Laughlin, James, 1914-:The Moths [from The Man in the Wall (1993),
New Directions]
Remembering Vladimir
Nabokov1
A dark damp night and a sudden hatch
2
of moths has covered the glass of the
3
big window in the living room attract-
4
ed by the light where I sit reading
5
they make a solid curtain of flutter-
6
ing little shapes they are desperate
7
they are the kind which only lives for
8
one night and they must reach the light
9
there must be thousands of them there
10 is
nothing remarkable in this invasion
11
no metaphor for the poet to play with
12 but
now again it is a night some forty
13
years ago the summer when Volya came
14 to
hunt lepidoptera at the mountain
15
lodge in Utah he had turned the inside
16
lights against the picture window and
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the outside was swarming with moths
18 he
put on a miner's headlamp and stood
19
on a stepladder on the terrace plucking
20 the
moths into a cyanide jar with his
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21
tweezers next morning when he examin-
22 ed
the bodies with a jeweler's ocular
23
he was ecstatic eleven of the male
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moths were the variants (detectable by
25
a mutation in the genitalia) which were
26
first recorded by the French lepidopter-
27
ologist D'Imbert when he visited the
28
Wasatch range in 1896 later Volya told
29
me that he traded his duplicates with
30
collectors in Europe for varieties from
31
Manchuria & Tibet that he had never
seen.