She was playing with her little cat
—a female, black. From where I sat
in the shadows, it was entrancing,
watching the dancing
bat-bat back and forth
of their white hand-paws, by the hearth.
One of them had hidden away
—wicked thing!—inside her kitty-
mittens, the murderous
curved agates of her claws,
sleek and slicing as razors.
The other, too, was like so much sugar,
and only seemed to have withdrawn
her own stinging talons.
The Devil—never far away—
would not go cheated of his daily pay:
later, in the bedroom,
where it was heavier, the gloom,
with her every laugh, light
and bell-like in the night
but also sure and sonorous,
were four bright points of phosphorus.
— Translated from the French of Paul Verlaine
by Diane Furtney [1]
Links:
[1] https://www.ablemuse.com/v18/bio/diane-furtney
[2] https://www.ablemuse.com/digital-books-18/v18/digital edition/Complete Digital Version of -/Able Muse, Print Edition (Number 18), Winter 2014