The Poetry Corner

Allegory

By Charles Baudelaire

Picture a beauty, shoulders rich and fine, Letting her long hair trail into her wine. Talons of love, the poison tooth of sin Slip and are dulled against her granite skin. She laughs at Death and flouts Debauchery; Those fiends who in their heavy pleasantries Gouge and destroy, still keep a strange regard For majesty - her body strong and hard. A goddess, or a sultan's regal wife A faithful Paynim of voluptuous life Her eyes call mortal beings to the charms Of ready breasts, between her open arms. She feels, she knows - this maid, this barren girl By our desire fit to move the world The gift of body's beauty is sublime And draws forgiveness out of every crime. She knows no Hell, or any afterlife, And when her time shall come to face the Night She'll meet Death like a newborn, face to face In innocence - with neither guilt nor hate.