Absinthe-minded Charlatan

     Absinthe-minded Charlatan

 

    “The most curious thing about the transformation of the

sensorial apparatus—the phenomenon, at least, that struck

me most forcibly in the experiments I conducted on myself—

is that all sensations are perceived by all senses at once. My

own impression is that I am breathing sounds and hearing

colours, that scents produce a sensation of lightness or of

weight, roughness or smoothness, as if I were touching them

with my fingers.”

   ~ a French doctor writing about absinthe in the year that

      Verlaine and Rimbaud moved to London

 

“the honey-voiced sirens” ~ Homer, The Odyssey

How boring that these poets after all

Weren’t geniuses, but only addicts knocked

About inside their skulls.  Rimbaud and Paul

Found out, brainlessly, that they could concoct

With chemicals odd words and phrases that

Were unexpected.  Now synaesthesia

Had been around since the Iliad at

Least.  (Paul’s wormwood slopped to anaesthesia

In later decades.)  The arrogant boy

Thought he’d created something wholly new,

Ignoring the fact that his druggy ploy

Turned poetry to troubled prosy spew.

..Paul embraced the boy’s grandiloquent fiction.

….Poetry suffers still from the affliction.

In his poem “Comédie de la Soif” (“Comedy of Thirst”), Rimbaud says: “Wise pilgrims, let us reach / The Absinthe with its green pillars.”