Flowers of Evil by Charles Baudelaire (moboreader TXT) đ
- Author: Charles Baudelaire
- Performer: -
Book online «Flowers of Evil by Charles Baudelaire (moboreader TXT) đ». Author Charles Baudelaire
A melancholy waltz and a drowsiness divine.
The flowers evaporate like an incense urn,
The viol vibrates like the wailing of souls that repine.
A melancholy waltz and a drowsiness divine,
The skies like a mosque are beautiful and stern.
The viol vibrates like the wailing of souls that repine;
Sweet souls that shrink from chaos vast and etern,
The skies like a mosque are beautiful and stern,
The sunset drowns within its blood-red brine.
Sweet souls that shrink from chaos vast and etern,
Essay the wreaths of their faded Past to entwine,
The sunset drowns within its blood-red brine,
Thy thought within me glows like an incense urn.
Overcast Sky
Meseemeth thy glance, soft enshrouded with dew,
Thy mysterious eyes (are they grey, green or blue?),
Alternately cruel, and tender, and shy,
Reflect both the languor and calm of the sky.
Thou recallest those white days with shadows caressed,
Engendering tears from thâ enraptured breast,
When racked by an anguish unfathomed that weeps,
The nerves, too awake, jibe the spirit that sleeps.
At times thou art like those horizons divine,
Where the suns of the nebulous seasons decline;
How resplendent art thou O pasturage vast,
Illumed by the beams of a sky overcast!
O! dangerous dame oh seductive clime!
As well, will I love both thy snow and thy rime,
And shall I know how from the frosts to entice
Delights that are keener than iron and ice?
Invitation to a Journey
My sister, my dear
Consider how fair,
Together to live it would be!
Down yonder to fly
To love, till we die,
In the land which resembles thee.
Those suns that rise
âNeath erratic skies,
No charm could be like unto theirs
So strange and divine,
Like those eyes of thine
Which glow in the midst of their tears.
There, all is order and loveliness,
Luxury, calm and voluptuousness.
The tables and chairs,
Polished bright by the years,
Would decorate sweetly our rooms,
And the rarest of flowers
Would twine round our bowers
And mingle their amber perfumes.
The ceilings arrayed,
And the mirrors inlaid,
This Eastern splendour among,
Would furtively steal
Oâer our s&uls, and appeal
With its tranquillous native tongue.
There, all is order and loveliness,
Luxury, calm and voluptuousness.
In the harbours, peep,
At the vessels asleep
(Their humour is always to roam),
Yet it is but to grant
Thy smallest want
From the ends of the earth that they come,
The sunsets beam
Upon meadow and stream,
And upon the city entire
âNeath a violet crest,
The world sinks to rest,
Illumed by a golden fire.
There, all is order and loveliness,
Luxury, calm and voluptuousness.
Sisina
Imagine Diana in gorgeous array,
How into the forests and thickets she flies,
With her hair in the breezes, and flushed for the fray,
How the very best riders she proudly defies.
Have you seen Theroigne, of the blood-thirsty heart,
As an unshod herd to attack he bestirs,
With cheeks all inflamed, playing up to his part,
As he goes, sword in hand, up the royal stairs?
And so is Sisina yet this warrior sweet,
Has a soul with compassion and kindness replete,
Inspired by drums and by powder, her sway
Knows how to concede to the supplicantsâ prayers,
And her bosom, laid waste by the flames, has alway,
For those that are worthy, a fountain of tears.
To a Creolean Lady
In a country perfumed with the sunâs embrace,
I knew âneath a dais of purpled palms,
And branches where idleness weeps oâer oneâs face,
A Creolean lady of unknown charms.
Her tint, pale and warm this bewitching bride,
Displays a nobly nurtured mien,
Courageous and grand like a huntsman, her stride;
A tranquil smile and eyes serene.
If, madam, youâd go to the true land of gain,
By the banks of the verdant Loire or the Seine,
How worthy to garnish some pile of renown.
Youâd awake in the calm of some shadowy nest,
A thousand songs in the poetâs breast,
That your eyes would inspire far more than your brown.
Moesta et Errabunda
Oh, Agatha, tell! does thy heart not at times fly away?
Far from the city impure and the lowering sea,
To another ocean that blinds with its dazzling array,
So blue and so clear and profound, like virginity?
Oh, Agatha, tell! does thy heart not at times fly away?
The sea, the vast ocean our travail and trouble consoles!
What demon hath gifted the sea with a voice from on high,
To sing us (attuned to an ^Eolus-organ that rolls
Forth a grumbling burden) a lenitive lullabye?
The sea, the vast ocean our travail and trouble consoles!
Oh, carry me, waggons, oh, sailing-ships, help me depart!
Far, far, here the dust is quite wet with our showering
tears,
Oh, say! it is true that Agathaâs desolate heart,
Proclaimeth, â Away from remorse, and from crimes, and
from cares,â
Oh, carry me, waggons, oh, sailing ships, help me depart!
How distant you seem to be, perfumed Elysian fields!
Wherein there is nothing but sunshine and love and glee;
Where all that one loves is so worthy, and lovingly yields,
And our hearts float about in the purest of ecstasy,
How distant you seem to be, perfumed Elysian fields!
But the green paradise of those transient infantile loves,
The strolls, and the songs, and the kisses, and bunches of
flowers,
The viols vibrating beyond, in the mountainous groves,
With the chalice of wine and the evening, entwined, in the
bowers,
But the green paradise of those transient infantile loves.
That innocent heaven oâerflowing with furtive delight,
Than China or India, is it still further away?
Or, could one with pityful prayers bring it back to our
sight?
Or yet with a silvery voice oâer the ages convey
That innocent heaven oâerflowing with furtive delight!
The Ghost
Just like an angel with evil eye,
I shall return to thee silently,
Upon thy bower Iâll alight,
With falling shadows of the night
With thee, my brownie, Iâll commune,
And give thee kisses cold as the moon,
And with a serpentâs moist embrace,
Iâll crawl around thy resting-place.
And when the livid morning falls,
Thouâlt find alone the empty walls,
And till the evening, cold âtwill be.
As others with their tenderness,
Upon thy life and youthfulness,
Iâll reign alone with dread oâer thee.
Autumn Song
They ask me thy crystalline eyes, so acute,
âOdd lover why am I to thee so dear?â
Be sweet and keep silent, my heart, wrifch is sear,
For all, save the rude and untutored brute,
Is loth its infernal depths to reveal,
And its dissolute motto engraven with fire,
Oh charmer! whose arms endless slumber inspire!
I abominate passion and wit makes me ill.
So let us love gently. Within his retreat,
Foreboding, Love seeks for his arrows a prey,
I know all the arms of his battle array.
Delirium and loathing O pale Marguerite!
Like me, art thou not an autumnal ray,
Alas my so white, my so cold Marguerite!
Sadness of the Moon-Goddess
To-night the Moon dreams with increased weariness,
Like a beauty stretched forth on a downy heap
Of rugs, while her languorous fingers caress
The contour of her breasts, before falling to sleep.
On the satin back of the avalanche soft,
She falls into lingering swoons, as she dies,
While she lifteth her eyes to white visions aloft,
Which like efflorescence float up to the skies.
When at times, in her languor, down on to this sphere,
She slyly lets trickle a furtive tear,
A poet, desiring slumber to shun,
Takes up this pale tear in the palm of his hand
(The colours of which like an opal blend),
And buries it far from the eyes of the sun.
Cats
All ardent lovers and all sages prize,
As ripening years incline upon their brows
The mild and mighty cats pride of the house
That like unto them are indolent, stern and wise.
The^friends of Learning and of Ecstasy,
They search for silence and the horrors of gloom;
The^devil had used them for his steeds of Doom,
Could he alone have bent their pride to slavery.
When musing, they display those outlines chaste,
Of the great sphinxes stretched oâer the sandy waste,
That seem to slumber deep in a dream without end :
From out their loins a fountainous furnace flies,
And grains of sparkling gold, as fine as sand,
Bestar the mystic pupils of their eyes.
Owls
Beneath the shades of sombre yews,
The silent owls sit ranged in rows,
Like ancient idols, strangely pose,
And darting fiery eyes, they muse.
Immovable, they sit and gaze,
Until the melancholy hour,
At which the darknesses devour
The faded sunsetâs slanting rays.
Their attitude, instructs the wise,
That he within this world who flies
From tumult and from merriment;
The man allured by a passing face,
For ever bears the chastisement
Of having wished to change his place.
Music
Oft Music possesses me like the seas!
To my planet pale,
âNeath a ceiling of mist, in the lofty breeze,
I set my sail.
With inflated lungs and expanded chest,
Like to a sail,
On the backs of the heaped-up billows I rest
Which the shadows veil
I feel all the anguish within me arise
Of a ship in distress;
The tempest, the rain, âneath the lowering skies,
My body caress:
At times, the calm pool or the mirror clear
Of my despair!
The Joyous Defunct
Where snails abound in a juicy soil,
I will dig for myself a fathomless grave,
Where at leisure mine ancient bones I can coil,
And sleep quite forgotten like a shark âneath the wave.
I hate every tomb I abominate wills,
And rather than tears from the world to implore,
I would ask of the crows with their vampire bills
To devour every bit of my carcass impure.
Oh worms, without eyes, without ears, black friends!
To you a defunct-one, rejoicing, descends,
Enlivened Philosophers offspring of Dung!
Without any qualms, oâer my wreckage spread,
And tell if some torment there still can be wrung
For this soul-less old frame that is dead âmidst the dead!
The Broken Bell
How sweet and bitter, on a winter night,
Beside the palpitating fire to list,
As, slowly, distant memories alight,
To sounds of chimes that sing across the mist.
Oh, happy is that bell with hearty throat,
Which neither age nor time can eâer defeat,
Which faithfully uplifts its pious note,
Like an ag&d soldier on his beat.
For me, my soul is cracked, and âmid her cares,
Would often fill with her songs the midnight airs;
And oft it chances that her feeble moan
Is like the wounded warriorâs fainting groan,
W T ho by a lake of blood, âneath bodies slain,
In anguish falls, and never moves again.
Spleen
The rainy moon of all the world is weary,
And from its urn a gloomy cold pours down,
Upon the pallid inmates of the mortuary,
And on the neighbouring-outskirts of the town.
My wasted cat, in searching for a litter,
Bestirs its mangy paws from post to post;
(A poetâs soul that wanders in the gutter,
With the jaded voice of a shivâring ghost).
The smoking pine-log, while the drone laments,
Accompanies the wheezy pendulum,
The while
Comments (0)