Flowers of Evil

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By Listen TheBook Posted on Jun 21, 2024
In Category - Lyric
James Huneker, Charles Baudelaire 1919
English
  • The Dance of Death
  • The Beacons
  • The Sadness of the Moon
  • Exotic Perfume
  • Beauty
  • The Balcony
  • The Sick Muse
  • The Venal Muse
  • The Evil Monk
  • The Temptation
  • The Irreparable
  • A Former Life
  • Don Juan in Hades
  • The Living Flame
  • Correspondences
  • The Flask
  • Reversibility
  • The Eyes of Beauty
  • Sonnet of Autumn
  • The Remorse of the Dead
  • The Ghost
  • To a Madonna
  • The Sky
  • Spleen
  • The Owls
  • Bien Loin D'Ici
  • Music
  • Contemplation
  • To a Brown Beggar-maid
  • The Swan
  • The Seven Old Men
  • The Little Old Women
  • A Madrigal of Sorrow
  • The Ideal
  • Mist and Rain
  • Sunset
  • The Corpse
  • An Allegory
  • The Accursed
  • La Béatrice
  • The Soul of Wine
  • The Wine of Lovers
  • The Death of Lovers
  • The Death of the Poor
  • The Benediction
  • Gypsies Travelling
  • Robed in a Silken Robe
  • A Landscape
  • The Voyage
Charles Baudelaire was a French poet whose work is described as combining an exoticism inherited from the Romantics with the Realism of other French writers of his time. The Flowers of Evil (Les Fleurs du mal) is a book of lyric poetry and his most famous work. In it he expresses the changing nature of beauty in the rapidly industrialising Paris caused by Haussmann's renovation of the city during the mid-19th century. He coined the term modernity to designate the fleeting experience of life in an urban metropolis, and the responsibility of artistic expression to capture that experience. Les Fleurs du mal includes nearly all Baudelaire's poetry, written from 1840 until his death in August 1867. First published in 1857, it was important in the symbolist and modernist movements. Though it was extremely controversial upon publication, with six of its poems censored due to their immorality, it is now considered a major work of French poetry. The poems in Les Fleurs du mal frequently break with tradition, using suggestive images and unusual forms. They deal with themes relating to decadence and eroticism, particularly focusing on suffering and its relationship to original sin, disgust toward evil and oneself, obsession with death, and aspiration toward an ideal world. Les Fleurs du mal had a powerful influence on several notable French poets, including Paul Verlaine, Arthur Rimbaud, and Stéphane Mallarmé. These English translations by Frank Pearce Sturm (1879-1942) include a selection from the original French edition. (Summary by Alan Mapstone and wikipedia)

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