Petits Poemes en Prose: Le Spleen de Paris

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Dodo Press, 2009 - Literary Collections - 120 pages
Charles Pierre Baudelaire (1821-1867) est un poete francais. Il se vit reprocher son ecriture et le choix de ses sujets. Il ne fut compris que par quelques-uns de ses pairs. Aujourd'hui reconnu comme un ecrivain majeur de l'histoire de la poesie francaise, Baudelaire est devenu un classique. Barbey d'Aurevilly voyait en lui "un Dante d'une epoque dechue". Au travers de son oeuvre, Baudelaire a tente de tisser et de demontrer les liens entre le mal et la beaute, le bonheur et l'ideal inaccessible (A une Passante), la violence et la volupte (Une Martyre), entre le poete et son lecteur (" Hypocrite lecteur, mon semblable, mon frere "), entre les artistes a travers les ages (Les Phares). En parallele de poemes graves (Semper Eadem) ou scandaleux pour l'epoque (Delphine et Hippolyte), il a exprime la melancolie (Moesta et Errabunda) et l'envie d'ailleurs (L'Invitation au Voyage). Il a aussi extrait la beaute de l'horreur (Une Charogne).

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About the author (2009)

Charles Baudelaire, 1821 - 1867 Charles Baudelaire had perhaps had an immeasurable impact on modern poetry. He was born on April 9, 1821, to Joseph-Francois Baudelaire and Caroline Archimbaut Dufays in Paris. He was educated first at a military boarding school and then the College Louis-le-Grand, where he was later expelled in 1839. Baudelaire then began to study law, at the Ecole de Droit in Paris, but devoted most of his time to debauchery. After an abortive trip to the East, he settled in Paris and lived on an inheritance from his much despised step father, while he wrote poetry. During this period he met Jeanne Duval, a mulatto with whom he fell in love with and who became the "Black Venus," the muse behind some of his most powerful erotic verse. Baudelaire strove to portray sensual experiences and moods through complex imagery and classical form, avoiding sentimentality and objective description. Thus he profoundly influenced the later French symbolist writers, including Mallarme and Rimbaud, and such English-language poets as Yeats, Eliot, and Stevens. With much of his inheritance squandered, Baudelaire turned to journalism, especially art and literary criticism, the first of which were "Les Salons". Here he discovered the work of Edgar Allan Poe, which became an influence on his own poetry. While continuing to write unpublished verse, Baudelaire became famous as critic and translator of Poe. This reputation enabled Baudelaire to publish his most famous collection of poetry, "Les Fleurs du Mal" (The Flowers of Evil) in 1857. The result was an obscenity trial and the banning of six of the poems. Though he continued to write journalism with some success, he became increasingly depressed and pessimistic. Baudelaire attempted suicide in 1845, an attempt to get attention, and became minorly involved in the French Revolution. Today Baudelaire's work is considered the "last brilliant summation of romanticism, precursor of symbolism and the first expression of modern techniques". It was his originality that set him apart and ultimately proved to be his end. Baudelaire died, apparently from complications of syphilis, on August 31, 1867, in Paris.

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