Get Your Premium Membership

The Swan, and Someone Replaceable

(after Charles Baudelaire) It’s not the same. I noticed it today, while dodging Rond-Point carriages. I’m not the sort who mindlessly disparages whatever’s new, but Haussman’s swept away the Paris that I loved. Thus thought the swan who’d wandered somehow from the Tuileries and limped, bewildered, frightened, ill-at-ease, his web feet scraping as he struggled on, he knew not where, uncertain why his wings were rasping in dry dust, instead of water. Nearby, a black girl on a cast-iron bench (advanced TB: I’ve come to know these things) sat huddled, shy, not knowing any French, quite lost. And Africa has lost a daughter.

Copyright © | Year Posted 2017




Post Comments

Poetrysoup is an environment of encouragement and growth so only provide specific positive comments that indicate what you appreciate about the poem.

Please Login to post a comment

Date: 3/8/2017 9:25:00 AM
OK, Rimbaud and Beaudelaire, love those two. Le Cygnet. I really know not too everything about this, but I do know of course what it is, I've read parts of it in French. So don't start to think I know everything, I don't! You took a small but important part from the poem, they both can't find their way back home....
Login to Reply
Coy Avatar
Michael Coy
Date: 3/8/2017 11:39:00 AM
Precisely! And yes, Rimbaud and Baudelaire are the best!

Book: Shattered Sighs