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The Burial, Translation of Paul Verlaine's Sonnet: L'Enterrement

The Burial, Translation of Paul Verlaine’s sonnet : L’Enterrement I know nothing as gay as a burial ! The grave-digger who sings with his pickaxe in bright thrill The church bells from afar reverberating with their svelte trille The priest in a white surplice whose joyous prayers hardly in denial The chorus boy with his voice fresh as a girl’s, And when at the bottom of the hole, all warm and snug, The coffin nestles in with the tumbling in soft tug Of earth making the corpse’s eiderdown, the lucky devil’s All this looks to me quite charming forsooth ! And then, all those, stuffed plump in tail coats’ sheath, Mourners whose noses redden while receiving tips And then, the proper concise speeches stuffed with advice rare And then, with bulging hearts and glorious foreheads glistening Hail ! The sparkling heirs ! © T. Wignesan – Paris, 2013

Copyright © | Year Posted 2013




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Book: Reflection on the Important Things