Baudelaire's Hair.


Cascading fleece, to the collar gliding,
Ah, tresses, Ah the flippantly charged perfume—
Delight! I want to shake the memories hiding
In this hair, toss it like a kerchief flying
In the air, to fill this night, this dismal room!

Two ancient lands, afar & on the wane,
Burning Africa: Asia's gloom,
In your fragrant woods they live again;
As other souls sail on music's strains,
Mine, my love, swims on your perfume.

There will I go, where men and trees seem
Filled with seeds & droop in withering blasts;
Strong braids, swing me upward from their steam!
Ebony sea, you hold a dazzling dream
Of sails, of oars, of ensigns, and of masts:

Reverberating harbor, where my soul may rinse
Itself in color, waves of perfume and sound;
Where vessels glide in gold and misty glints,
Spreading their arms to embrace the radiance
Of sky, where eternal quivering warmth is found.

Into this ocean where another is enclosed
I will plunge my love-drunk head, my inner-person,
Pitching, yawing with caresses, will know
Where to find you, fertile indolence! Oh,
Endless cradlings of anointed diversion!

Bluish hairs, trapped evenings in this tent,
You speak of vast & rolling skies at dusk;
I earnestly am drunk upon these bent
Coils in your locks, with the blending scent
Of cocoa-oil, of tar, & of musk.

Always—forever! My hand in your heavy mane
Will sow pearls and rubies so you will never be
Deaf to my desire. Are you not then
The oasis where I dream: the gourd I drain
In endless sips from the wine of my memory?