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Title: Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867)


1
Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867)
2
Critical opinion
  • The most important poet in the history of French
    letters (Paul Valéry, 1924)
  • Baudelaires position is central to the whole of
    modern European literature (Paul de Man, 1967)
  • The writer of modern life (Walter Benjamin)
  • Marked a radical departure from poetry before
    him, inaugurating Symbolism, and influencing
    Surrealism, and Postmodernism

3
Symbolism
  • impressionistic, contemplative preoccupation
    with powerful symbols and their effects on
    consciousness
  • Dominance of synaesthesia the tendency for one
    sensory experience (e.g. color) to evoke another
    (e.g. sound)

4
Les Fleurs du mal (1857/1861)
  • Poet as an urban wanderer (flâneur)
  • The urban experience
  • Modern life as a shock to the senses
  • rejection of bourgeois values
  • marginalized characters
  • Problematizes language
  • Spleen, ennui

5
PASCAL On Boredom
  • Man finds nothing so intolerable as to be in a
    state of complete rest, without passions, without
    occupation, without diversion, without effort.
  • Then he faces his nullity, loneliness,
    inadequacy, dependence, helplessness, emptiness.
  • And at once there wells up from the depths of his
    soul boredom, gloom, depression, chagrin,
    resentment, despair. Pensées 622

6
Other works
  • Spleen de Paris (1869) inaugurates prose poem
  • Important commentaries on contemporary art
    (Salons)
  • Translations of Edgar Allen Poe

7
The modern city
8
  • Fear, revulsion, and horror were the emotions
    which the big-city crowd aroused in those who
    first observed it.. The inhabitant of the
    great urban centers, writes Valéry, reverts to
    a state of savagery that is, of isolation. The
    feeling of being dependent on others is
    gradually blunted in the smooth functioning of
    the social mechanism. Any improvement of this
    mechanism eliminates certain modes of behavior
    and emotions. Comfort isolates on the other
    hand, it brings those enjoying it closer to
    mechanization. In the mid-nineteenth century, the
    invention of the match brought forth a number of
    innovations which have one thing in common a
    single abrupt movement of the hand triggers a
    process of many steps . With regard to
    countless movements of switching, inserting,
    pressing, and the like, the snapping of the
    photographer had the greatest consequences.
    Henceforth a touch of the finger sufficed to fix
    an event for an unlimited period of time.
    Haptic experiences of this kind were joined by
    optic ones, such as are supplied by advertising
    pages of a newspaper or the traffic of a big
    city. Moving through this traffic involves the
    individual in a series of shocks and collisions.
    At dangerous intersections, nervous impulses flow
    through him in rapid succession, like the energy
    from a battery. Baudelaire speaks of a man who
    plunges into the crowd as into a reservoir of
    electric energy. Circumscribing the experience of
    the shock, he calls this man a kaleidoscope
    endowed with consciousness.
  • Walter Benjamin, The Writer of Modern Life,
    190-191

9
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12
Poéte maudit (cursed poet)
  • Life of debts, emotional torments, erratic
    productivity, and illness
  • Experienced social exclusion and persecution (six
    poems in Les Fleurs du mal were banned for
    obscenity)

13
Édouard Manet, Baudelaires Mistress, Jeanne Duval
14
Baudelaires grave at Montparnasse
15
Correspondences Nature is a temple where living
pillarsLet escape sometimes confused wordsMan
traverses it through forests of symbolsThat
observe him with familiar glances.Like long
echoes that intermingle from afar se
confondentIn a dark and profound unity,Vast
like the night and like the light,The perfumes,
the colors and the sounds respond. se
répondentThere are perfumes fresh like the
skin of infantsSweet like oboes, green like
prairies,And others corrupted, rich and
triumphantThat have the expanse of infinite
things,Like ambergris, musk, balsam and
incense,Which sing the ecstasies of the mind
lesprit and senses.
16
Arcade
17
To a Passer-By The street about me roared with a
deafening sound. Tall, slender, in heavy
mourning, majestic grief, A woman passed, with a
glittering hand Raising, swinging the hem and
flounces of her skirt Agile and graceful, her
leg was like a statue's. Tense as in a delirium
un extravagant, I drank From her eyes, pale
sky where tempests germinate, The sweetness that
enthralls and the pleasure that kills. A
lightning flash... then night! Fleeting beauty
By whose glance I was suddenly reborn, Will I
see you no more before eternity? Elsewhere, far,
far from here! too late! never perhaps!For I
know not where you fled, you know not where I
go,O you whom I would have loved, O you who knew
it! William Aggeler, The Flowers of Evil
(Fresno, CA Academy Library Guild, 1954)
18
In groups, discuss
  • What images of the city are inscribed? Choose one
    or two that you find particularly striking.
  • What impression does the reader get?
  • What is the position/role/characterization of the
    poet?
  • What is Baudelaire saying about modern life?

19
Gambling
  • In faded armchairs aged courtesans, Pale,
    eyebrows penciled, with alluring fatal eyes,
    Smirking and sending forth from wizened ears A
    jingling sound of metal and of gems
  • Around the gaming tables faces without lips,
    Lips without color and jaws without teeth,
    Fingers convulsed with a hellborn fever
    Searching empty pockets and fluttering bosoms
  • Under dirty ceilings a row of bright lusters And
    enormous oil-lamps casting their rays On the
    tenebrous brows of distinguished poets Who come
    there to squander the blood they have sweated
  • That is the black picture that in a dream one
    nightI saw unfold before my penetrating eyes.I
    saw myself at the back of that quiet den,Leaning
    on my elbows, cold, silent, envying,
  • Envying the stubborn passion of those people,
    The dismal merriment of those old prostitutes,
    All blithely selling right before my eyes, One
    his ancient honor, another her beauty!
  • My heart took fright at its envy of so many
    Wretches running fiercely to the yawning chasm,
    Who, drunk with their own blood, would prefer,
    in a word, Suffering to death and hell to
    nothingness!
  • William Aggeler, The Flowers of Evil (Fresno,
    CA Academy Library Guild, 1954)

20
Twilight
  • Behold the sweet evening, friend of the criminal
    It comes like an accomplice, stealthily the sky
    Closes slowly like an immense alcove, And
    impatient man turns into a beast of prey. O
    evening, kind evening, desired by him Whose arms
    can say, without lying "Today We labored!" It
    is the evening that comforts Those minds that
    are consumed by a savage sorrow, The obstinate
    scholar whose head bends with fatigue And the
    bowed laborer who returns to his bed.
  • Meanwhile in the atmosphere malefic demons
    Awaken sluggishly, like businessmen, And take
    flight, bumping against porch roofs and shutters.
    Among the gas flames worried by the wind
    Prostitution catches alight in the streets
    Like an ant-hill she lets her workers out
    Everywhere she blazes a secret path, Like an
    enemy who plans a surprise attack She moves in
    the heart of the city of mire Like a worm that
    steals from Man what he eats. Here and there one
    hears food sizzle in the kitchens, The theaters
    yell, the orchestras moan
  • The gambling dens, where games of chance delight,
    Fill up with whores and cardsharps, their
    accomplices The burglars, who know neither
    respite nor mercy, Are soon going to begin their
    work, they also, And quietly force open
    cash-boxes and doors To enjoy life awhile and
    dress their mistresses.
  • Meditate, O my soul, in this solemn moment, And
    close your ears to this uproar It is now that
    the pains of the sick grow sharper! Somber Night
    grabs them by the throat they reach the end Of
    their destinies and go to the common pit The
    hospitals are filled with their sighs. More
    than one Will come no more to get his fragrant
    soup By the fireside, in the evening, with a
    loved one.
  • However, most of them have never known The
    sweetness of a home, have never lived!
  • William Aggeler, The Flowers of Evil (Fresno,
    CA Academy Library Guild, 1954)

21
Spleen I
  • January, irritated with the whole city, Pours
    from his urn great waves of gloomy cold On the
    pale occupants of the nearby graveyard And death
    upon the foggy slums.
  • My cat seeking a bed on the tiled floor Shakes
    his thin, mangy body ceaselessly The soul of an
    old poet wanders in the rain-pipe With the sad
    voice of a shivering ghost.
  • The great bell whines, the smoking
    logAccompanies in falsetto the snuffling
    clock,While in a deck of cards reeking of filthy
    scents,
  • My mortal heritage from some dropsical old woman,
    The handsome knave of hearts and the queen of
    spades Converse sinisterly of their dead love
    affair.
  • William Aggeler, The Flowers of Evil (Fresno,
    CA Academy Library Guild, 1954)

22
Spleen II
  • I have more memories than if I'd lived a thousand
    years.
  • A heavy chest of drawers cluttered with
    balance-sheets, Processes, love-letters, verses,
    ballads, And heavy locks of hair enveloped in
    receipts, Hides fewer secrets than my gloomy
    brain. It is a pyramid, a vast burial vault
    Which contains more corpses than potter's
    field. I am a cemetery abhorred by the moon,
    In which long worms crawl like remorse And
    constantly harass my dearest dead. I am an old
    boudoir full of withered roses, Where lies a
    whole litter of old-fashioned dresses, Where the
    plaintive pastels and the pale Bouchers, Alone,
    breathe in the fragrance from an opened phial.
  • Nothing is so long as those limping days, When
    under the heavy flakes of snowy years Ennui, the
    fruit of dismal apathy, Becomes as large as
    immortality. Henceforth you are no more, O
    living matter! Than a block of granite
    surrounded by vague terrors, Dozing in the
    depths of a hazy Sahara An old sphinx ignored by
    a heedless world, Omitted from the map, whose
    savage nature Sings only in the rays of a
    setting sun.
  • William Aggeler, The Flowers of Evil (Fresno,
    CA Academy Library Guild, 1954)

23
Quotes taken from
  • Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory
  • Benjamin, Walter. The Writer of Modern Life.
    Essays on Charles Baudelaire. Cambridge, Mass.
    Harvard UP, 2006.
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