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At the Party

Unrhymed, unrhythmical, the chatter goes:

Yet no one hears his own remarks as prose.

 

Beneath each topic tunelessly discussed

The ground-bass is reciprocal mistrust.

 

The names in fashion shuttling to and fro

Yield, when deciphered, messages of woe.

 

You cannot read me like an open book.

I'm more myself than you will ever look.

 

Will no one listen to my little song?

 

Perhaps I shan't be with you very long.

 

A howl for recognition, shrill with fear,

Shakes the jam-packed apartment, but each ear

Is listening to its hearing, so none hear.

Written by
W. H. Auden
1907-1973 / Male / English
Lines·Words
13·92
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