You’re never serious at seventeen.
- One of these nights, tired of pints and lemonade,
Of noisy bars with shiny chandeliers
- You go under the lime trees of the promenade.
The lime trees smell good in the good nights of June !
Sometimes the air’s so soft you close your eyelids;
The noise-carrying wind - the city's not far -
Smells of grape with fragrances of beer...
II
- Now you see a tiny rug
Of dark azure, framed by a little branch,
pierced by a weak star that blends in
With soft shudders, small and all white.
June night! Being seventeen! - You get intoxicated.
The sap is champagne that goes to your head...
You're raving: you feel on your lips a kiss
That flutters there, like a little bug...
III
Your crazy heart Robinsons through novels,
When, in the light of a pale lamppost,
A young lady passes by with a charming little style,
Under the frightening shadow of her father's false-collar...
And as she finds you immensely naïve,
While trotting in her little boots,
She turns her head with a quick and alert move...
- Then the cavatinas die on your lips...
IV
Now you're in love. Hired until August.
You're in love. - Your sonnets make Her laugh.
All your friends leave you, you're bad tasted.
- Then the adored one, one night, consented to write to you!
You order up pints or lemonade...
- You’re never serious at seventeen
When you have green limes on the promenade.
