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Charles Baudelaire
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The poetic masterpiece of the great nineteenth-century writer Charles Baudelaire, The Flowers of Evil is one of the most frequently read and studied works in the French language. In this compelling new translation of Baudelaire's most famous collection, Keith Waldrop recasts the poet's original French alexandrines and other poetic arrangements into versets, a form that hovers between poetry and prose. Maintaining Baudelaire's complex view of sound and structure, Waldrop's translation mirrors the intricacy of the original without attempting to replicate its inimitable verse. The result is a powerful new re-imagining, one that is, almost paradoxically, closer to Baudelaire's own poetry than any previous English translation. Including the six poems banned from the first edition, this Flowers of Evil preserves the complexity, eloquence, and dark humor of its author. Brought here to new life, it is hypnotic, frank, and forceful.
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Charles Baudelaire was a French poet whose work epitomizes the Decadent movement in literature. He ... produced influential critical essays on other important writers of his era and translated much of Edgar Allan Poe's work into French. Baudelaire is best known for his collection of poetry entitled Les Fleurs du Mal (The Flowers of Evil). His work also had a significant influence on the emergent Symbolist movement in art and literature.
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Charles Baudelaire has a stellium from late Pisces to mid-Aries, where all planets involved are either in the eighth house or in conjunction with a Pluto in Pisces squared by its dispositor Neptune. This accounts for the chart´s emphasis on sex and drugs. 
Charles Baudelaire Charles Baudelaire (1821-66) took his themes from city life and introduced many of the preoccupations of Modernism. Charles was born the son of François Baudelaire, an ex-priest who was 60 and a widower when he married Caroline Dufaÿs, a penniless orphan of 26. His father died in 1827, and Charles was brought up by his stepfather, Major Jacques Aupick, a brilliant, forceful man who eventually became a general and senator. Relations were initially cordial but Charles worshipped his mother, and relied on her help throughout his life. Charles was packed off to boarding school, expelled, enrolled at the École de Droit, became addicted to opium, contracted syphilis, and fell into debt. Law studies were terminated and in 1841 Charles was propelled on a voyage to India, towards which he got as far as Mauritius.
Charles Baudelaire?s ?Revolt? Collection of The Flowers of Evil is essentially a transition leading into his theme of death. In the poem, ?The Denial of Saint Peter,? Baudelaire is reminding God of his own crucifixion: ?Jesus, remember, in the olive trees-- / In all simplicity you prayed afresh / To One whom your own butchers seemed to please / In hammering the nails into your flesh? (Baudelaire 167). Baudelaire wants God to remember the pain and agony that he experienced.
Charles Baudelaire was born in Paris on April 9, 1821. His mother, Caroline Archimbaut-Dufays gave birth to Charles when she was 28-years-old to a much older man Francois Baudelaire of sixty-one. Charles' father instilled in him an appreciation for art. Francois Baudelaire's best friends were artists and he often took his young son to museums and galleries. Charles often sat by his father's side at his easel to watch his father paint. Some of Charles' earliest memories were of the times his father took him to the Palace of the Luxembourg to explain the statues that were there.
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