The Enemy
Charles Baudelaire
My youth was nothing but a black storm Crossed now and then by brilliant suns. The thunder and the rain so ravage the shores Nothing's left of the fruit my garden held once. I should employ the rake and the plow, Having reached the autumn of ideas, To restore this inundated ground Where the deep grooves of water form tombs in the lees. And who knows if the new flowers you dreamed Will find in a soil stripped and cleaned The mystic nourishment that fortifies? —O Sorrow—O Sorrow—Time consumes Life, And the obscure enemy that gnaws at my heart Uses the blood that I lose to play my part.
Next 10 Poems
- Charles Baudelaire : The Eyes Of Beauty
- Charles Baudelaire : The Flask
- Charles Baudelaire : The Ghost
- Charles Baudelaire : The Irreparable
- Charles Baudelaire : The Living Flame
- Charles Baudelaire : The Owls
- Charles Baudelaire : The Remorse Of The Dead
- Charles Baudelaire : The Sadness Of The Moon
- Charles Baudelaire : The Seven Old Men
- Charles Baudelaire : The Sick Muse
Previous 10 Poems
- Charles Baudelaire : The Dance Of Death
- Charles Baudelaire : The Bad Monk
- Charles Baudelaire : The Albatross
- Charles Baudelaire : Spleen Iv
- Charles Baudelaire : Spleen Iii
- Charles Baudelaire : Spleen Ii
- Charles Baudelaire : Spleen I
- Charles Baudelaire : Spleen
- Charles Baudelaire : Sonnet Of Autumn
- Charles Baudelaire : Reversibility