Man
and the Sea
by Charles Baudelaire
Always, unfettered man, you will cherish the sea!
The sea your mirror, you look into your mind In its eternal billows
surging without end, And as its gulfs are bitter, so must your spirit be.
You plunge with joy into this image of your own: You hug it with
your eyes and arms; your heart Forgets for a time its noisy beat, becomes
a part Of a greater, more savage and less tameable moan. In your
own ways, you both are brooding and discreet: Man, no one has mapped your
chasm's hidden floor, Oh sea, no one knows your inmost riches, for Your
jealousy hides secrets none can repeat. As the uncounted swarm of centuries
gathers You two have fought without pity or remorse, both From sheer
love of the slaughter and of death Oh, eternal wrestlers, oh, relentless
brothers! | |