POSTHUMOUS REMORSE

by: Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867)

      h, when thou shalt slumber, my darkling love,
      Beneath a black marble-made statuette,
      And when thou'lt have nought for thy house or alcove,
      But a cavernous den and a damp oubliette.

      When the tomb-stone, oppressing thy timorous breast,
      And thy hips drooping sweetly with listless decay,
      The pulse and desires of mine heart shall arrest,
      And thy feet from pursuing their adventurous way,

      Then the grave, that dark friend of my limitless dreams
      (For the grave ever readeth the poet aright),
      Amid those long nights, which no slumber redeems

      'Twill query—"What use to thee, incomplete spright
      That thou ne'er hast unfathomed the tears of the dead"?—
      Then the worms will gnaw deep at thy body, like Dread.

"Posthumous Remorse" is reprinted from The Flowers of Evil. Charles Baudelaire. London: Elkin Mathews, 1909.

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