Analysis of The Bestiary: or Orpheus’s Procession



(Le Bestiaire ou Cortège d’Orphée)

Admire the vital power
And nobility of line:
It’s the voice that the light made us understand here
That Hermes Trismegistus writes of in Pimander.

From magic Thrace, O delerium!
My sure fingers sound the strings.
The creatures pass to the sounds
Of my tortoise, and the songs I sing.

My harsh dreams knew the riding of you
My gold-charioted fate will be your lovely car
That for reins will hold tight to frenzy,
My verses, the patterns of all poetry.

The Tibetan Goat

The fleece of this goat and even
That gold one which cost such pain
To Jason’s not worth a sou towards
The tresses with which I’m taken.

You set yourself against beauty.
And how many women have been
victims of your cruelty!
Eve, Eurydice, Cleopatra:
I know three or four more after.

I wish there to be in my house:
A woman possessing reason,
A cat among books passing by,
Friends for every season
Lacking whom I’m barely alive.

O lion, miserable image
Of kings lamentably chosen,
Now you’re only born in a cage
In Hamburg, among the Germans.

Don’t be fearful and lascivious
Like the hare and the amorous.
But always let your brain weave
The full form that conceives.

There’s another cony I remember
That I’d so like to take alive.
Its haunt is there among the thyme
In the valleys of the Land of Tender.

With his four dromedaries
Don Pedro of Alfaroubeira
Travels the world and admires her.
He does what I would rather
If I’d those four dromedaries.

Sweet days, the mice of time,
You gnaw my life, moon by moon.
God! I’ve twenty eight years soon,
and badly spent ones I imagine.

I carry treasure in my mouth,
As an elephant his ivory.
At the price of flowing words,
Purple death!…I buy my glory.

Look at this pestilential tribe
Its thousand feet, its hundred eyes:
Beetles, insects, lice
And microbes more amazing
Than the world’s seventh wonder
And the palace of Rosamunde!

Work leads us to riches.
Poor poets, work on!
The caterpillar’s endless sigh
Becomes the lovely butterfly.

The songs that our flies know
Were taught to them in Norway
By flies who are they say
Divinities of snow.

Fleas, friends, lovers too,
How cruel are those who love us!
All our blood pours out for them.
The well-beloved are wretched then.

Here’s the slender grasshopper
The food that fed Saint John.
May my verse be similar,
A treat for the best of men.

His heart was the bait: the heavens were the pond!
For, fisherman, what fresh or seawater catch
equals him, either in form or savour,
that lovely divine fish, Jesus, My Saviour?

Dolphins, playing in the sea
The wave is bitter gruel.
Does my joy sometimes erupt?
Yet life is still so cruel.

The Octopus
Hurling his ink at skies above,
Sucking the blood of what he loves
And finding it delicious,
Is myself the monster, vicious.

Medusas, miserable heads
With hairs of violet
You enjoy the hurricane
And I enjoy the very same.

Uncertainty, O my delights
You and I we go
As lobsters travel onwards, quite
Backwards, Backwards, O.

In your pools, and in your ponds,
Carp, you indeed live long!
Is it that death forgets to free
You fishes of melancholy?

The female of the Halcyon,
Love, the seductive Sirens,
All know the fatal songs
Dangerous and inhuman.
Don’t listen to those cursed birds
But Paradisial Angels’ words.

Do I know where your ennui’s from, Sirens,
When you grieve so widely under the stars?
Sea, I am like you, filled with broken voices,
And my ships, singing, give a name to the years.

Dove, both love and spirit
Who engendered Jesus Christ,
Like you I love a Mary.
And so with her I marry.

In spreading out his


Scheme A BXXB CDXE FXAA G HIXJ AHAXB XJKJL XJXM NNXD BLCB DBBBD COOJ XAPA XXXEBG QRKK STTS FNCU BRBU XXBB AXXX XXXNN XXIC XSXS XXAA JMXJPP MXQX XXAA X
Poetic Form
Metre 0111111 0101010 0010011 10110111011 11011101 110111 1110101 0101101 111000111 111101011 1111111101 111111110 11001011100 00101 01111010 1111111 11110101 01011110 11010110 01101011 101110 11010 11111110 11111011 01001010 01011101 1110010 10111001 110100010 11110 11101001 01001010 111000100 10100100 111111 01111 101011010 11111101 11110101 0010101110 1111 11011 10010010 1111110 11111 110111 1111111 1110111 010111010 11010011 111001100 1011101 10111110 11111 11011101 1011 011010 1011010 001011 111110 11011 0100101 0101010 0111011 011101 111111 010011 11101 11011111 11011111 01011101 101010 011111 1111100 0110111 11101010001 110111101 101100111 1100111011 1010001 0111010 1110101 1111110 010 10111101 10011111 0101010 1101010 01010001 111100 101010 01010101 01001101 10111 11010101 10101 0110011 110111 11110111 1101100 0110100 1001010 110101 1000010 1101111 11101 111111110 1111101001 11111111010 01110101101 111010 1010101 1111010 0110110 01011
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 3,736
Words 687
Sentences 50
Stanzas 29
Stanza Lengths 1, 4, 4, 4, 1, 4, 5, 5, 4, 4, 4, 5, 4, 4, 6, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 5, 4, 4, 4, 6, 4, 4, 1
Lines Amount 115
Letters per line (avg) 24
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 96
Words per stanza (avg) 22
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on April 22, 2023

3:26 min read
95

Guillaume Apollinaire

Guillaume Apollinaire was an Italian-born French poet, playwright, short story writer, novelist, and art critic born in Rome, in Italy, to a Polish mother. more…

All Guillaume Apollinaire poems | Guillaume Apollinaire Books

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