Daily Book Excerpt: Adult fiction:
Still in the short-story collection The Grass Harp: Including A Tree of Night and Other Stories
– by Truman Capote. Next story is “The Headless Hawk”. I love this story, it seems to capture a certain era in New York (and actually, that New York does still exist – you just have to look a little harder) – and a certain area and season in New York … it’s very potent stuff, classic Capote.It’s kind of a love story – between Vincent, who works in an art gallery – he’s in his 30s – and a young girl, 18, who comes in one day to sell a painting she owns. She’s a bit of a waif, she has nowhere to go, she’s beautiful and mysterious. Capote, in this story, captures the feeling of almost unbearable loneliness in New York City on beautiful spring nights … surrounded by humanity, the lonely person can feel as though he or she does not exist. Vincent is haunted by the girl who sold the painting to him … but fears he will never see her again. I don’t know – something about the prose here brings the ache of loneliness to life, so vividly.
It’s the New York of Joseph Cornell and Edward Hopper – penny arcades, automats, organ grinders …
Here’s an excerpt.
Excerpt from The Grass Harp: Including A Tree of Night and Other Stories – by Truman Capote – “The Headless Hawk”.
Then, too, he’d quite expected she would reappear, but February passed, and March. One evening, crossing the square which fronts the Plaza, he had a queer thing happen. The archaic hansom drivers who line that location were lighting their carriage lamps, for it was dusk, and lamplight traced through moving leaves. A hansom pulled from the curb and rolled past in the twilight. There was a single occupant, and this passenger, whose face he could not see, was a girl with chopped fawn-colored hair. So he settled on a bench, and whiled away time talking with a soldier, and a fairy colored boy who quoted poetry, and a man out airing a dachshund: night characters with whom he waited – but the carriage, with the one for whom he waited, never came back. Again he saw her (or supposed he did) descending subway stairs, and this time lost her in the tiled tunnels of painted arrows and Spearmint machines. It was as if her face were imposed upon his mind; he could no more dispossess it than could, for example, a dead man rid his legendary eyes of the last image seen. Around the middle of April he went up to Connecticut to spend a weekend with his married sister; keyed-up, caustic, he wasn’t, as she complained, at all like himself. “What is it, Vinny, darling – if you need money …” “Oh, shut up!” he said. “Must be love,” teased his brother-in-law. “Come on, Vinny, ‘fess up; what’s she like?” And all this so annoyed him he caught the next train home. From a booth in Grand Central he called to apologize, but a sick nervousness hummed inside him, and he hung up while the operator was still trying to make a connection. He wanted a drink. At the Commodore Bar he spent an hour or so drowning four daiquiris – it was Saturday, it was nine, there was nothing to do unless he did it alone, he was feeling sad for himself. Now in the park behind the Public Library sweethearts moved whisperingly under trees, and drinking-fountain water bubbled softly, like their voices, but for all the white April evening meant to him, Vincent, drunk a little and wandering, might as well have been old, like the old bench-sitters rasping phlegm.
In the country, spring is a time of small happenings happening quietly, hyacinth shoots thrusting in a garden, willows burning with a sudden frosty fire of green, lengthening afternoons of long flowing dusk, and midnight rain opening lilac; but in the city there is the fanfare of organ-grinders, and odors, undiluted by winter wind, clog the air; windows long closed go up, and conversation, drifting beyond a room, collides with the jangle of a peddler’s bell. It is the crazy season of toy balloons and roller skates, of courtyard baritones and men of freakish enterprise, like the one who jumped up now like a jack-in-the-box. He was old, he had a telescope and a sign: 25c See the Moon! See the Stars! 25c! No stars could penetrate a city’s glare, but Vincent saw the moon, a round, shadowed whiteness, and then a blaze of electric bulbs: Four Roses, Bing Cro — he was moving through caramel-scented staleness, swimming through oceans of cheese-pale faces, neon, and darkness. Above the blasting of a jukebox, bulletfire boomed, a cardboard duck fell plop, and somebody screeched: “Yay Iggy!” It was a Broadway funhouse, a penny arcade, and jammed from wall to wall with Saturday splurgers. He watched a penny movie (What the Bootblack Saw), and had his fortune told by a wax witch leering behind glass: “Yours is an affectionate nature” … but he read no further, for up near the jukebox there was an attractive commotion. A crowd of kids, clapping in time to jazz music, had formed a circle around two dancers. These dancers were both colored, both girls. They swayed together slow and easy, like lovers, rocked and stamped and rolled serious savage eyes, their muscles rythmically attuned to the ripple of a clarinet, the rising harangue of a drum. Vincent’s gaze traveled round the audience, and when he saw her a bright shiver went through him, for something of the dance’s violence was reflected in her face. Standing there beside a tall ugly boy, it was as if she were the sleeper and the Negroes a dream. Trumpet-drum-piano, bawling on behind a black girl’s froggy voice, wailed toward a rocking finale. The clapping ended, the dancers parted. She was alone now, though Vincent’s instinct was to leave before she noticed, he advanced, and, as one would gently waken a sleeper, lightly touched her shoulder. “Hello,” he said, his voice too loud. Turning, she stared at him, and her eyes were clear-blank. First terror, then puzzlement replaced the dead lost look. She took a step backward, and just as the jukebox commenced hollering again, he seized her wrist: “You remember me,” he promoted, “the gallery? Your painting?” She blinked, let the lids sink sleepily over those eyes, and he could feel the slow relaxing of tension in her arm. She was thinner than he recalled, prettier, too, and her hair, grown out somewhat, hung in casual disorder. A little silver Christmas ribbon dangled sadly from a stray lock. He started to say, “Can I buy you a drink?” but she leaned against him, her head resting on his chest like a child’s, and he said: “Will you come home with me?” She lifted her face; the answer, when it came, was a breath, a whisper: “Please,” she said.



I always liked this story. Capote’s incredible use of language, rhythm, and description–at his best, he was a beautiful writer. I haven’t read it for many years, but I will pull it out this weekend.
Yeah, I love the collection! It doesn’t have any of that bitchy cynicism that really ruined his work (in my opinion) in his later years – when he had a hard time writing anymore. It’s painful sometimes to read the stories he wrote near the end of his life – he had so clearly lost his way. But these early ones are just so great!!
I love this story. The character, Vincent is one of my favorite short story characters if not only because of the incredible level of depth Capote used in his development. He is so masterfully crafted that his very existence makes me want to read more about the adventures of Vincent Walters. I also love the consistency of ideas with which Capote writes. For example how he mentions that Vincent has been to so many movies with D.J. that Hollywood images exist even in his dreams and then later that night Vincent’s dream sequence opens with a drum-roll and “R.K.O. Presents”… Simply fantastic writing. Bravo Capote.
Antonio – You make me want to read the story again!