The Wine-Drinkers Poem by Tennessee Williams

The Wine-Drinkers

Rating: 4.3


The wine-drinkers sit on the porte cochère in the sun.
Their lack of success in love has made them torpid.
They move their fans with a motion that stirs no feather,
the glare of the sun has darkened their complexions.

Let us commend them on their conversations.
One says "oh" and the other says "indeed."

The afternoon must be prolonged forever, because the night
will be impossible for them.
They know that the bright and very delicate needles
inserted beneath the surfaces of their skins
will work after dark--at present are drugged, are dormant.

Nobody dares to make any sudden disturbance.

One says "no," the other one murmurs "why?"
The cousins pause: tumescent.
What do they dream of? Murder?
They dream of lust and they long for violent action
but none occurs.
Their quarrels perpetually die from a lack of momentum
The light is empty: the sun forestalls reflection.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Sylvia Frances Chan 18 December 2021

I am very happy for the family of the late great author that he is chosen as The Poet Of The Day, Hoorray!

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Sylvia Frances Chan 18 December 2021

Mesmerizing poem by the world famous Tennessee Williams. I have known most of his latter works, true dramatic storiesmperformed by very talented actors.5 Stars full

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Chuck Audette 06 February 2009

Odd. Very odd. -chuck

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