Talk to me about the rain and not about the fine weather,
Fine weather is not to my taste and sets my teeth on edge.
Beautiful azure sky infuriates me,
For the greatest love that was granted to me on earth,
I owe it to the bad weather, I owe it to Jupiter,
It struck me like a thunderbolt from a stormy sky.
On one November evening, mounted over the rooftops,
A true thunderstorm from Brest, with ear-splitting screeches
Sets off its display of pyrotechnics.
Leaping up from her bed in her night attire
My terror-stricken neighbour came to hammer at my portal
Begging for my good offices.
“I am alone and frightened, open please for me, for pity’s sake
My husband has just left to carry out his harsh profession.
Poor, unforunate mercenary,
Forced to sleep outdoors when the weather is bad,
For the good reason that he is a representative
For a firm of lightning conductors.”
Blessing the name of Benjamin Franklin,
I put her in a safe place snuggled in my arms,
And then love did the rest!
You who spread all around conductors in abundance,
Why did you not stick one of them on your own roof?
A mistake of the most fateful...
When Jupiter went to make himself heard elsewhere,
The beautiful young woman, having finally cast off her fright
And recovered all her courage,
Went back home to get her husband dried out
Offering me a rendez-vous for the days of inclement weather,
Rendez-vous for the next storm.
From that moment, I never again looked down to the ground,
I devoted my time to contemplating the skies,
To watching the clouds go by,
To keeping an eye on the stratus, to peering at the nimbus,
To tenderly eye the least bit of cumulus,
But she never came back.
Her good man of a husband had done so much business,
Sold so many bits of iron on that evening,
That he had become a millionaire
And had taken her away to skies always blue,
Of the stupid countries where never does it rain,
Where people know nothing about thunder.
God grant that my lament goes, with beating drum,
Speaking to her about the rain, speaking about the violent weather
To which we faced up together,
Tell her that a certain murderous thunderbolt
Hit the bullseye of my heart to leave behind the pattern
Of a little flower that is her likeness…