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Today, on August 22nd, 2008, the site contains 193 poets, 8,680 poems and 4,527 comments.
Charles Baudelaire - THE SWAN

ANDROMACHE, I think of you! The stream, 
The poor, sad mirror where in bygone days 
Shone all the majesty of your widowed grief, 
The lying Simoïs flooded by your tears, 
Made all my fertile memory blossom forth 
As I passed by the new-built Carrousel. 
Old Paris is no more (a town, alas, 
Changes more quickly than man's heart may change); 
Yet in my mind I still can see the booths; 
The heaps of brick and rough-hewn capitals; 
The grass; the stones all over-green with moss; 
The débris, and the square-set heaps of tiles. 
  
There a menagerie was once outspread; 
And there I saw, one morning at the hour 
When toil awakes beneath the cold, clear sky, 
And the road roars upon the silent air, 
A swan who had escaped his cage, and walked 
On the dry pavement with his webby feet, 
And trailed his spotless plumage on the ground. 
And near a waterless stream the piteous swan 
Opened his beak, and bathing in the dust 
His nervous wings, he cried (his heart the while 
Filled with a vision of his own fair lake): 
"O water, when then wilt thou come in rain? 
Lightning, when wilt thou glitter?" 
  
Sometimes yet 
I see the hapless bird -- strange, fatal myth-- 
Like him that Ovid writes of, lifting up 
Unto the cruelly blue, ironic heavens, 
With stretched, convulsive neck a thirsty face, 
As though he sent reproaches up to God! 
  
II.
  
Paris may change; my melancholy is fixed. 
New palaces, and scaffoldings, and blocks, 
And suburbs old, are symbols all to me 
Whose memories are as heavy as a stone. 
And so, before the Louvre, to vex my soul, 
The image came of my majestic swan 
With his mad gestures, foolish and sublime, 
As of an exile whom one great desire 
Gnaws with no truce. And then I thought of you, 
Andromache! torn from your hero's arms; 
Beneath the hand of Pyrrhus in his pride; 
Bent o'er an empty tomb in ecstasy; 
Widow of Hector -- wife of Helenus! 
And of the negress, wan and phthisical, 
Tramping the mud, and with her haggard eyes 
Seeking beyond the mighty walls of fog 
The absent palm-trees of proud Africa; 
Of all who lose that which they never find; 
Of all who drink of tears; all whom grey grief 
Gives suck to as the kindly wolf gave suck; 
Of meagre orphans who like blossoms fade. 
And one old Memory like a crying horn 
Sounds through the forest where my soul is lost . . . 
I think of sailors on some isle forgotten; 
Of captives; vanquished . . . and of many more. 





Added: Mar 8 2005 | Viewed: 1391 times | Comments (0)


THE SWAN - Comments and Information

Poet: Charles Baudelaire
Poem: THE SWAN
Volume: The Poems and Prose Poems
Year: Published/Written in 1919
Poem of the Day on:
May 17 2008
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