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To the Reader

Topics: classic

Stupidity and error, avarice and vice,     possess our spirits, batten on our flesh,     we feed that fond remorse, our guest,     like ragged beggars nourishing their lice.     Our sins are mulish, our repentance vain:     we make certain our confessions pay,     well happily retrace the muddied way,     thinking vile tears will wash away the stain.     Satan Trismegistes rocks the bewitched     Mind, endlessly, on evils pillow, till,     all the precious metal of our wills     vaporised by that knowing alchemist.     The Devil pulls the strings that make us move!     We take delight in such disgusting things:     one step nearer Hell each new day brings     us, void of horror, to the stinking gloom.     We clutch at furtive pleasure as we pass,     like the debauchee whose lips are pressed     to some antique whores battered breast,     squeezing the rotten orange that we grasp.     Packed, and seething like a million worms,     a host of Demons riot in our brains,     and when we breathe, invisibly, Death drains     into our lungs, stream full of silent groans.     If poison, arson, knives, base desire,     havent yet embroidered deft designs     on the dull canvas of our pitiful lives     its only, alas, because our souls lack fire.     Among the jackals, bitches, panthers,     monkeys, scorpions, serpents, vultures,     that screech, howl, grunt, and crawl, ogres,     in the vile menagerie of our errors,     theres one of uglier, nastier, fouler birth!     Without one wild gesture, one savage yell,     it would willingly send this world to hell,     and in one great yawn swallow up the earth:     its Boredom! in its eyes an involuntary tear,     dreaming of scaffolds, as it smokes its hookah,     You know it, Reader, that fastidious monster,     hypocrite, Reader, my brother, and my peer!

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"Stupidity and error, avarice and vice,..."

Charles Baudelaire's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "To the Reader"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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"Je suis comme le roi dun pays pluvieux,     Riche..."

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