The
Albatross
by Charles Baudelaire
Often, for pastime, mariners will ensnare The
albatross, that vast sea-bird who sweeps On high companionable pinion where
Their vessel glides upon the bitter deeps. Torn from his native
space, this captive king Flounders upon the deck in stricken pride,
And pitiably lets his great white wing Drag like a heavy paddle at his side.
This rider of winds, how awkward he is, and weak ! How droll he
seems, who lately was all grace ! A sailor pokes a pipestem into his beak;
Another, hobbling, mocks his trammeled pace The Poet is like this
monarch of the clouds, Familiar of storms, of stars, and of all high things;
Exiled on earth amidst its hooting crowds, He cannot walk, borne down
by his giant wings. | |