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View Full Version : Baudelaire's Sadness of the Moon (tran 1936)


Magdalen
06-07-2007, 05:27 AM
The Sadness of the Moon


Tonight the moon, by languorous memories obsessed,
Lies pensive and awake: a sleepless beauty amid
The tossed and multitudinous cushions of her bed,
Caressing with an abstracted hand the curve of her breast.


Surrendered to her deep sadness as to a lover, for hours
She lolls in the bright luxurious disarray of the sky —
Haggard, entranced — and watches the small clouds float by
Uncurling indolently in the blue air like flowers.

When now and then upon this planet she lets fall,
Out of her idleness and sorrow, a secret tear,
Some poet — an enemy of slumber, musing apart —
Catches in his cupped hands the unearthly tribute, all

Fiery and iridescent like an opal's sphere,
And hides it from the sun for ever in his heart.

— George Dillon, Flowers of Evil (NY: Harper and Brothers, 1936)

ddgryphon
06-07-2007, 07:23 PM
When Baudelaire is on he is SO on! This is an example of his absolute best work--and a great translation.

Thanks for bringing it here.

LimeyDawg
06-08-2007, 05:07 AM
That is some fine, fine work.

kdnxdr
07-02-2007, 12:54 AM
So, so beautiful

wyntermoon
07-02-2007, 12:57 AM
Lovely, sigh.