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The Carnival Théophile Gautier (1811-1872)
IN THE STREET
It is an old popular tune By all the raked violins, By the barking dogs angry By all the nasty organs.
The music snuffboxes have it on their repertoire; for the canaries it is classical, and my grandmother, as a child, learned it.
To this tune, pistons, clarinets, In the balls with powdery cradles, Jump committed and gray, And from their nests flee the birds.
The guinguette, under its arbour of hops and honeysuckle, Celebrates, shouting the ritornello, the gay Sunday and the argenteuil.
The blind man with a bassoon who whines and whines, fucks him with the wrong fingers; the sebaceous one with his teeth, his poodle Near him grunts him in the middle voice.
And the little guitarists, Thin under their thin tartans, Yelp with their sad voices at the tables of the singing cafés.
Paganini, the fantastic, One evening, as if with a hook, Collected the ancient theme From the end of his divine bow,
And, embroidering the faded gauze That the pipework still blushes, Made on the scorned phrase Run his golden arabesques.
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