@SpokenVerse
  @SpokenVerse
SpokenVerse | Metamorphoses of a Vampire by Charles Baudelaire (read by Tom O'Bedlam) @SpokenVerse | Uploaded November 2012 | Updated October 2024, 10 hours ago.
Lamia, The Serpent Woman, by Anna Lea Merritt (1844-1930)

Portrait of Baudelaire by Emile Deroy

Monica Bellucci from the movie, Bram Stoker's Dracula

Detail of etching by Gustav Dore

Meanwhile the woman, writhing like a snake
On fiery coals, kneaded her breasts to make
Them hug their steely corset; and she said,
Her lips redder than strawberries are red:

"Behold, my mouth is moist, and on my deep
Couch I can lull grim Conscience fast asleep,
I dry all tears on my triumphant breasts,
Where old men laugh like boys at boyish jests.

For him who sees me naked, I comprise
All moons and suns and stars and clouds and skies!
I am so skilled, fond scholar, in love's charms
That when I hug you in my ruthless arms,

Or, shy and lustful, frail and forceful, when
I yield taut nipples to the teeth of men,
My bosom's pillows, palpitant, would doom
Angels to ruin for coveting my womb..."

When she had sucked my marrow dry, I turned,
Languid, to give her back the kiss she earned,
Only to view, I fond and amorous,
A viscid wineskin, nidorous with pus...

Frozen with fear, I shut my eyelids tight,
Then, opening them against the garish light,
I saw no solid puppet by my side
Whose lusts my blood, drained dry, had satisfied,

But a debris of quavering bone on bone,
Moaning as only weathervanes can moan,
And creaking as a rusty signpost might
Lashed by the furies of a winter night.

Les Métamorphoses du vampire

La femme cependant, de sa bouche de fraise,
En se tordant ainsi qu'un serpent sur la braise,
Et pétrissant ses seins sur le fer de son busc,
Laissait couler ces mots tout imprégnés de musc:
— «Moi, j'ai la lèvre humide, et je sais la science
De perdre au fond d'un lit l'antique conscience.
Je sèche tous les pleurs sur mes seins triomphants,
Et fais rire les vieux du rire des enfants.
Je remplace, pour qui me voit nue et sans voiles,
La lune, le soleil, le ciel et les étoiles!
Je suis, mon cher savant, si docte aux voluptés,
Lorsque j'étouffe un homme en mes bras redoutés,
Ou lorsque j'abandonne aux morsures mon buste,
Timide et libertine, et fragile et robuste,
Que sur ces matelas qui se pâment d'émoi,
Les anges impuissants se damneraient pour moi!»
Quand elle eut de mes os sucé toute la moelle,
Et que languissamment je me tournai vers elle
Pour lui rendre un baiser d'amour, je ne vis plus
Qu'une outre aux flancs gluants, toute pleine de pus!
Je fermai les deux yeux, dans ma froide épouvante,
Et quand je les rouvris à la clarté vivante,
À mes côtés, au lieu du mannequin puissant
Qui semblait avoir fait provision de sang,
Tremblaient confusément des débris de squelette,
Qui d'eux-mêmes rendaient le cri d'une girouette
Ou d'une enseigne, au bout d'une tringle de fer,
Que balance le vent pendant les nuits d'hiver.
Metamorphoses of a Vampire by Charles Baudelaire (read by Tom OBedlam)When Like the Sun by AD Hope (read by Tom OBedlam)Sonnet 57  Being your slave, what should I do... by William Shakespeare (poetry reading)Great Expectations Chapter 1 by Charles Dickens (read by Tom OBedlam)The Crunch (first version) by Charles Bukowski (read by Tom OBedlam)Sad Steps by Philip Larkin (read by Tom OBedlam)To His Lost Lover by Simon Armitage (read by Tom OBedlam)Figs by D H Lawrence (read by Tom OBedlam)Zewhyexary by Tom Disch (read by Tom OBedlam)Ballade of Suicide by G K Chesterton (read by Tom OBedlam)A Red Red Rose by Robert Burns (read by Tom OBedlam)The Owl by Alfred, Lord Tennyson (read by Tom OBedlam)

Metamorphoses of a Vampire by Charles Baudelaire (read by Tom O'Bedlam) @SpokenVerse

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER