Analysis of A Carcass

Charles Baudelaire 1821 (Paris) – 1867 (Paris)



Remember, my love, the object we saw
That beautiful morning in June:
By a bend in the path a carcass reclined
On a bed sown with pebbles and stones;

Her legs were spread out like a lecherous whore,
Sweating out poisonous fumes,
Who opened in slick invitational style
Her stinking and festering womb.

The sun on this rottenness focused its rays
To cook the cadaver till done,
And render to Nature a hundredfold gift
Of all she'd united in one.

And the sky cast an eye on this marvellous meat
As over the flowers in bloom.
The stench was so wretched that there on the grass
You nearly collapsed in a swoon.

The flies buzzed and droned on these bowels of filth
Where an army of maggots arose,
Which flowed with a liquid and thickening stream
On the animate rags of her clothes.

And it rose and it fell, and pulsed like a wave,
Rushing and bubbling with health.
One could say that this carcass, blown with vague breath,
Lived in increasing itself.

And this whole teeming world made a musical sound
Like babbling brooks and the breeze,
Or the grain that a man with a winnowing-fan
Turns with a rhythmical ease.

The shapes wore away as if only a dream
Like a sketch that is left on the page
Which the artist forgot and can only complete
On the canvas, with memory's aid.

From back in the rocks, a pitiful bitch
Eyed us with angry distaste,
Awaiting the moment to snatch from the bones
The morsel she'd dropped in her haste.

And you, in your turn, will be rotten as this:
Horrible, filthy, undone,
O sun of my nature and star of my eyes,
My passion, my angel in one!

Yes, such will you be, o regent of grace,
After the rites have been read,
Under the weeds, under blossoming grass
As you moulder with bones of the dead.

Ah then, o my beauty, explain to the worms
Who cherish your body so tine,
That I am the keeper for corpses of love
Of the form, and the essence divine!


Scheme XAXB XXXC XDXD ECFA XXGX XXXX XHXH GXEX XIBI XDXD XJFJ XKXK
Poetic Form Quatrain  (50%)
Metre 0101101011 11001001 10100101001 101111001 01011101001 1011001 1100101001 01001001 011111011 11001011 010110011 11101001 0011111111 11001001 01111011101 11001001 01101111011 111011001 11101001001 101001101 01101101101 10010011 11111101111 1001001 011101101001 11001001 10110110101 11011 01101111001 101111101 101001011001 1010111 1100101001 1111001 01001011101 01011001 01011111011 1001001 11111001111 11011001 1111111011 1001111 1001101001 111011101 11111001101 11011011 11101011011 101001001
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 1,850
Words 362
Sentences 13
Stanzas 12
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4
Lines Amount 48
Letters per line (avg) 31
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 122
Words per stanza (avg) 29
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Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on May 02, 2023

1:49 min read
1,312

Charles Baudelaire

Charles Pierre Baudelaire was a French poet who also produced notable work as an essayist, art critic, and pioneering translator of Edgar Allan Poe. more…

All Charles Baudelaire poems | Charles Baudelaire Books

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