Thursday, January 08, 2009

The Defilements


Poetry-wise, Arthur Rimbaud lived a very short life. As Wallace Fowlie notes in his introduction to Rimbaud: Complete Works, Selected Letters, the Symbolist prodigy's "literary work was over" by the time he was 19. In November 1891, he succumbed to cancer (a tumour, which was first thought to be an arthritic disturbance, claimed his right leg in May of that year). He was 37.

The following poem is the third in a collection of erotic sonnets called Les Stupra.

Dark and Wrinkled

Dark and wrinkled like a deep pink,
It breathes, humbly nested among the moss
Still wet with love that follows the gentle
Descent of the white buttocks to the edge of its border.

Filaments like tears of milk
Have wept under the cruel wind pushing them back
Over small clots of reddish marl,
And there lose themselves where the slope called them.

In my dream my mouth was often placed on its opening;
My soul, jealous of the physical coitus,
Made of it its fawny tear-bottle and its nest of sobs.

It is the fainting olive and the cajoling flute,
The tube from which the heavenly praline descends,
A feminine Caanan enclosed in moisture.

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