Voyelles, sonnet by Arthur Rimbaud, published in Paul Verlaine’s Les Poètes maudits (1884). Written in traditional alexandrine lines, the poem is far from traditional in its subject matter; it arbitrarily assigns to each of the vowels a different, specific colour.
Suggestions as to the inspiration for the poem include a child’s coloured alphabet book, alchemy, or simple poetic obfuscation. The poem may also be a reference to Charles Baudelaire’s theory of the role of synesthesia (the association of two different senses—in this case sight and sound) in poetry.