Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Danse macabre by Charles Baudelaire
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Danse macabre

    By Charles Baudelaire



    For Ernest Christophe

    Proud, like one living, of her noble height,
    With handkerchief and gloves, her great bouquet,
    She has the graceful nonchalance that might
    Befit a gaunt coquette with lavish ways.

    At any ball does one see waist so slim?
    In all their regal amplitude, her clothes
    Unfurl down to a dry foot, pinched within
    A pomponned shoe as lovely as a rose.

    The frill that plays along her clavicles,
    As a lewd streamlet rubs its stony shores,
    Modestly shields from jeering ridicule
    Enticements her revealing gown obscures.

    Her eyes, made of the void, are deep and black;
    Her skull, coiffured in flowers down her neck,
    Sways slackly on the column of her back,
    o charm of nothingness so madly decked!

    You will be called by some, 'caricature',
    Who do not know, lovers obsessed with flesh,
    The grandeur of the human armature.
    You please me, skeleton, above the rest!

    Do you display your grimace to upset
    Our festival of life? Some ancient fire,
    Does it ignite your living carcass yet,
    And push you to the sabbath of Desire?

    Can you dismiss the nighnnare mocking you,
    With candle glow and songs of violins,
    And will you try what floods of lust can do
    To cool the hell that brands the heart within?

    Eternal well of folly and of fault!
    Alembic of the old and constant griefs!
    I notice how, along the latticed vault
    Of ribs, the all-consuming serpent creeps.

    Truly, your coquetry will not evoke
    Any award that does not do it wrong;
    Who of these mortal hearts can grasp the joke?
    The charms of horror only suit the strong!

    Full of atrocious thoughts, your eyes' abyss
    Breathes vertigo - no dancer could begin
    Without a bitter nausea to kiss
    Two rows of teeth locked in a steady grin.

    But who has not embraced a skeleton?
    Who has not fed himself on carrion meat?
    What matter clothes, or how you put them on?
    The priggish dandy shows his self-deceit.

    Noseless hetaera, captivating quean,
    Tell all those hypocrites what you know best:
    'Proud darlings though you powder and you preen,
    O perfumed skeletons, you reek of death!

    Favourites faded, withered-in the mob
    Antinous, and many a lovelace
    The ceaseless swirling of the danse macabre
    Sweeps you along to some unheard-of place!

    From steamy Ganges to the freezing Seine
    The troop of mortal leaps and swoons, and does
    Not see the Angel's trumpet aimed at them
    Down through the ceiling, that black blunderbuss.

    In every climate Death admires you
    In your contortions, 0 Humanity,
    And perfuming herself as you would do,
    Into your madness blends her irony!'



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