As I was floating down unconcerned 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 cottons When, along with my haulers those uproars were done with 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 Never endured more triumphant clamourings
The storm made bliss of my sea-borne awakenings Lighter than a cork, I danced on the waves Which men call eternal rollers of victims For ten nights, without once missing the foolish eye of the harbor lights!
And from that time on I bathed in the Poem Of the Sea, star-infused and churned into milk Devouring the green azures; where, entranced in pallid flotsam A dreaming drowned man sometimes goes down;
Where, suddenly dyeing the bluenesses, 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 lightnings, 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 horrors Lighting up long violet coagulations Like the performers in very-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 Marys Could force back the muzzles of snorting Oceans!
I have struck, do you realize, incredible Floridas Where mingle with flowers the eyes of panthers In human skins! Rainbows stretched like bridles Under the seas' 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 gulfs Where the giant snakes devoured by vermin Fall from the twisted trees with black odours!
I should have liked to show to children those dolphins Of the blue wave, those golden, those singing fishes - 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 rollings Lifted its shadow-flowers with their yellow sucking disks toward me And I hung there like a kneeling woman...
Almost an island, tossing on my beaches the brawls And droppings of pale-eyed, clamouring birds And I was scudding along when across my frayed cordage Drowned 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 Hanse ships would have fished up;
Free, smoking, risen from violet fogs I who bored through the wall of the reddening sky Which bears a sweetmeat good poets find delicious Lichens of sunlight [mixed] with azure snot
Who ran, speckled with lunula of electricity A crazy plank, with black sea-horses for escort When Julys were crushing with cudgel blows Skies of ultramarine into burning funnels;
I who trembled, to feel at fifty leagues' distance The groans of Behemoth's rutting, and of the dense Maelstroms Eternal spinner of blue immobilities I long for Europe with it's aged old parapets!
I have seen archipelagos of stars! and islands Whose delirious skies are open to sailor: - Do you sleep, are you exiled in those bottomless nights Million golden birds, O Life Force of the future? -
But, truly, I have wept too much! The Dawns are heartbreaking Every moon is atrocious and every sun bitter: Sharp love has swollen me up with heady langours O let my keel split! O let me sink to the bottom!
If there is one water in Europe I want, it is the Black cold pool where into the scented twilight A child squatting full of sadness, launches A 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 the hulks
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Genius Annotation1 contributor
The Drunken Boat or “Le Bateau ivre” is a 100 line poem written by Arthur Rimbaud in 1871.
Inspired by Jules Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, Rimbaud wrote the poem when he was only 16. It remains one of the most well known examples of French symbolist poetry.
Rimbaud sent a copy of the poem to Paul Verlaine as an introduction. The two would later become lovers, and then enemies after Verlaine shot Rimbaud.
Contrary to what many think, the poem is not about drugs or alcohol. The boat in the story is drunk on limitless freedom. The poem is often viewed as an allegory for the freedom of youth.
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