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Stanzas for "Le Monocle de Mon Oncle"

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("The Naked Eye of the Aunt")
I peopled the dark park with gowns
In which were yellow, rancid skeletons.
Oh! How suave a purple passed me by!
But twiddling mon idée, as old men will,
And knowing the monotony of thought,
I said, "She thumbs the memories of dress."
Can I take fire from so benign an ash? 
It is enough that she comes upon the eye.
A maid of forty is no feathery girl.
Green bosoms and black legs, beguile
These ample lustres from the new-come moon.

Poets of pimpernel, unlucky pimps 
Of pomp, in love and good ensample, see
How I exhort her, huckstering my woe.
"Oh, hideous, horrible, horrendous hocks!"
Is there one word of sunshine in this plaint?
Do I commend myself to leafy things
Or melancholy crows as shadowing clouds?
I grieve the pinch of her long-stiffening bones.
"Oh lissomeness turned lagging ligaments!"
Eheu! Eheu! With what a weedy face
Black fact emerges from her swishing dreams.

Eheu: The words and theme are evocative of Horace's Eheu, fugaces labuntur anni ("Alas, the fleeting years slip by")

Swishing dreams: The metaphor of the sleeper emerging out of watery depths is reworked into stanza 3 of Le Monocle de Mon Oncle.

Created by guccipiggy
Last modified 2005-03-17 09:04 PM
 

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