The Poetry Corner

The Dancing Serpent

By Charles Baudelaire

How I adore, dear indolent, Your lovely body, when Like silken cloth it shimmers Your sleek and glimmering skin! Within the ocean of your hair, All pungent with perfumes, A fragrant and a wayward sea Of waves of browns and blues, Like a brave ship awakening To winds at break of day, My dreamy soul sets forth on course For skies so far away. Your eyes, where nothing is revealed, The bitter nor the sweet, Are two cold stones, in which the tinctures Gold and iron meet. Viewing the rhythm of your walk, Beautifully dissolute, One seems to see a serpent dance Before a wand and flute. Your childlike head lolls with the weight Of all your idleness, And sways with all the slackness of A baby elephant's, And your lithe body bends and stretches Like a splendid barque That rolls from side to side and wets With seas its tipping yards. As when the booming glaciers thaw They swell the waves beneath, When your mouth's water floods into The borders of your teeth, I know I drink a gypsy wine, Bitter, subduing, tart, A liquid sky that strews and spangles Stars across my heart!