Les amoureux fervents et les savants aust?res
Aiment ?galement, dans leur m?re saison,
Les chats puissants et doux, orgueil de la maison,
Qui comme eux sont frileux et comme eux s?dentaires.
Amis de la science et de la volupt?
Ils cherchent le silence et l’horreur des t?n?bres;
L’Er?be les e?t pris pour ses coursiers fun?bres,
S’ils pouvaient au servage incliner leur fiert?.
Ils prennent en songeant les nobles attitudes
Des grands sphinx allong?s au fond des solitudes,
Qui semblent s’endormir dans un r?ve sans fin;
Leurs reins f?conds sont pleins d’?tincelles magiques,
Et des parcelles d’or, ainsi qu’un sable fin,
Etoilent vaguement leurs prunelles mystiques.
Cats
Both ardent lovers and austere scholars
Love in their mature years
The strong and gentle cats, pride of the house,
Who like them are sedentary and sensitive to cold.
Friends of learning and sensual pleasure,
They seek the silence and the horror of darkness;
Erebus would have used them as his gloomy steeds:
If their pride could let them stoop to bondage.
When they dream, they assume the noble attitudes
Of the mighty sphinxes stretched out in solitude,
Who seem to fall into a sleep of endless dreams;
Their fertile loins are full of magic sparks,
And particles of gold, like fine grains of sand,
Spangle dimly their mystic eyes.
– Translated by William Aggeler
Cats
Sages austere and fervent lovers both,
In their ripe season, cherish cats, the pride
Of hearths, strong, mild, and to themselves allied
In chilly stealth and sedentary sloth.
Friends both to lust and learning, they frequent
Silence, and love the horror darkness breeds.
Erebus would have chosen them for steeds
To hearses, could their pride to it have bent.
Dreaming, the noble postures they assume
Of sphinxes stretching out into the gloom
That seems to swoon into an endless trance.
Their fertile flanks are full of sparks that tingle,
And particles of gold, like grains of shingle,
Vaguely be-star their pupils as they glance.
– Translated by Roy Campbell
Cats
No one but indefatigable lovers and old
Chilly philosophers can understand the true
Charm of these animals serene and potent, who
Likewise are sedentary and suffer from the cold.
They are the friends of learning and of sexual bliss;
Silence they love, and darkness, where temptation breeds.
Erebus would have made them his funereal steeds,
Save that their proud free nature would not stoop to this.
Like those great sphinxes lounging through eternity
In noble attitudes upon the desert sand,
They gaze incuriously at nothing, calm and wise.
Their fecund loins give forth electric flashes, and
Thousands of golden particles drift ceaselessly,
Like galaxies of stars, in their mysterious eyes.
– Translated by George Dillon
Cats
Fevered lovers and austere thinkers
Love equally, in their ripe season
Cats powerful and gentle, pride of the house
Like them they feel the cold, like them are sedentary
Friends of science and sensuality
They seek the silence and the horror of the shadows
Erebus had taken them for its funeral coursers
Could they to servitude incline their pride.
Dreaming, they take on noble postures
Great sphinxes stretched out in the depths of emptiness
Seeming to fall asleep into an endless dream.
Their fertile loins are full of magic sparks
And nuggets of gold like fine sand
Vaguely bestar their mystic pupils.
Translated by Anonymous
(Charles Baudelaire)
More Poetry from Charles Baudelaire:
Charles Baudelaire Poems based on Topics: Sadness, Love, Gold, Dreams, Pride, Happiness, Pleasure, Nature, Sleep, Wisdom & Knowledge, Friendship- B (Charles Baudelaire Poems)
- A Une Madone (To A Madonna) (Charles Baudelaire Poems)
- Chanson d'Apr (Charles Baudelaire Poems)
- Chant d'automne (Song Of Autumn) (Charles Baudelaire Poems)
- Ch (Charles Baudelaire Poems)
- Causerie (Conversation) (Charles Baudelaire Poems)
Readers Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: Love Poems, Sadness Poems, Nature Poems, Dreams Poems, Friendship Poems, Sleep Poems, Happiness Poems, Gold Poems, Wisdom & Knowledge Poems, Education Poems, Pride PoemsBased on Keywords: coursers, nuggets, amis, spangle, lounging, postures, grands, chats, particles, thinkers, erebus
- A Poem On The African Slave Trade. Addressed To Her Own Sex. Part II (Mary Birkett Card Poems)
- The Battle Of The Lake Regillus (Thomas Babbington Macaulay Poems)
- Fireflies (Rabindranath Tagore Poems)
- The Feast Of The Virgins - The Feast Of The Virgins (Hanford Lennox Gordon Poems)
- The Vision Of Piers Plowman - Part 11 (William Langland Poems)