Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Snake That Dances by Charles Baudelaire
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The Snake That Dances

    By Charles Baudelaire



    How I love to watch, dear indolence,
    like a bright shimmer,
    of fabric, the skin of your elegant
    body glimmer!

    Over the bitter-tasting perfume,
    the depths of your hair,
    odorous, restless spume,
    blue, and brown, waves, there,

    like a vessel that stirs, awake
    when dawn winds rise,
    my dreaming soul sets sail
    for those distant skies.

    Your eyes where nothing’s revealed
    either acrid or sweet,
    are two cold jewels where steel
    and gold both meet.

    Seeing your rhythmic advance,
    your fine abandon,
    one might speak of a snake that danced
    at the end of the branch it’s on.

    Under its burden of languidness,
    your head’s child-like slant,
    rocks with weak listlessness
    like a young elephant’s,

    and your body heels and stretches
    like some trim vessel
    that rocking from side to side, plunges
    its yards in the swell.

    As when the groaning glacier’s thaw
    fills the flowing stream,
    so when your mouth’s juices pour
    to the tip of your teeth,

    I fancy I’m drinking overpowering, bitter,
    Bohemian wine,
    that over my heart will scatter
    its stars, a liquid sky!



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