Jewels
by
Charles Baudelaire
The darling one was naked, and knowing my wish,
Had kept only the regalia of her jewelry Whose resonant charms can lure and
vanquish Like a Moorish slave-girl's in her moment of glory. A
world of dazzling stones and of precious metals Flinging, in its quick rhythm,
glints of mockery Ravishes me into ecstasy, I love to madness The mingling
of sounds and lights in one intricacy. Naked, then, she was to all of
my worship, Smiling in triumph from the heights of her couch At my desire
advancing, as gentle and deep As the sea sending its waves to the warm beach.
Her eyes fixed as a tiger's in the tamer's trance, Absent, unthinking,
she varies her poses With an audacity and wild innocence That gave a
strange pang to each metamorphosis. Her long legs, her hips, shining
smooth as oil, Her arms and her thighs, undulant as a swan, Lured my
serene, clairvoyant gaze to travel To her belly and breasts, the grapes of
my vine. With a charm as powerful as an evil angel To trouble and
calm where my soul had retreated, They advanced slowly to dislodge it from
its crystal Rock, where its loneliness meditated. With the hips
of Antiope, the torso of a boy, So deeply was the one form sprung into the
other It seemed as if desire had fashioned a new toy. Her farded, fawn-brown
skin was perfection to either ! --And the lamp having at last resigned
itself to death, There was nothing now but firelight in the room, And
every time a flame uttered a gasp for breath It flushed her amber skin with
the blood of its bloom. | |