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| | Arthur Rimbaud - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Jean Nicolas Arthur Rimbaud (October 20, 1854 – November 10, 1891) was a French poet, born in Charleville. |  | | Rimbaud's and Verlaine's stormy homosexual relationship took them to London in 1872, when Verlaine left his wife and infant son (both of whom he used to treat badly in his alcoholic rages). |  | | Voyelles / Vowels a poem by Arthur Rimbaud |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Rimbaud
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| | Rimbaud, Arthur on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Rimbaud's poetry has been called hallucinatory because the poet seems to write not of material reality but of his dreamworld; his technique anticipates the symbolists in its suggestiveness, its abstract verbal music, and its images drawn from the subconscious. |  | | Rimbaud is thought to have stopped writing poetry at the age of 19, and he never wrote another literary work. |  | | RIMBAUD, ARTHUR [Rimbaud, Arthur], 1854-91, French poet who had a great influence on the symbolists and subsequent modern poets, b. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/R/Rimbaud.asp
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| | Arthur Rimbaud |
 | | Arthur Rimbaud is remembered as much for his volatile personality and tumultuous life as he is for his writings, most of which he produced before the age of eighteen. |  | | Rimbaud's stormy affair with Paul Verlaine estranged the older poet from his wife and, eventually, from most of his artistic friends as well. |  | | When he was not yet 17, Arthur Rimbaud (1854-91) electrified Paris's literary society with the incendiary poems that later made him the guiding saint of 20th-century rebels, from Pablo Picasso to Jim Morrison. |
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http://www.queertheory.com/histories/r/rimbaud_arthur.htm
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| | rimbio |
 | | This technique was later used as a basis for the Surrealist movement in art and literature. |  | | Also in 1871, Rimbaud was writing to the poet Paul Verlaine and was given an invitation to visit him in Paris. |  | | Rimbaud also became more interested in the occult and the illuminist literature that had become popular. |
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http://athena.english.vt.edu/~maclaugh/rimbio.htm
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| | The Academy of American Poets - Arthur Rimbaud |
 | | A volatile and peripatetic poet, the prodigy Arthur Rimbaud wrote all of his poetry in a space of less than five years. |  | | Both Rimbaud’s life and poetry has inspired a great number of poets and artists, including the French symbolists, Surrealism, the counter-culture Beat Movement, and the musicians Bob Dylan, Jim Morrison and Patti Smith. |  | | By the age of thirteen, he had already won several prizes for his writing and was adept at composing verse in Latin. |
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http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/1268
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| | You should know about ... Arthur Rimbaud - Entertainment |
 | | While it is easy in some sense to dismiss Rimbaud as the arch-rebel of French letters or the teenage poet laureate, to do so would be to miss not only the incredible depth and richness of his poems, but the central importance of his place in the history of French poetry. |  | | For a few months Rimbaud and Verlaine made the rounds in the Paris cafes, mocking the smug self-satisfaction of its writers, driving a wedge between Mathilde's parents with their antics and in general making themselves the scandal of Parisian literary society. |  | | After finishing "Season," Rimbaud would go on to complete what would be the first book of prose poems in the French language, "Illuminations." At 19 years old, he gave up writing poetry for the rest of his life, spending a few years traveling and learning languages in Europe before resettling in East Africa. |
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http://www.dailytexanonline.com/news/2005/10/20/Entertainment/You-Should.Know.About.Arthur.Rimbaud-1027292.shtml
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| | [No title] |
 | | Rimbaud's poetry is characterized by its diverse and disparate language levels, its clashes of tone and register, its use of neologisms ("Robinsonner" in `Roman' and "silluner" in `Les Poètes de sept ans'), and its inclusion of vocabulary from semantic fields not traditionally considered appropriate to poetry. |  | | Rimbaud's poetry, little known, during his own lifetime, had an exceptional influence on succeeding generations of writers: Claudel saw him as a Christian apologist, and the Surrealists of the 1920's and 1930's found in Rimbaud's rejection of the rational intellect, a precursor to their own movement. |  | | Rimbaud's conception of the poet was that he was a kind of instrument for a new perception of the world, exploring beyond the surface of so-called reality. |
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http://www.sunderland.ac.uk/~os0tmc/rimbaud/rimbmain.htm
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| | The Crux of Rimbaud's Poetics. |
 | | The poet is born, the voyant is self-created. |  | | I know that Rimbaud uses the metaphor of the bugle to explain being "born a poet," and that in fact he is not speaking of waking up as a voyant. |  | | Rimbaud was a poet writing in a theocentric universe. |
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http://www.necessaryprose.com/crux.html
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| | Astrocartography of Arthur Rimbaud's Least-aspected Venus,Pluto |
 | | Rimbaud submitted several poems, including the sonnet, “Voyelles,” to the Parisian poet Paul Verlaine, who was so impressed that he invited Rimbaud to Paris. |  | | Rimbaud completed his first collection of verse when he was only sixteen years old, then he ran away to Paris. |  | | Such things form a central theme in Rimbaud’s poetry (e.g., “I is somebody else”) as well in his life. |
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http://www.dominantstar.com/b_rim.htm
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| | Arthur Rimbaud |
 | | Meanwhile, in 1886, believing Rimbaud to be dead, Verlaine had published his poems, under the title of Les Illuminations, and they had created a great sensation in Paris. |  | | Meanwhile Rimbaud, deeply disillusioned, determined to abandon Europe and literature, and he ceased at the age of nineteen to write poetry. |  | | He began to write when he was ten, and some of the poems which now appear in his works belong to his fifteenth year. |
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http://www.nndb.com/people/875/000031782
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| | Selected Poems and Letters (Rimbaud, Arthur) - Arthur Rimbaud - Penguin Classics |
 | | Arthur Rimbaud was one of the wildest, most uncompromising poets of his age, although his brief literary career was over by the time he was twenty-one when he embarked on a new life as a trader in Africa. |  | | A master of French verse forms, the young Rimbaud set out to transform his art, and language itself, by a systematic “disordering of all the senses,” often with the aid of alcohol and drugs. |  | | This edition brings together his extraordinary poetry and more than a hundred of his letters, most of them written after he had abandoned literature. |
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http://us.penguinclassics.com/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,10_0140448020,00.html
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| | ArtandCulture Artist: Arthur Rimbaud |
 | | Rimbaud was schooled in Charleville, a town in northeastern France where his family lived in poverty (his father had abandoned them when Rimbaud was six). |  | | Considering that Rimbaud wrote for less than half of his life, he left quite a mark on the literary world. |  | | Rimbaud is featured here along with Mallarmé, Baudelaire, Verlaine, and other decadent poets. |
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http://www.artandculture.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/ACLive.woa/wa/artist?id=778
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| | Glossary: Rimbaud, Arthur |
 | | Arthur Rimbaud was a young genius who unwittingly changed the language of modern poetry and he sang a siren song across the years to the troubadours of the '60s. |  | | Jean-Nicholas-Arthur Rimbaud (born: October 20, 1854 - Charleville, France; died: November 10, 1891 - Marseilles, France) was a French poet who died tragically young after having lived an intense life that scandalized many. |  | | In the 19th century, Rimbaud and Verlaine shocked the French bourgeoisie by their violently outrageous behavior. |
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http://www.harbour.sfu.ca/~hayward/van/glossary/rimbaud.html
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| | The Drunken Boat - The Life and Poetry of Arthur Rimbaud |
 | | The house by the river where the Rimbaud family lived is being restored as a museum; it will contain the personal effects of the poet on displayhis famous valise, the articles of clothing, the cutlery, the musical instruments, the mementos and leavings of a life. |  | | There is also focus upon the Victorian novelist, Marie Corelli (1855 - 1924), whose works, although despised by the critics of her day, rose to a popularity greater than any of her contemporaries, and set new standards in the literary world, many of which are continued today. |  | | The intensity and the timeless emotional impact of Arthur Rimbaud's work make his poetry the perfect song lyrics. |
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http://members.tripod.com/RoadSide6/frames.html
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| | Rimbaud and Total Eclipse |
 | | Rimbaud and Verlaine reached London in September and found plenty of interest and amusement and also inspiration: Verlaine completed the Romances - the subjects are mostly landscape or regret or vituperation of his estranged wife. |  | | In 1871, Arthur Rimbaud met Paul Verlaine, and if their friendship was controversial, their sexual relationship was downright scandalous. |  | | Arthur Rimbaud's literary style has influenced almost all modern forms of literature - he has been cited as an inspiration by songwriters like Bob Dylan, Patti Smith and Jim Morrison. |
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http://www.auschwitz.dk/Rimbaud.htm
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| | Translating Rimbauds Poetry |
 | | Although Rimbaud was knowledgeable about the works of the leading poets of his time and often mimicked (and mocked) their forms in his own work, it was his unique style that earned him a rightful place among France& notable writers. |  | | Perhaps most remarkably, Rimbaud wrote the entirety of his poetical works during his adolescence, turning away from poetry altogether in his late teenage years to pursue a precarious career of trading in Yemen and Africa. |  | | While many translators have worked with Rimbauds poetry and have produced volumes of his work in English, perhaps no single individual stands out as crucial to bringing Rimbaud to an English-reading audience as Wallace Fowlie, a noted professor emeritus of French at Duke University. |
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http://accurapid.com/journal/06liter.htm
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| | Compare Prices and Read Reviews on Arthur Rimbaud at Epinions.com |
 | | Benjamin Ivry's Outline of Symbolist poet, Arthur Rimbaud, and his sexuality as it relates to his affair with Lyric poet Paul Veralin is a great read. |  | | Rimbaud and Verlain are compared to Beavis and Butthead of cartoon fame. |  | | After his affair with Paul Verlaine was over (Verlain was in prison for violence because he beat his mother), Arthur worked a series of hand-to-mouth jobs and finally went to Africa as a trader in the import/export field for a series of French employers. |
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http://www.epinions.com/content_117999439492
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| | Saudi Aramco World : Arthur Rimbaud, Coffee Trader |
 | | For the next eleven years, until he died miserably in a hospital in Marseille, Arthur Rimbaud, France's great 19th-century enfant terrible, whose poetry was to exert enormous influence on French literature, lived mostly in Aden and in Harar, Ethiopia, working in the coffee trade. |  | | Though he was by then aware that some of his poetry had been published and had attracted attention, he had not a clue of the magnitude of his eventual, posthumous fame. |  | | How his life swung from the sublime to the commercial is one of the most perplexing mysteries in the history of modern literature. |
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http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/200105/arthur.rimbaud.coffee.trader.htm
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| | LitKicks: Arthur Rimbaud |
 | | A precursor to surrealism, Rimbaud is also considered to have been one of the creators of the free verse style. |  | | Rimbaud's literary style has influenced almost all modern forms of literature, including the Beats. |  | | Madame Rimbaud showed little affection to her children, instead focusing her ambitions on her two sons. |
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http://www.litkicks.com/People/ArthurRimbaud.html
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| | Amazon.com: I Promise to Be Good : The Letters of Arthur Rimbaud (Modern Library): Books: Arthur Rimbaud,Wyatt Mason |
 | | Rimbaud liked to use the phrase, "above all" in many of his early letters, which according to Wyatt Mason is indicative of his imperious personality. |  | | For those readers unacquainted with Rimbaud and hoping for first-hand accounts of his Parisian adventures, his European travels, debauched meetings with other poets and artists, and poetical inspirations they will likely be disappointed in the long run. |  | | Additionally, a few photographs Rimbaud took while in Abyssinia are printed, along with others of Africa, including the slick cover photograph of what appears to be Rimbaud and his co-workers in Aden - never before printed as far as I know. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/067964301X?v=glance
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| | Narratives: Arthur Rimbaud's House in Harar, Vincent Smith |
 | | Arthur Rimbaud's House in Harar shows his interest in African imagery while simultaneously suggesting that European history and figures are of no less interest to an African American artist. |  | | In Arthur Rimbaud's House in Harar, Smith expressionistically conveys the creativity, decadence, and instability that characterized Rimbaud's life. |  | | In his works, Smith often explores his own heritage, particularly concentrating on jazz imagery and African-inspired masks and figures. |
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http://www.artgallery.umd.edu/driskell/exhibition/sec5/smit_v_01.htm
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| | The New Yorker: The Critics: Books |
 | | Rimbaud’s odd behavior (one of his hosts discovered him naked on the rooftop, hurling his clothes onto the street) and horrific personal hygiene earned him a reputation as a difficult house guest. |  | | The bilingual first volume, which was published last year, includes all of Rimbaud’s poetry as well as uncollected writings ranging from Latin school compositions to fragments of poems reconstructed by his acquaintances. |  | | Secondary sources present additional problems: the memoirs of Rimbaud’s relatives, friends, and ex-friends are a cacophony of quarrels, often apocryphal, while critics have tended to use him as a mirror for their own preoccupations. |
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http://www.newyorker.com/critics/books/?031117crbo_books
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| | Arthur Rimbaud |
 | | The poet who came to symbolize alienated genius for French letters was the son of an army captain who deserted his family when his son was six years old. |  | | (It was during this time that Rimbaud wrote "The Spiritual Hunt," a poem that Verlaine called his masterpiece. |  | | His highly suggestive, subtle work drew on subconscious sources, and its form was correspondingly supple and novel. |
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http://www.levity.com/corduroy/rimbaud.htm
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| | Rimbaud's "Drunken Boat," Illuminations & Season in Hell |
 | | Rimbaud wrote this work at the age of 19. |  | | Rimbaud is one of the world's most influential writers. |  | | In Claude J. Summers' Gay and Lesbian Literary Heritage, see the articles and bibliographies for "Rimbaud," "Verlaine," and "French Literature: Nineteenth Century." There are many resources including additional poems, articles, and photographs at Peter Pullicino's excellent Rimbaud site. |
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http://www.angelfire.com/ny/gaybooks/rimbaud.html
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| | Amazon.ca: Rimbaud: The Works: A Season in Hell; Poems & Prose; Illuminations: Books |
 | | Arthur Rimbaud (1854-1891), "a prodigious and prodigal adolescent," composed his entire body of work between the ages of 15 and 19. |  | | He took poetry "beyond literature." The latter half of his life was spent in Africa as a trader in coffee,hides, ivory, and guns. |  | | Subjects > Literature & Fiction > Poetry 62; Poets, A-Z > (R) > Rimbaud, Arthur |
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http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0738852007
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| | 19th Century French Literature |
 | | Arthur Rimbaud, "Au Cabaret-Vert cinq heures du soir" (1870): |  | | Arthur RIMBAUD, "Les chercheuses de poux", from Poesies (1886) |  | | Arthur RIMBAUD, "Au Cabaret-Vert : cinq heures du soir": |
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http://globegate.utm.edu/french/lit/century.19.html
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| | Arthur Rimbaud - Picture - MSN Encarta |
 | | Arthur Rimbaud, one of the most renowned of the French symbolist poets, wrote the poetry upon which his reputation is based between the ages of 10 and 20. |  | | Rimbaud’s use of objects and imagery to represent emotional states and his inventive language influenced many later French poets, especially the surrealists of the 1920s and 1930s. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/media_461541562/Arthur_Rimbaud.html
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| | Rimbaud |
 | | Incredibly, by the age of 20, Rimbaud abandoned poetry and spent the rest of his life as a nomad in Europe and Africa. |  | | In 1871 he met fellow poet Paul Verlaine and they embarked on a tempestuous love affair. |  | | (He had previously sent poems to Verlaine.) During their time together they made two trips to London and it was here that Rimbaud began his famous prose poem A Season in Hell. |
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http://www.poetsgraves.co.uk/rimbaud.htm
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| | Arthur Rimbaud |
 | | Rimbaud was already a marvelous poet, but his behaviour in Paris |  | | Charleville, Rimbaud sent to the poet Paul Verlaine samples of his |  | | In his 16th year Rimbaud found his own distinctive voice in poems |
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http://www.albany.edu/faculty/rlp96/rimbaud.html
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| | Arthur Rimbaud - Penguin UK Authors - Penguin UK |
 | | Arthur Rimbaud (1854–1891) is one of France’s most controversial and influential poets, though he gave up his career at a young age. |  | | Arthur Rimbaud - Penguin UK Authors - Penguin UK home |
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http://www.penguin.co.uk/nf/Author/AuthorPage/0,,0_1000013782,00.html
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| | Total Eclipse (1995) |
 | | French poet Rimbaud, who wrote almost everything he wrote as a teenager, has been admired by some of the most eccentric creative people of the last century. |  | | The great French poet Arthur Rimbaud wrote all his poems... |  | | Quotes: Arthur Rimbaud: The only unbearable thing is that nothing is unbearable. |
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http://us.imdb.com/Title?0114702
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| | The Connection.org : Arthur Rimbaud |
 | | Others dismiss Rimbaud's work as little more than an artistic line drawn through his lascivious affair with the French poet Paul Verlaine, calling Rimbaud "a pouting poster boy of the bohemian left." |  | | The kid writes his last poem at age 21, then disappears on a Capitalist quest into the jungle of East Africa for the second half of his life. |  | | One explanation is that he was a brilliant brat: Arthur Rimbaud, the enfant terrible of late 19th century French verse, dashed off poems in puberty that grown men continue to admire and study. |
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http://www.theconnection.org/shows/2002/04/20020416_b_main.asp
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| | Arthur Rimbaud |
 | | I bought most of his poetry at the bookstore, but have only read parts of them up until now, for whatever reason. |  | | I felt I started writing garbage after a few years, just writing about anything and everything. |  | | Rimbaud wrote profound works, and probably wrote them easily and quickly. |
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http://www.magickalkingdom.com/topic_11855.htm
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| | Rimbaud, Jean Nicholas Arthur: Rimbaud |
 | | More than a century after his death, the young rebel-poet continues to appeal to modern readers as much for his turbulent life as for his poetry; his stormy affair with fellow poet Paul Verlaine and his nomadic adventures in eastern Africa are as iconic as his hallucinatory poems and symbolist prose. |  | | Rimbaud, Jean Nicholas Arthur Rimbaud: Complete Works, Selected Letters, a Bilingual Edition. |  | | The enfant terrible of French letters, Jean-Nicholas-Arthur Rimbaud (1854-91) was a defiant and precocious youth who wrote some of the most remarkable prose and poetry of the nineteenth century, all before leaving the world of verse by the age of twenty-one. |
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http://www.press.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/hfs.cgi/00/152955.ctl
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| | Rimbaud |
 | | This is a Arthur Rimbaud Web Ring site, owned by Pete. |  | | The far sound of cities in the evening. |  | | It also has a mailing list you can join to receive updates of my site and general commentary on AR. |
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http://www.geocities.com/athens/8161/rimbaud.html
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| | Bernstein, Joseph M.; Rimbaud, Arthur; Baudelaire, Charles P.: Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Verlaine: Selected Verse and Prose ... |
 | | Here, for the first time, the work of three of Frances greatest poets has been published in a single volume: the sensual and passionate glow of Charles Baudelaire, the desperate intensity and challenge of Arthur Rimbaud, and the absinthe-tinted symbolist songs of Paul Verlaine. |  | | The volume includes Arthur Symons' unabridged translation of Flowers of Evil and the Prose Poems of Baudelaire; Louise Varese's translation of Rimbaud's A Season in Hell and Prose Poems from "Illuminations"; J. Norman Cameron's translation of the verse from the Illuminations; and a representative selection from Verlaine's verse translated by Gertrude Hall and Arthur Symons. |  | | Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Verlaine: Selected Verse and Prose Poems |
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http://www.forbesbookclub.com/BookPage.asp?prod_cd=I82MA
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| | Arthur Rimbaud Life Stories, Books, & Links |
 | | by Fowlie Wallace and Jean Nicholas (Editors), Arthur Rimbaud |  | | On this day in 1885 Arthur Rimbaud wrote to his mother that he had decided to give up his more sedate job as a coffee-trader in Ethiopia, so beginning the last phase of his wild, infamous and short life: "... |  | | FIND BOOKS BY ARTHUR RIMBAUD AT Powell's Books |
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http://todayinliterature.com/biography/arthur.rimbaud.asp
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| | Arthur - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Arthur Magazine, publication devoted to avant-garde music, experimental music and noise music. |  | | Arthur, a plant which appeared from time to time in Mad magazine. |  | | This is a disambiguation page: a list of articles associated with the same title. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur
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| | Five Poems by Rimbaud - Venus Anadyomene |
 | | Rimbaud: Complete Works, Selected Letters, a Bilingual Edition |  | | Copyright: Excerpted from Rimbaud: Complete Works, Selected Letters, a Bilingual Edition, published by the University of Chicago Press. |  | | from Rimbaud: Complete Works, Selected Letters, a Bilingual Edition |
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http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/719774.html
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| | Arthur Rimbaud quotes |
 | | Arthur Rimbaud said: "Only divine love bestows the keys of knowledge." and: |
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http://en.thinkexist.com/quotation/only_divine_love_bestows_the_keys_of_knowledge/262411.html
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| | rodcorp: How we work: Arthur Rimbaud, poet |
 | | Listed below are links to weblogs that reference How we work: Arthur Rimbaud, poet: |  | | Comments are moderated, and will not appear on this weblog until the author has approved them. |
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http://rodcorp.typepad.com/rodcorp/2004/12/how_we_work_art_1.html
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| | Arthur Rimbaud |
 | | We are searching for Arthur Rimbaud in the ether of the 19th Century... |  | | Speaking to you via telephone from the 19th century. |
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http://www.usdat.us/secretary/rimbaud
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| | Arthur Rimbaud Page |
 | | Les textes inspirés par la relation tumultueuse entre Rimbaud et Verlaine |  | | These are all from a Candian site- you will have to use the "back" button on your browser to return to this page if you leave. |
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http://people.colgate.edu/stking/rimbaud.htm
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