When he left home having reached eighteen years old, Oskar Serti settled
into a garret next to that of the poet Virgil Bànek. Although
he couldn’t distinctly hear the words of the poet from there,
Serti was able, by applying his back against the panel which separated
them, to feel resounding through his own body the verses that Virgil
Bànek, leaning on the other side of the partition, recited each
night in a gloomy voice.
Having become a writer himself in 1902, Oskar Serti reminded himself
of this episode and organized his very first public readings in apartments
where he invited the guests to lean against the wall, before closing
himself alone in an adjoining room. He would then start to mumble there
his texts in a deep tone, consciously leaning on the other side of
the partition which gathered his listeners who were supposed to vibrate
at his speech.
Unfortunately, Serti’s approach was completely misunderstood
and numerous parties even accused him of being singulary cowardly in
face of the public and especially in face of his own texts.
In March 1955 after a long and brilliant exile, Serti returned to a
homecoming covered with honour. During a highly visible visit to the
walls of his first readings, Serti dallied in front of the deep cracks
which had taken over. In front of an audience composed principally
of those who had once criticized him so much, Serti superbly downplayed
the role played by the famous November 1954 earthquake and, not without
lyricism, justified the origin of these cracks by the fact that his
texts had finally succeeded in penetrating the incomprehension in which
they were for so long confined.
Opposite: reconstitution of the most
remarkable cracks found on the apartments visited by Oskar Serti
in 1902.