Dat
Burton Delvers
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Deranged Hermit
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« on: 19 September 2010, 15:49:45 » |
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I'm posting poetry because everyone else is. This is 'A Matyr' from Charles Beaudelaire's 'Flowers of Evil'. I've recently found an album of the same name where his poems are read by Yvette Mimieux with music by Ali Akbar Khan of Indian Classical fame. I hope you enjoy this macabre tale;
A Martyr
Drawing by an unknown master
In the midst of perfume flasks, of sequined fabrics And voluptuous furniture, Of marble statues, pictures, and perfumed dresses That trail in sumptuous folds,
In a warm room where, as in a hothouse, The air is dangerous, fatal, Where bouquets dying in their glass coffins Exhale their final breath,
A headless cadaver pours out, like a river, On the saturated pillow Red, living blood, that the linen drinks up As greedily as a meadow.
Like the pale visions engendered by shadows And which hold our eyes riveted, The head, its mane of hair piled up in a dark mass And wearing precious jewels,
On the bedside table, like a ranunculus, Reposes; and, empty of thoughts, A stare, blank and pallid as the dawn, Escapes from the upturned eyeballs.
On the bed, the nude torso shamelessly displays With the most complete abandon The secret splendor and fatal beauty That nature had bestowed on her;
A rose stocking embroidered with gold clocks remains On her leg like a souvenir; The garter, like a hidden flashing eye, Darts its glance of diamond brilliance.
The bizarre aspect of that solitude And of a large, languid portrait With eyes as provocative as the pose, Reveals an unwholesome love,
Guilty joys and exotic revelries, With infernal kisses That delighted the swarm of bad angels Hovering in the curtains' folds;
And yet one sees from the graceful slimness Of the angular shoulders. The haunches slightly sharp, and the waist sinuous As a snake poised to strike,
That she's still quite young! — Had her exasperated soul And her senses gnawed by ennui Thrown open their gates to the thirsty pack Of lost and wandering desires?
The vengeful man whom you could not with all your love Satisfy when you were alive, Did he use your inert, complacent flesh to fill The immensity of his lust?
Reply, impure cadaver! and by your stiffened tresses Raising you with a fevered arm, Tell me, ghastly head, did he glue on your cold teeth The kisses of the last farewell?
— Far from the sneering world, far from the impure crowd, Far from curious magistrates, Sleep in peace, sleep in peace, bizarre creature, In your mysterious tomb;
Your mate roams o'er the world, and your immortal form Watches over him when he sleeps; Even as you, he will doubtless be faithful And constant until death.
— William Aggeler, The Flowers of Evil (Fresno, CA: Academy Library Guild, 1954)
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