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The Drunken Boat

As I drifted on a river I could not control,

No longer guided by the bargemen's ropes.

They were captured by howling

Who nailed them naked to coloured posts.

I cared no more for other boats or cargoes:

Flemish wheat or English cottons, all were

When my bargemen could no longer haul meI forgot about everything and drifted on.

Amid the fury of the loudly chopping

Last winter, deaf as a child's dark night,

Ah, how I raced!

And the drifting

Have never known such conquering delight.

Lighter than cork,

I revolved upon

That roll the dead forever in the deep,

Ten days, beyond the blinking eyes of land!

Lulled by storms,

I drifted seaward from sleep.

Sweeter than apples to a child its pungent edge;

The wash of green water on my shell of pine.

Anchor and rudder went drifting away,

Washed in vomit and stained with blue wine.

Now I drift through the poem of the sea;

This gruel of stars mirrors the milky sky,

Devours green azures; ecstatic flotsam,

Drowned men, pale and thoughtful, sometimes drift by.

Staining the sudden blueness, the slow sounds,

Deliriums that streak the glowing sky,

Stronger than drink and the songs we sing,

It is boiling, bitter, red; it is love!

I know how lightening split the sky apart,

I know the surf and waterspouts and evening's fall,

I've seen the dawn arisen like a flock of doves;

I've seen what men have only dreamed they saw!

I saw the sun with mystic horrors

And shimmer through a violet haze;

With a shiver of shutters the waves

Like actors in ancient, forgotten plays!

I dreamed of green nights and glittering snow,

Slow kisses rising in the eyes of the sea,

Unknown liquids flowing, the blue and

Stirring of phosphorescent melody!

For months I watched the surge of the sea,

Hysterical herds attacking the reefs;

I never thought the bright feet of

Could muzzle up the heavy-breathing waves!

I have jostled - you know? - unbelievable

And seen among the flowers the wild

Of panthers in the skins of men!

Birdling blind flocks beneath the horizons!

In stinking swamps I have seen great hulks:

A Leviathan that rotted in the reeds!

Water crumbling in the midst of

And distances that shatter into foam.

Glaciers, silver suns, waves of pearl, fiery skies,

Giant serpents stranded where lice

Them, falling in the depths of dark

From contorted trees, bathed in black perfume!

I wanted to show children these fishes

In the blue wave, the golden fish that sing - A froth of flowers cradled my

And delicate winds tossed me on their wings.

Sometimes, a martyr of poles and latitudes,

The sea rocked me softly in sighing air,

And brought me dark blooms with yellow stems - I remained there like a woman on her knees.

Almost an island,

I balanced on my boat's

Rapacious blond-eyed birds, their dung, their screams.

I drifted on through fragile tangled

Drowned men, still staring up, sank down to sleep.

Now I, a little lost boat, in swirling debris,

Tossed by the storm into the birdless upper air- All the Hansa Merchants and

Could not fish up my body drunk with the sea;

Free, smoking, touched the violet haze above,

I, who the lurid heavens breached like some rare

Which boasts - confection that the poets love - Lichens of sunlight, and snots of bright blue sky;

Lost branch spinning in a herd of hippocamps,

Covered over with electric animals,

An everlasting July

The glittering sky and its fiery funnels;

Shaking at the sound of monsters roaring,

Rutting Behemoths in thick whirlpools,

Eternal weaver of unmoving blues,

I thought of Europe and its ancient walls!

I have seen archipelagos in the stars,

Feverish skies where I was free to roam!

Are these bottomless nights your exiled nests,

Swarm of golden birds,

O Strength to come?

True,

I've cried too much;

I am heartsick at dawn.

The moon is bitter and the sun is sour…Love burns me;

I am swollen and slow.

Let my keel break!

Oh, let me sink in the sea!

If I long for a shore in Europe,

It's a small pond, dark, cold, remote,

The odour of evening, and a child full of

Who stoops to launch a crumpled paper boat.

Washed in your languors, sea,

I cannot

The wake of tankers foaming through the cold,

Nor assault the pride of pennants and flags,

Nor endure the slave ship's stinking

Translation by Rebecca Seiferle:

As I descended impassible Rivers,

I felt no longer steered by bargemen;they were captured by howling Redskins,nailed as targets, naked, to painted stakes.

What did I care for cargo or crews,bearers of English cotton or Flemish grain—having left behind the bargemen and racket,the Rivers let me descend where I wished.

In the furious splashing of the waves,

I — that other winter, deafer than the mindsof children — ran!

And the unanchored Peninsulasnever knew a more triumphant brouhaha.

The tempest blessed my sea awakening.

Lighter than cork,

I danced the wavesscrolling out the eternal roll of the dead—ten nights, without longing for the lantern's silly eye.

Sweeter than the flesh of tart apples to children,the green water penetrated my pine hulland purged me of vomit and the stain of blue wines—my rudder and grappling hooks drifting away.

Since then,

I have bathed in the Poemof the Sea, a milky way, infused with stars,devouring the azure greens where, flotsam-paleand ravished, drowned and pensive men float by.

Where, suddenly staining the blues, deliriousand slow rhythms under the glowing red of day,stronger than alcohol, vaster than our lyrics,ferment the red bitters of love!

I know heavens pierced by lightning, the waterspoutsand undertows and currents:

I know night,

Dawn rising like a nation of doves,and I've seen, sometimes, what men only dreamed they saw!

I've seen the sun, low, a blot of mystic dread,illuminating with far-reaching violet coagulations,like actors in antique tragedies,the waves rolling away in a shiver of shutters.

I've dreamed a green night to dazzling snows,kisses slowly rising to the eyelids of the sea,unknown saps flowing, and the yellow and bluerising of phosphorescent songs.

For months,

I've followed the swells assaultingthe reefs like hysterical herds, without ever thinkingthat the luminous feet of some Marycould muzzle the panting Deep.

I've touched, you know, incredible Floridaswhere, inside flowers, the eyes of panthers minglewith the skins of men!

And rainbows bridleglaucous flocks beneath the rim of the sea!

I've seen fermenting— enormous marshes, netswhere a whole Leviathan rots in the rushes!

Such a ruin of water in the midst of calm,and the distant horizon worming into whirlpools!

Glaciers, silver suns, pearly tides, ember skies!

Hideous wrecks at the bottom of muddy gulfswhere giant serpents, devoured by lice,drop with black perfume out of twisted trees!

I wanted to show children these doradosof the blue wave, these golden, singing fish.

A froth of flowers has cradled my vagrancies,and ineffable winds have winged me on.

Sometimes like a martyr, tired of poles and zones,the sea has rolled me softly in her sighand held out to me the yellow cups of shadow flowers,and I've remained there, like a woman, kneeling . . .

Almost an island, balancing the quarrels,the dung, the cries of blond-eyed birds on the gunnelsof my boat,

I sailed on, and through my frail lines,drowned men, falling backwards, sank to sleep.

Now,

I, a boat lost in the hair of the coves,tossed by hurricane into the birdless air,me, whom all the Monitors and Hansa sailing shipscould not salvage, my carcass drunk with sea;free, rising like smoke, riding violet mists,

I who pierced the sky turning red like a wall,who bore the exquisite jam of all good poets,lichens of sun and snots of azure,who, spotted with electric crescents, ran on,a foolish plank escorted by black hippocamps,when the Julys brought down with a single blowthe ultramarine sky with its burning funnels;

I who tremble, feeling the moan fifty leagues awayof the Behemoth rutting and the dull Maelstrom,eternal weaver of the unmovable blue—I grieve for Europe with its ancient breastworks!

I've seen thunderstruck archipelagos! and islandsthat open delirious skies for wanderers:

Are these bottomless nights your nest of exile,

O millions of gold birds,

O Force to come?

True,

I've cried too much!

Dawns are harrowing.

All moons are cruel and all suns, bitter:acrid love puffs me up with drunken slowness.

Let my keel burst!

Give me to the sea!

If I desire any of the waters of Europe, it's the pondblack and cold, in the odor of evening,where a child full of sorrow gets down on his kneesto launch a paperboat as frail as a May butterfly.

Bathed in your languors, o waves,

I can no longerwash away the wake of ships bearing cotton,nor penetrate the arrogance of pennants and flags,nor swim past the dreadful eyes of slave

As I was floating down impassive Rivers,

I no longer felt myself steered by the haulers:gaudy Redskins had taken them for targets,nailing them naked to coloured stakes.

I cared nothing for all my crews,carrying Flemish wheat or English cotton.

When, along with my haulers, those uproars stopped,the Rivers let me sail downstream where I pleased.

Into the ferocious tide-rips, last winter,more absorbed than the minds of children,

I ran!

And the unmoored Peninsulas neverendured more triumphant clamourings.

The storm made bliss of my sea-borne awakenings.

Lighter than a cork,

I danced on the waveswhich men call the eternal rollers of victims,for ten nights, without once missing the foolish eye of the harbor lights!

Sweeter than the flesh of sour apples to children,the green water penetrated my pinewood hulland washed me clean of the bluish wine-stainsand the splashes of vomit, carrying away both rudder and anchor.

And from that time on I bathed in the Poemof the Sea, star-infused and churned into milk,devouring the green azures where, entrancedin pallid flotsam, a dreaming drowned man sometimes goes down;where, suddenly dyeing the blueness,deliriums and slow rhythms under the gleams of the daylight,stronger than alcohol, vaster than music,ferment the bitter rednesses of love!

I have come to know the skies splitting with lightning,and the waterspouts, and the breakers and currents;

I know the evening, and dawn rising up like a flock of doves,and sometimes I have seen what men have imagined they saw!

I have seen the low-hanging sun speckled with mystic horrorslighting up long violet coagulationslike the performers in antique dramas;waves rolling back into the distances their shiverings of venetian blinds!

I have dreamed of the green night of the dazzled snows,the kiss rising slowly to the eyes of the seas,the circulation of undreamed-of saps,and the yellow-blue awakenings of singing phosphorus!

I have followed, for whole months on end,the swells battering the reefs like hysterical herds of cows,never dreaming that the luminous feet of the Maryscould muzzle by force the snorting Oceans!

I have struck, do you realize, incredible Floridas,where mingle with flowers the eyes of panthers in human skins!

Rainbows stretched like bridlesunder the sea's horizon to glaucous herds!

I have seen the enormous swamps seething,traps where a whole leviathan rots in the reeds!

Downfalls of waters in the midst of the calm,and distances cataracting down into abysses!

Glaciers, suns of silver, waves of pearl, skies of red-hot coals!

Hideous wrecks at the bottom of brown gulfswhere the giant snakes, devoured by vermin,fall from the twisted trees with black odours!

I should have liked to show to children those dolphinsof the blue wave, those golden, those singing fish. --Foam of flowers rocked my driftings,and at times ineffable winds would lend me wings.

Sometimes, a martyr weary of poles and zones,the sea whose sobs sweetened my rollingslifted my shadow-flowers with their yellow sucking disks toward me,and I hung there like a kneeling woman...

Resembling an island, tossing on my sides the brawlsand droppings of pale-eyed, clamouring birds.

And I was scudding along when across my frayed ropesdrowned men sank backwards into sleep!...

But now I, a boat lost under the hair of coves,hurled by the hurricane into the birdless ether;

I, whose wreck, dead-drunk and sodden with water,neither Monitor nor Hanseatic ships would have fished up;free, smoking, risen from violet fogs,

I who bored through the wall of the reddening sky which bearsa sweetmeat good poets find delicious:lichens of sunlight mixed with azure snot;who ran, speckled with tiny electric moons,a crazy plank with black sea-horses for escort,when Julys were crushing with cudgel blowsskies of ultramarine into burning funnels;

I who trembled to feel at fifty leagues offthe groans of Behemoths rutting, and the dense Maelstroms;eternal spinner of blue immobilities,

I long for Europe with it's age-old parapets!

I have seen archipelagos of stars! and islandswhose delirious skies are open to sea wanderers: --Do you sleep, are you exiled in those bottomless nights,

O million golden birds,

Life Force of the future?

But, truly,

I have wept too much!

Dawns are heartbreaking.

Every moon is atrocious and every sun bitter:sharp love has swollen me up with intoxicating torpor.

O let my keel split!

O let me sink to the bottom!

If there is one water in Europe I want, it is the blackcold pool where into the scented twilighta child squatting full of sadness launchesa boat as fragile as a butterfly in May.

I can no more, bathed in your langours,

O waves,sail in the wake of the carriers of cottons;nor undergo the pride of the flags and pennants;nor pull past the horrible eyes of prison hulks.

Translation by Wallace Fowlie:

As I was going down impassive rivers,

I no longer felt myself guided by haulers!

Yelping redskins had taken them as targets,

And had nailed them naked to colored stakes.

I was indifferent to all crews,

The bearer of Flemish wheat or English cottons,

When with my haulers this uproar stopped,

The Rivers let me go where I wanted.

Into the furious lashing of the tides,

More heedless than children's brains, the other winterI ran!

And loosened

Have not undergone a more triumphant hubbub.

The storm blessed my sea vigils.

Lighter than a cork I danced on the

That are called eternal rollers of victims,

Ten nights, without missing the stupid eye of the lighthouses!

Sweeter than the flesh of hard apples is to children,

The green water penetrated my hull of

And washed me of spots of blue

And vomit, scattering rudder and grappling-hook.

And from then on I bathed in the

Of the Sea, infused with stars and lactescent,

Devouring the green azure where, like a pale

Piece of flotsam, a pensive drowned figure sometimes sinks;

Where, suddenly dyeing the blueness,

And slow rhythms under the streaking of daylight,

Stronger than alcohol, vaster than our lyres,

The bitter redness of love ferments!

I know the skies bursting with lighting, and the

And the surf and the currents;

I know the evening,

And dawn as exhalted as a flock of doves,

And at times I have seen what man thought he saw!

I have seen the low sun spotted with mystic horrors,

Lighting up, with long violet clots,

Resembling actors of very ancient dramas,

The waves rolling far off their quivering of shutters!

I have dreamed of the green night with dazzled snows,

A kiss slowly rising to the eyes of the sea,

The circulation of unknown saps,

And the yellow and blue awakening of singing phosphorous!

I followed during pregnant months the swell,

Like hysterical cows, in its assault on the reefs,

Without dreaming that the luminous feet of the

Could restrain the snout of the wheezing Oceans!

I struck against, you know, unbelievable

Mingling with flowers panthers' eyes and

Skin!

Rainbows stretched like bridal

Under the horizon of the seas to greenish herds!

I have seen enormous swamps ferment,

Where a whole Leviathan rots in the rushes!

Avalanches of water in the midst of a calm,

And the distances cataracting toward the abyss!

Glaciers, suns of silver, nacreous waves, skies of embers!

Hideous strands at the end of brown

Where giant serpents devoured by

Fall down from gnarled tress with black scent!

I should have liked to show children those

Of the blue wave, the fish of gold, the singing fish.--Foam of flowers rocked my

And ineffable winds winged me at times.

At times a martyr weary of poles and zones,

The sea, whose sob created my gentle roll,

Brought up to me her dark flowers with yellow

And I remained like a woman on her knees...

Resembling an island tossing on my sides the

And droppings of noisy birds with yellow eyes.

And I sailed on, when through my fragile

Drowned men sank backward to sleep!

Now I, a boat lost in the foliage of caves,

Thrown by the storm into the birdless air,

I whose water-drunk carcass would not have been

By the Monitors and the Hanseatic sailboats;

Free, smoking, topped with violet fog,

I who pierced the reddening sky like a

Bearing--delicious jam for good poets--Lichens of sunlight and mucus of azure;

Who ran, spotted with small electric moons,

A wild plank, escorted by black seahorses,

When Julys beat down with blows of

The ultramarine skies with burning funnels;

I, who trembled, hearing at fifty leagues

The moaning of the Behemoths in heat and the thick Maelstroms,

I, eternal spinner of the blue immobility,

Miss Europe with its ancient parapets!

I have seen sidereal archipelagos! and

Whose delirious skies are open to the sea-wanderer:--Is it in these bottomless nights that you sleep and exile yourself,

Million golden birds,

O future Vigor?

But, in truth,

I have wept too much!

Dawns are heartbreaking.

Every moon is atrocious and every sun bitter.

Acrid love has swollen me with intoxicating torpor.

O let my keel burst!

O let me go into the sea!

If I want a water of Europe, it is the

Cold puddle where in the sweet-smelling twilightA squatting child full of sadness releasesA boat as fragile as a May butterfly.

No longer can I, bathed in your languor,

O waves,

Follow in the wake of the cotton boats,

Nor cross through the pride of flags and flames,

Nor swim under the terrible eyes of prison ships.

Translation by A.

S.

As I floated down impassive Rivers,

I felt myself no longer pulled by ropes:

The Redskins took my hauliers for targets,

And nailed them naked to their painted posts.

Carrying Flemish wheat or English cotton,

I was indifferent to all my crews.

The Rivers let me float down as I wished,

When the victims and the sounds were through.

Into the furious breakers of the sea,

Deafer than the ears of a child, last winter,

I ran!

And the Peninsulas sliding by

Never heard a more triumphant clamour.

The tempest blessed my sea-borne arousals.

Lighter than a cork I danced those

They call the eternal churners of victims,

Ten nights, without regret for the lighted bays!

Sweeter than sour apples to the

The green ooze spurting through my hull’s pine,

Washed me of vomit and the blue of wine,

Carried away my rudder and my anchor.

Then I bathed in the Poem of the Sea,

Infused with stars, the milk-white spume blends,

Grazing green azures: where ravished,

Flotsam, a drowned man in dream descends.

Where, staining the blue, sudden

And slow tremors under the gleams of fire,

Stronger than alcohol, vaster than our rhythms,

Ferment the bitter reds of our desire!

I knew the skies split apart by lightning,

Waterspouts, breakers, tides:

I knew the night,

The Dawn exalted like a crowd of doves,

I saw what men think they’ve seen in the light!

I saw the low sun, stained with mystic terrors,

Illuminate long violet coagulations,

Like actors in a play, a play that’s ancient,

Waves rolling back their trembling of shutters!

I dreamt the green night of blinded snows,

A kiss lifted slow to the eyes of seas,

The circulation of unheard-of flows,

Sung phosphorus’s blue-yellow awakenings!

For months on end,

I’ve followed the

That batters at the reefs like terrified cattle,

Not dreaming the Three Marys’ shining

Could muzzle with their force the Ocean’s hell!

I’ve struck Floridas, you know, beyond belief,

Where eyes of panthers in human skins,

Merge with the flowers!

Rainbow bridles, beneaththe seas’ horizon, stretched out to shadowy fins!

I’ve seen the great swamps boil, and the

Where a whole whale rots among the reeds!

Downfalls of water among tranquilities,

Distances showering into the abyss.

Nacrous waves, silver suns, glaciers, ember skies!

Gaunt wrecks deep in the brown

Where the giant eels riddled with

Fall, with dark perfumes, from the twisted trees!

I would have liked to show children

Of the blue wave, the golden singing fish.– Flowering foams rocked me in my drift,

At times unutterable winds gave me wings.

Sometimes, a martyr tired of poles and zones,

The sea whose sobs made my roilings

Showed me its shadow flowers with yellow

And I rested like a woman on her knees… Almost an isle, blowing across my sands,

And droppings of pale-eyed clamorous gulls,

And I scudded on while, over my frayed lines,

Drowned men sank back in sleep beneath my hull!… Now I, a boat lost in the hair of bays,

Hurled by the hurricane through bird-less ether,

I, whose carcass, sodden with salt-sea water,

No Monitor or Hanseatic vessel could recover:

Freed, in smoke, risen from the violet fog,

I, who pierced the red skies like a wall,

Bearing the sweets that delight true poets,

Lichens of sunlight, gobbets of azure:

Who ran, stained with electric moonlets,

A crazed plank, companied by black sea-horses,

When Julys were crushing with cudgel

Skies of ultramarine in burning funnels:

I, who trembled to hear those

Of rutting Behemoths and dark Maelstroms,

Eternal spinner of blue immobilities,

I regret the ancient parapets of Europe!

I’ve seen archipelagos of stars!

And

Whose maddened skies open for the sailor:– Is it in depths of night you sleep, exiled,

Million birds of gold,

O future Vigour? – But, truly,

I’ve wept too much!

The

Are heartbreaking, each moon hell, each sun bitter:

Fierce love has swallowed me in drunken torpors.

O let my keel break!

Tides draw me down! If I want one pool in Europe, it’s the

Black pond where into the scented nightA child squatting filled with sadness launchesA boat as frail as a May butterfly.

Bathed in your languor, waves,

I can no

Cut across the wakes of cotton ships,

Or sail against the pride of flags, ensigns,

Or swim the dreadful gaze of prison ships.

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Arthur Rimbaud

Jean Nicolas Arthur Rimbaud (20 October 1854 – 10 November 1891) was a French poet known for his influence on modern literature and arts, prefig…

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