Paul Festa

THE GENIUS OF KOMEDA


It resolves into the last wholly romantic period 

before James, six weeks 

at the Dorland Mountain Arts Colony 

in the scorched hills overlooking Temecula: 

rattlesnakes, blackened chaparral, kerosene lamps and a wood stove, 

chaotic LA weekends and, 

thudding fluently out of the old Remington Noiseless, 

the unfinishable novel that decades later still sprawls 

asymptotically 

toward its climax in the burning oak. 

Out of reverence, I never touched 

the mahogany Steinway in my cabin, which 

the caretaker told me 

Rachmaninov had practiced on when he was in the area. A few years 

after my residency, the piano burned 

along with the rest of the colony. 

Kerosene lamps, I thought, 

but arson was suspected. 

James wanted a fireplace and I vetoed it. 

I’d just read that woodstoves produced 

more airborne carcinogens in London 

than auto traffic. Amid the city’s 

newly risen smokestacks, Blake gave the world 

six thousand years before fire 

would consume all of Creation, 

yielding holiness and infinitude 

where now reign corruption and transiency. 

“This will come to pass,” Blake writes, 

“by an improvement of sensual enjoyment.” 

Fire spreads among the senses 

the way it spreads through the world. 

I adhere to descriptions of death by fire—

war and Holocaust, 9/11, Wolf Hall, Australia and California, 

the boy at Short Mountain who incinerated himself 

in a cave. We romanticize fire reflexively, 

involuntarily, just as we are hypnotized by it, 

like that Komeda song where she sings

Fire, fire, fire, fire

Fire, fire, fire, fire

Fire, fire, fi-yer

Fire, fire, fi-yer

Fire, fire, fire, fire…


Paul Festa’s essays, criticism, and poetry appear in numerous publications and anthologies, including The New York Times Book Review, The Los Angeles Review of Books, The Daily Beast, Salon, HuffPost Opinions, Beyond Words Magazine, three editions of the Best Sex Writing series, and Nerve: The First Ten Years. Paul teaches fiction writing, poetry, and modern Italian history, among other subjects, at Bard College Berlin, and has won awards and fellowships including several residencies at MacDowell and Yaddo.