Across the foliated space of the twenty-seven equivalents, Faustroll conjured up into the third dimension:
From Baudelaire, E. A. Poe's Silence, taking care to retranslate Baudelaire's translation into Greek.
From Bergerac, the precious tree into which the nightingale-king and his subjects were metamorphosed, in the land of the sun.
From Bloy, the black pigs of Death, retinue of the Betrothed.
From Coleridge, the ancient mariner's crossbow and the ship's floating skeleton, which, when placed in the skiff, was sieve upon sieve.
From Kahn, one of the golden peals from the celestial goldsmiths' shops.
From Lautréamont, the scarab, beautiful as the trembling of hands in alcoholism, which vanished over the horizon.
From Maeterlinck, the lights heard by the first blind sister.
From Mallarmé, the virgin, the bright, and the beautiful today.
From Mendes, the north wind which blew upon the green sea and blended with its salt the sweat of the galley slave who rowed until he was a hundred and twenty years old.
From Péladan, the reflection, in the mirror of the shield silvered with ancestral ashes, of the sacrilegious massacre of the seven planets.
From Régnier, the sorrel plain where the modern centaur snorted.
From Rimbaud, the icicles hurled by the wind of God into the waters.
From Schwob, the scaly animals imitated by the whiteness of the leper's hands.
From Ubu Roi, the fifth letter of the first word of the first act.
From Verlaine, voices asymptotic toward death.
From Verne, the two and a half leagues of the earth's crust.
Alfred Jarry, 1911