of gravitation at the same time where the importance of the qualities has totally disappeared, where the casuality hardly touches the spirit, where the objects have ceased to be sultan postulates accompanied by harems. Max Ernst holds in his hand a bouquet of flowers. One of the flowers is a flower, another is a woman’s leg, another a hat, an other a young child, another some sea weed, another a little ele phant. The poetry germinates and flowers, watered by the streams where circle the mystic cleaners who polish appearances and carry in a bag the noble organs destined for digestion. The poetry flows like a mineral source, rises like a bird’s vapour, solidifies like a frozen breast. It is impossible to breathe nor mally before a picture of Max Ernst, because we have not yet acquired the complete organism to live in this new medium, when the bouquet begins to grow out of the little pearl at the end of the fingers. Marcel Duchamp is a comet that crosses and attracts the solar system without our knowing whether it belongs to it or not. It is in the midst of space on the same road as dada, but with other seasons, days and nights. It will never pass over the same route but its light and the trail of its light has been seen. Perhaps we shall go on seeing it if the universe tips to the same side and we roll together our glands in our hands. The smile of the heart desires it. This is all that I know of the eyes of dada, excuse me for not being an oculist. Q. RIBEMONT-DESSAIGNES 12 BY MAX ERNST