The Poetry Corner

To A Woman Of Malabar

By Charles Baudelaire

Your feet are as slender as hands, your hips, to me, wide enough for the sweetest white girls envy: to the wise artist your body is sweet and dear, and your great velvet eyes black without peer. In the hot blue lands where God gave you your nature your task is to light a pipe for your master, to fill up the vessels with cool fragrance and chase the mosquitoes away when they dance, and when dawn sings in the plane-trees, afar, fetch bananas and pineapples from the bazaar. All day your bare feet go where they wish as you hum old lost melodies under your breath, and when evenings red cloak descends overhead you lie down sweetly on a straw bed, where humming birds fill your floating dreams, as graceful and flowery as you it seems. Happy child, why do you long to see France our suffering, and over-crowded land, and trusting your life to the sailors, your friends, say a fond goodbye to your dear tamarinds? Scantily dressed, in muslins, frail, shivering under the snow and hail, how youd pine for your leisure, sweet and free, body pinned in a corsets brutality, if youd to glean supper amongst our vile harms, selling the scent of exotic charms, sad pensive eyes searching our fog-bound sleaze, for the lost ghosts of your coconut-trees