Venus Anadyomène (by Arthur Rimbaud)

Arthur Rimbaud
Comme d’un cercueil vert en fer blanc, une tête
De femme à cheveux bruns fortement pommadés
D’une vieille baignoire émerge, lente et bête,
Avec des déficits assez mal ravaudés;
Puis le col gras et gris, les larges omoplates
Qui saillent; le dos court qui rentre et qui ressort;
Puis les rondeurs des reins semblent prendre l’essor;
La graisse sous la peau paraît en feuilles plates:
L’échine est un peu rouge, et le tout sent un goût
Horrible étrangement; on remarque surtout
Des singularités qu’il faut voir à la loupe…
Les reins portent deux mots gravés:
—Et tout ce corps remue et tend sa large croupe
Belle hideusement d’un ulcère à l’anus.
[1870]
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As from a green zinc coffin, a woman’s
Head with brown hair heavily pomaded
Emerges slowly and stupidly from an old bathtub,
With bald patches rather badly hidden;
Then the fat gray neck, broad shoulder-blades
Sticking out; a short back which curves in and bulges;
Then the roundness of the buttocks seems to take off;
The fat under the skin appears in slabs:
The spine is a bit red; and the whole thing has a smell
Strangely horrible; you notice especially
Odd details you’d have to see with a magnifying glass…
The buttocks bear two engraved words:
—And that whole body moves and extends its broad rump
Hideously beautiful with an ulcer on the anus.
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Copyright: Excerpted from Rimbaud: Complete Works, Selected Letters, a Bilingual Edition, published by the University of Chicago Press. ©1967, 2005 by the University of Chicago. All rights reserved. This text may be used and shared in accordance with the fair-use provisions of U.S. copyright law, and it may be archived and redistributed in electronic form, provided that this entire notice, including copyright information, is carried and provided that the University of Chicago Press is notified and no fee is charged for access. Archiving, redistribution, or republication of this text on other terms, in any medium, requires the consent of the author and the University of Chicago Press.
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Please explain Venus Anadyomene and why this poem was worth putting on your literary selections. "Hideously beautiful with an ulcer on the anus" ??
It not only smells bad but is ugly as sin to think about. YUK!! It seems that Rimbaud had really nasty thoughts about some women, especially fat old ones.
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One day everything that presumes to be CLARA VENUS will decline and die.
Or maybe it's metaphor - some things presumed to be beautiful have a hidden hideousness which the poet feels compelled to expose.
Why is Governor Palin coming to mind? (I did not just say that).
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I really like your blog content the way you put up the things…I’ve read the topic with great interest.
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