paroles de chanson Phonographic Memory - Elvis Costello
We
have
not
come
so
much
to
a
fork
in
the
road
As
a
fork
on
the
plate
Scraping
the
last
lick
off
the
gravy
train
of
history
There
was
nervous
laughter
from
the
dais
That
rolled
outwards
through
the
crowd
On
a
breeze
that
rustled
flags
and
banners
It
was
the
voice
of
Orson
Welles
His
baritone
coming
to
us
Over
decades
of
dead
silence
through
a
metallic
tannoy
Each
word
meticulously
tape-spliced
From
various
soundtracks
and
radio
broadcasts
In
the
Library
of
Congress
It
wowed
the
crowd
before
it
fluttered
and
faltered
As
the
powder
of
lost
oxide
caused
a
catch
in
his
voice
Just
as
the
spool
ran
out
Curiously,
the
simulated
address
Seemed
to
be
delivered
in
the
same,
strange,
stage-Irish
accent
That
Welles
had
possibly
purloined
from
the
actor,
Michael
MacLiammóir
When
he
had
bluffed
his
way
onto
the
Dublin
stage
as
a
teenager
Now
it
was
just
one
in
a
queue
Of
immigrant
inflections
that
might
have
taken
the
day
It
was
also
the
voice
that
Orson
had
used
in
Lady
From
Shanghai
You
know,
the
one
with
the
shootout
Amidst
the
shattered
reflections
of
fun
house
mirrors
Few
remembered
that
motion
picture
now
One
man
in
the
third
row
remarked
to
his
wife
That
he
seemed
to
remember
this
voice
Selling
him
sweet
sherry
in
his
youth
But
there
were
many
in
the
crowd
Who
knew
nothing
of
this
Citizen
and
the
Kane
he
had
once
raised
Back
when
the
worst
one
could
imagine
Was
an
invasion
from
another
sphere
After
the
peace
was
negotiated
And
the
internet
switched
off
Knowledge
returned
to
its
medieval
cloister
In
this
and
that
illuminated
volume
The
jealous
possession
of
the
pious
and
the
superstitious
Who
might
once
again
wield
ignorance
like
a
scythe
There
were
but
dimly
remembered
facsimiles
After
many
of
the
public
libraries
had
been
torched
Untouched
books
now
went
for
the
price
of
a
Vuitton
handbag
Ever
since
the
U.S.
Mint
was
sucked
dry
and
spat
out
Bookworms
paid
for
rare
tomes
With
wheelbarrows
full
of
banknotes
Some
of
them
worthless
Confederate
money
(They
bartered
it
on
a
Mississippi
square)
Stashed
in
plinths
of
various
toppled
statues
(With
the
irony
and
arrogance
of
victors)
None
of
it
helped
the
healing
Yet
in
the
absence
of
a
noble
woman
Or
a
statesman
equal
to
the
task
A
tireless
engineer
had
magically
assembled
The
random
words
of
Welles'
oration
Into
a
speech
worthy
of
the
occasion
From
the
depths
of
the
national
archive
President
Swift
gave
a
slight,
shy
smile
Of
pearl
and
pillar-box
red
And
began
to
sing
a
plain
song
of
her
acceptance
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