The Poetry Corner

To A Red-Haired Beggar Girl

By Charles Baudelaire

Pale girl with russet hair, Tatters in what you wear Show us your poverty And your beauty, For me, poor poet, in The frail and freckled skin Of your young flesh Is a sweetness. You move in shoes of wood More gallantly than could A velvet-buskined Queen Playing a scene; In place of rags for clothes Let a majestic robe Trail in its bustling pleats Down to your feet; Behind the holes in seams Let a gold dagger gleam Laid for the roue's eye Along your thigh; Let loosened ribbons, then, Unveil us for our sins Two breasts as undisguised And bright as eyes; As for your other charms, Let your resistant arms Frustrate with saucy blows The groping rogues; Pearls of a lustrous glow, Sonnets penned by Belleau, Suitors at your command Constantly send, Menial rhymsters, too, Dedicate works to you; Seeing your slipper there Under the stair, Pages and noble lords, Would-be Ronsards galore, Spy for the secret sweets Of your retreat! Lilies, in your alcove, Count less than making love You'd hold to lovers' law Several Valois' - Meanwhile, you beg to eat Stale bread and tainted meat Thrown from an alley door Backstreet Vefour And covet secretly The cheapest jewellery Which I (forgive me!) can't Place in your hand. Go then, a starveling girl With no perfume or pearls, Only your nudity O my beauty!