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| | Charles Baudelaire - The Academy of American Poets |
 | | Baudelaire was very close with his mother (much of what is known of his later life comes from the letters he wrote her), but was deeply distressed when she married Major Jacques Aupick. |  | | Baudelaire enhanced this reputation by flaunting his eccentricities; for instance, he once asked a friend in the middle of a conversation "Wouldn't it be agreeable to take a bath with me?" Because of the abundance of stories about the poet, it is difficult to sort fact from fiction. |  | | Baudelaire was so concerned with the quality of the printing that he took a room near the press to help supervise the book's production. |
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http://www.poets.org/poets/cbaud
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| | Charles Baudelaire - The Biography of |
 | | Baudelaire and his mother lived together on the outskirts of Paris from this point. |  | | Charles Baudelaire was a 19th century French poet, translator, and literary and art critic whose reputation rests primarily on Les Fleurs du mal; (1857; The Flowers of Evil) which was perhaps the most important and influential poetry collection published |  | | The agonizing moods of isolation and despair that Baudelaire had known in adolescence, and which he called his moods of "spleen," returned and became more frequent. |
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http://www.empirezine.com/spotlight/bau/bau-bio.htm
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| | Baudelaire, Charles |
 | | Baudelaire the poet, like the artists he lauded in "The Painter of Modern Life," was a hero of intensity. |  | | The painter of modern life, in whatever genre, will thus be characterized by an ability to make an intelligent sketch of what is passing ("Le Peintre de la vie moderne," 2:674). |  | | The face Baudelaire presents is that of a "dandy"--putting on the power of art, finding its supreme strength through the efforts of the senses and their symbols. |
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http://www.press.jhu.edu/books/hopkins_guide_to_literary_theory/charles_baudelaire.html
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| | Charles Baudelaire's Fleurs du Mal |
 | | Most importantly, it included the six poems censored from the first edition of Les Fleurs du mal, which were illegal to publish in France until the 1940s. |  | | This was the first edition of Les Fleurs du mal and contained a hundred poems written in the 1840s and 1850s. |  | | Pichois whom Le Magazine littéraire recently dubbed the "prince of Baudelaireans" was able to trace a direct lineage to Baudelaire, having worked closely with Jacques Crépet, son of Eugène Crépet, who knew and published Baudelaire. |
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http://www.FleursDuMal.org
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| | HERMENAUT: Charles-Pierre Baudelaire: 1821-1867 |
 | | Baudelaire's zine-like Salon de 1846 was a radical departure from the typical art-criticism format, since he was now more concerned with articulating his own aesthetic philosophy than with critiquing any particular paintings. |  | | Baudelaire returned to Paris the following year and wrote "Correspondances," arguably his best-known poem. |  | | The prose-poem is an arabesque—which Baudelaire describes in his journal as "the most spiritual of designs." Prose poetry, then, was Baudelaire's attempt to invent a medium which could express his vertiginous idea of truth, which is sincere without being bourgeois, and absurd without being meaningless. |
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http://www.hermenaut.com/a25.shtml
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| | Charles Baudelaire Site..by Erin |
 | | Baudelaire used his writting to shock and astonish society - perhaps because of his strict upbringing and strong opposition to nearly everything that had happened in his life. |  | | Francois Baudelaire's best friends were artists and he often took his young son to museums and galleries. |  | | The Art Gallery ---Pictures of Charles Baudelaire plus samples of his art reviews. |
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http://www.angelfire.com/ct/edarling
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| | Charles Baudelaire |
 | | Baudelaire had a deep influence on a generation of poets in the late 19th century, coming into vogue at a time when "art for art's sake" was a dogma. |  | | Baudelaire did not finish his book, an unique collection of insults, but its material has been printed in different editions. |  | | Other women, who inspired his poems, were Mme Sabatier, and the actress Marie Daubrun, but for most of his life Baudelaire maintained a relationship with Jeanne. |
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http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/baudelai.htm
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| | TheCriticalPoet - Featured Poet - Charles Baudelaire |
 | | Baudelaire translated many of Poe's works, which are classics of French prose, and wrote several critical articles on him. |  | | After its publication, Les Fleurs du Mal was banned, and Baudelaire and his publisher and printer were charged with obscenity and blasphemy. |  | | Charles Baudelaire was born and lived his life in Paris. |
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http://thecriticalpoet.tripod.com/baudelaire.html
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| | Encyclopedia article on Charles Baudelaire [EncycloZine] |
 | | Baudelaire was a slow and fastidious worker, and it was not until 1857 that he produced his first and famous volume of poems, ' 'Fleurs du mal' '. |  | | Baudelaire is one of the most famous decadent poets, but before the 20th century, when his work underwent considerable re-evaluation, he was generally considered by many to be merely a drug addict and a very vulgar author. |  | | The consummate art displayed in these verses was appreciated by a limited public, but general attention was caught by the perverse selection of morbid subjects, and the book became a by-word for unwholesomeness among conventional critics. |
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http://encyclozine.com/Charles_Baudelaire
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| | Charles Baudelaire |
 | | Baudelaire's essay The Poem of Hashish is available at this lirbary. |  | | Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mal is available in the original French in HTML |  | | Lecture notes from a class on Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mal. |
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http://nepenthes.lycaeum.org/Ludlow/People/baud.html
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| | Literary Kicks: CharlesBaudelaire |
 | | Poe was the greatest influence on Baudelaire, and Baudelaire translated his works into French and worked hard to promote his reputation (which, to this day, like that of Jerry Lewis, remains higher in France than elsewhere). |  | | Charles-Pierre Baudelaire was born into a comfortable middle-class family in Paris, France on April 9, 1821. |  | | Baudelaire would be immediately celebrated by the next generation of poets, the Symbolists like Rimbaud and Verlaine. |
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http://www.litkicks.com/BeatPages/page.jsp?what=CharlesBaudelaire
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| | ipedia.com: 1821 Article |
 | | April 9 - Charles-Pierre Baudelaire, French poet and writer († 1867) |  | | May 8 - Jean Henri Dunant, founder of the Red Cross and recipient of the Nobel Prize in peace 1901 († 1910) |
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http://www.ipedia.com/1821.html
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| | Deleuze, Gilles [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy] |
 | | In Normandy, he was inspired by a teacher, under whose influence he read Gide, Baudelaire and others, becoming for the first time interested in his studies. |  | | When the Germans invaded France, Deleuze was on vacation in Normandy and spent a year being schooled there. |  | | In a late interview, he states that after this experience, he never had any trouble academically. |
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http://www.iep.utm.edu/d/deleuze.htm
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| | Versions of Baudelaire |
 | | Corresponding poems as translated by William Howe from Baudelaire and Anbian. |  | | Poems from Baudelaire's Flowers of Evil, translated by Robert Anbian |
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http://wings.buffalo.edu/epc/rift/rift04/baud0401.html
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| | Charles Baudelaire's Spleen |
 | | [ Back to the Main Page ][ Pictures of Baudelaire ][ Excerpts from journals ][ Flowers of Evil ] |
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http://www.angelfire.com/ct/edarling/Spleen.html
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| | Baudelaire imported soaps - luxurious, natural, fragrant bath products |
 | | Bestselling collections include Provence Santé, a comprehensive line from France, as well as products based on honey (Apiana) and olive oil (Jardin d’Olivier). |  | | Baudelaire Soaps and Body Care specializes in distinctive, handcrafted imported soaps: including natural soaps, french milled soaps, and olive oil soaps as well as authentic bath and beauty products for men and women – from body lotions to shaving brushes. |  | | Baudelaire imported soaps - luxurious, natural, fragrant bath products |
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http://www.baudelairesoaps.com/
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