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Biography

Literature of the street

by Brian Nelson
September 2008, no. 304

Charles Baudelaire by Rosemary Lloyd

Reaktion Books, $34.95 pb, 189 pp

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Charles Baudelaire (1821–67) occupies a pivotal position in the development of modern writing, not just as the poet of Les Fleurs du mal (The Flowers of Evil, 1857) but as the proponent, in his critical writings, of a modern aesthetic based on the experience of city life. More than any other French poet of his time, he marks the transition from the Romantic to a proto-modernist poetic style and stance. T.S. Eliot recognised the nature of this achievement when he said that for him the significance of Les Fleurs du mal was summed up in the first lines of ‘Les sept vieillards’ (‘The Seven Old Men’), in Baudelaire’s vision of the ‘teeming city, city full of dreams, / where ghosts in broad daylight accost the passer-by’. ‘I knew what that meant,’ Eliot said, ‘because I had lived it before I knew that I wanted to turn it into verse on my own account.’

 


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Charles Baudelaire by Rosemary Lloyd

Reaktion Books, $34.95 pb, 189 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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