
Au grand poète - SAINT-POL-ROUX - À ceux qui comme lui - s'offrent - LE MAGNIFIQUE - plaisir de se faire oublier
CINQ RÊVES
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PIÈCE FAUSSE
PSSTT
LES REPTILES CAMBRIOLEURS
A wandering narrator drifts into an abandoned doorway on a quiet Parisian street, drawn by a faded sign that promises shelter. Inside, a dim stairwell spirals downward, its walls lined with oversized plaster moustaches—odd tributes to Baudelaire, Germain Nouveau, Barbey d’Aurevilly—while a familiar, silent guide leads the way. The descent opens onto three stark chambers: a cramped room where a young poet scribbles amidst filthy manuscripts, a dimly lit space occupied by another enigmatic writer, and finally a spacious hall with an empty chair that seems to wait for the visitor’s own words.
Compelled by the silence, the narrator sits at the pristine desk and attempts to capture the elusive light that haunts the dream, only to find the page repeatedly filled with the same fragment: “La lumière…”. The surreal atmosphere, the ghostly literary figures, and the uncanny objects all hint at a deeper quest for inspiration, inviting listeners to follow the strange, poetic maze as it unfolds.
Language
fr
Duration
~57 minutes (55K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Laura Natal Rodrigues at Free Literature (Images generously made available by Hathi Trust.)
Release date
2019-10-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1896–1966
A restless poet and critic who helped invent surrealism, he pushed literature toward dreams, chance, and the unexpected. His work opened a new way of thinking about art, freedom, and the unconscious.
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