The
Gladly Dead
by Charles Baudelaire
In a soil thick with snails and rich as grease
I've longed to dig myself a good deep grave, There to stretch my old bones
at ease And sleep in oblivion, like a shark in a wave. Wills I
detest, and tombstones set in rows; Before I'd beg a tear of anyone,
I'd rather go alive and let the crows Bleed the last scrap of this old carrion.
O worms! Black comrades without eye or ear, Here comes a dead man
for you, willing and gay; Feasting philosophers, sons born of decay,
Come burrow through my ruins, shed not a tear; But tell me if any torture
is left to dread For this old soulless body, dead as the dead?
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