And as the black Spaniard plays his guitar.

 

Who speaks? But it must be that I,

That animal, that Russian, that exile, for whom

 

The bells of the chapel pullulate sounds at

Heart. The peaches are large and round,

 

Ah! and red; and they have peach fuzz, ah!

They are full of juice and the skin is soft.

 

They are full of the colors of my village

And of fair weather, summer, dew, peace.

 

The room is quiet where they are.

The windows are open. The sunlight fills

 

The curtains. Even the drifting of the curtains,

Slight as it is, disturbs me. I did not know

 

That such ferocities could tear

One self from another, as these peaches do.

Written by
Wallace Stevens
1879-1955 / Male / American
Lines·Words
20·160
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