The Poetry Corner

Parisian Dream

By Charles Baudelaire

for Constantin Guys Of this strange, awe-inspiring scene Such as on earth one never sees, Today the image once again, Obscure and distant, captures me. Sleep is so full of miracles! By whimsy odd and singular I've banished from these spectacles Nature and the irregular. And, happy with my artistry, I painted into my tableau The ravishing monotony Of marble, metal, water-flow. Babel of endless stairs, arcades, It was a palace multifold Replete with pools and bright cascades Falling in dull or burnished gold; And the more weighty waterfalls Like crystal screens resplendent there Along the metal rampart walls Seemed to suspend themselves in air; The sleeping pools - there were no trees Gathered around them colonnades, And in them naiads at their ease Could cast the narcissistic gaze. Sheets of blue water, emptying Between the green and rosy quays From multitudes of openings, Poured to the world's last boundaries; Magical waves, to please the eye, Splashed on unheard-of stones, and vast Reflectors stood there, dazzled by The world they mirrored in their glass! Insouciant and taciturn, Some Ganges, in the firmament, Poured out the treasure of their urns Into the gulfs of diamond. Architect of my magic show, I then required, for my mood, Through a jewelled conduit to flow An ocean I had first subdued. And all, even the colour black, Seemed polished, sparkling, clear and clean; The liquid kept its glow intact Within the solid crystal beam. No star from anywhere, no sign Of moon or sunshine, bright or dim, Illuminate this scene of mine Glowing with fire from within! Over the pageantry appears To hover (awful novelty For eyes, but nothing for the ear!) A silence of eternity. Open, my ardent eyes could see The horror of my wretched hole; I felt my cursed cares to be A needle entering my soul; The clock proclaimed the time was noon In accents brutal and perverse, And from the misty sky a gloom Poured through the torpid universe.