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| | Charles Baudelaire - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | 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. |  | | Baudelaire was a slow and fastidious worker, and it was not until 1857 that he produced his first and most famous volume of poems, Les fleurs du mal ("The Flowers of Evil"). |  | | Neige also used poems from Baudelaire on his contributions to Mortifera's 2004 album, "Vastiia Tenebrd Mortifera" ("Le Revenant" and "Ciel Brouille"). |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Baudelaire
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| | The Academy of American Poets - Charles Baudelaire |
 | | 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's father, who was thirty years older than his mother, died when the poet was six. |
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http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/607
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| | Poe and Baudelaire: A Vast Ocean Apart |
 | | Charles Baudelaire was noticed for his dedication to this grand undertaking and his determination for completing as many translations as possible, at one point finishing thirty-seven works in two years (Baudelaire 32). |  | | Baudelaire believed that poetry was the highest form of expression and that in all his works he was striving for this simple, yet quite complex, form of perfection. |  | | Charles Baudelaire had many other influences, but counted Poe as one of the most important in his literary style. |
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http://www.usna.edu/EnglishDept/poeperplex/baudp.htm
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| | TheCriticalPoet - Featured Poet - Charles Baudelaire |
 | | Charles Baudelaire was born and lived his life in Paris. |  | | One of the greatest french poets of the 19th century, Charles Baudelaire (1821-67) was a precursor to french symbolism, and one of the earliest members of the Decadent Movement. |  | | Baudelaire translated many of Poe's works, which are classics of French prose, and wrote several critical articles on him. |
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http://thecriticalpoet.tripod.com/baudelaire.html
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| | Charles Baudelaire - Paris 19th Century - Spirit of Bohemia - The Spirit of Bohemia |
 | | Baudelaire had been highly stimulated by the fighting; it had provided him with the kind of excitement which set his adrenaline coursing and enabled him to explode out of his habitual condition of lethargy. |  | | Baudelaire occupies a pivotal position in the development of modern French writing, not just as the poet of Les Fleurs du mal, but as the proponent, in his critical writings, of a modern, and specifically urban, aesthetic based on what he called the 'innombrables rapports' and encounters of city life. |  | | Baudelaire wrote critical works on his literary associates Balzac, Gautier, and de Nerval, published posthumously in 1880, as well as other works including Les Paradis artificiels (1860) and Petits Poemes en prose (1869). |
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http://www.bohemiabooks.com.au/eblinks/spirboho/paris1830/baudelaire
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| | Charles Baudelaire in Relationships |
 | | Charles is big-hearted and openhanded with both his money and his affections and he is not happy if he has to budget or restrict himself in any way. |  | | Others are attracted to Charles Baudelaire because of his gentle, kind and friendly manner and he may feel especially drawn to young people. |  | | Baudelaire loves wholeheartedly and expects all-consuming, total devotion and attention from his partner. |
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http://www.topsynergy.com/famous/Baudelaire.asp
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| | Baudelaire |
 | | Baudelaire's poetry was a major influence on the work of the symbolist poets who included Mallarmé, Verlaine, Laforgue and Arthur Rimbaud. |  | | Baudelaire is also remembered for his collection of prose poems entitled Petit Poemes en prose (1869) and for his translations of the tales of Edgar Allen Poe. |  | | In 1857 Baudelaire published his masterpiece Les Fleurs du mal - arguably the most significant collection of poetry to be published in Europe during the 19th Century. |
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http://www.poetsgraves.co.uk/baudelaire.htm
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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. |  | | Evans's study of Paris Spleen is a masterful exploration of Baudelaire's use of intertextual parody and the arabesque, the central themes of his prose-poems (the city, prostitution, madness, savagery, the kaleidoscope, musical harmony), and his anti-linear brand of morality. |  | | Although the image of the abyss appears constantly in his poems and journals, for Baudelaire the abyss is always either a metaphor for his own heart or mind, or a terrifying reality—as far as I know, he never uses it to describe a state of total freedom or nihilism. |
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http://www.hermenaut.com/a25.shtml
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| | charles baudelaire ... at MSN Shopping |
 | | The Poems and Prose Poems of Charles Baudelaire |  | | More figures, Charles Baudelaire (1821-67) left behind a correspondence documenting in intimate detail a life as intense in its extremes as his poetry. |  | | Known for his highly controversial, and often dark poetry, Baudelaire's life was filled with drama and strife, from financial disaster to being prosecuted for obscenity and blasphemy. |
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http://shopping.msn.com/results/shp/?text=charles+baudelaire+...
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| | Charles Baudelaire - analysis |
 | | As both poet and critic, Baudelaire stands in relation to French and European poetry as Gustave Flaubert and Èdouard Manet do to fiction and painting, respectively: as a crucial link between Romanticism and modernism and as a supreme example, in both his life and his work, of what it means to be a modern artist. |  | | Baudelaire died unrecognized, with many of his writings still unpublished and most of those that had been published were out of print. |  | | Baudelaire moved decisively away from the Romantic poetry of statement and emotion to the modern poetry of symbol and suggestion. |
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http://www.veinotte.com/baudelaire/analysis.htm
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| | Charles Baudelaire |
 | | Charles was packed off to boarding school, expelled, enrolled at the École de Droit, became addicted to opium, contracted syphilis, and fell into debt. |  | | Readable books on Charles Baudelaire and his work include P. Quennell's Baudelaire and the Symbolists (1970), M. Gilman's The Idea of Poetry in France: From Houdar de la Motte to Baudelaire (1958) and J. Hiddleston's Baudelaire and the Art of Memory (1999). |  | | Relations were initially cordial but Charles worshipped his mother, and relied on her help throughout his life. |
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http://www.poetry-portal.com/poets39.html
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| | Charles Baudelaire - Paris 19th Century - Spirit of Bohemia |
 | | Baudelaire believed that art must be much more than self-expression. |  | | The artist must use his experience to pass beyond it, to try to capture the quintessence of his age through his art. |  | | As a poet he had a passion for things which are not, strictly speaking, artistic, but which are, on the other hand, purely artificial, and offer a distinct contrast to nature and natural beauty. |
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http://www.bohemiabooks.com.au/eblinks/spirboho/paris1830/baudelaire/baudelaire-P2.htm
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| | Charles Baudelaire - Biography |
 | | 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 |  | | Baudelaire and his mother lived together on the outskirts of Paris from this point. |  | | 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.veinotte.com/baudelaire
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| | Charles Baudelaire |
 | | Baudelaire life was almost as important as his poetry. |  | | His rejection of bourgeois values, his use of drugs, his fascination with sex, his close friendships with painters and other poets: all of these made him a sort of model for the poet as a 'bohemian' figure. |  | | Baudelaire's prose poems Spleen de Paris compete and indexed, in French only. |
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http://www.uvm.edu/~sgutman/Baudelaire.htm
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| | Charles Baudelaire |
 | | The poetry of Charles Baudelaire reflects the mind of the wretched genius, one of the most interesting characters in the world of literature. |  | | One reason I find Baudelaire so enjoyable is that he seems to be almost an "anti-poet." So much of poetry is concerned with idolizing and describing beauty, of taking joy in the myriad configurations of life, and compared to such poetry, Baudelaire is a breath of foul air. |  | | But his ruminations on the base and obscene are just as powerful a tool in pointing out the universal concerns of the poet as is the flowery, sing-song style of poetry. |
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http://www.cyberpat.com/essays/baudelaire.html
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| | Baudelaire: Une Micro-Histoire |
 | | Baudelaire, describing her in a poem, used an image of her as a "jeune éléphant" (a young elephant!) at one point in their tumultuous relationship. |  | | Every real poet, Baudelaire said, is an "incarnation." By this we assume him to mean that the poet is his poetry, his poetry is the poet. |  | | Baudelaire's review of the Paris Salon of 1845 was his first serious published work. |
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http://www.library.vanderbilt.edu/baudelaire/englishintro.html
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| | Charles Baudelaire's Fleurs du Mal |
 | | This edition of Les Fleurs du mal was prepared after Baudelaire's death by two of his friends. |  | | While living in Brussels, Baudelaire and his publisher decided to put out this collection of "scraps" containing a miscellany of poems. |  | | This was the first edition of Les Fleurs du mal and contained a hundred poems written in the 1840s and 1850s. |
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http://fleursdumal.org
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| | Les Fleurs du Mal - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Six poems from the work were suppressed and the ban on their publication was not lifted in France until 1949. |  | | In the wake of the prosecution a second edition was issued in 1861 which added 32 new poems, removed the six suppressed poems and added a new section entitled Tableaux Parisiens. |  | | "The Flowers of Evil") is a volume of French poetry by Charles Baudelaire. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Les_fleurs_du_mal
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| | Baudelaire, Charles on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | BAUDELAIRE, CHARLES [Baudelaire, Charles], 1821-67, French poet and critic. |  | | Managing imitation: translation and Baudelaire's art criticism.(Charles Baudelaire) |  | | Believing criticism to be a function of the poet, he wrote perceptive appraisals of his contemporaries. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/B/Baudelai.asp
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| | Charles Baudelaire - Little Poems in Prose - Teitan |
 | | The decadent poetry of Charles Baudelaire was a source of boundless inspiration for Aleister Crowley, who tried through the art of translation to make his untamed spirit live on. |  | | This book is Crowley's only separately published translation of Baudelaire's Le Spleen de Paris also known as Petits Poèmes en Prose, a series of free-flowing poems on life in the modern city. |  | | Charles Baudelaire - Little Poems in Prose - Teitan |
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http://www.teitanpress.com/books/lpip.html
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| | Charles Baudelaire Study Questions |
 | | Baudelaire treats the obscure artist Constantin Guys as the type of the artist as flâneur. |  | | Much as Oscar Wilde would do a few decades later, Baudelaire privileges artifice over raw nature, defiantly showing contempt for his predecessor critics' attempt to base art and ethics on some conception of Nature. |  | | First of all, how does this defiance play out the claims of Kant and Schiller concerning art? |
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http://www.ajdrake.com/e491_fall_04/materials/authors/baudelaire_sq.htm
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| | EDSITEment - Lesson Plan |
 | | All students can compare works of Baudelaire to any modern artist from the music, art, or fiction industries in terms of attitude toward women, despair and nihilism, restlessness and dissatisfaction with life, etc. |  | | Ask students to compose a sonnet in the style of Baudelaire or on the themes of Baudelaire and the Decadent era. |  | | To recognize Charles Baudelaire as a Decadent poet and the leading influence of the Symbolist movement |
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http://edsitement.neh.gov/view_lesson_plan.asp?id=389
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| | Baudelaire, Charles: Selected Poems from Les Fleurs du mal |
 | | Baudelaire, Charles Selected Poems from Les Fleurs du mal: A Bilingual Edition. |  | | Baudelaire, Charles: Selected Poems from Les Fleurs du mal |  | | In a masterly translation by Norman Shapiro, this selection of poems from Les Fleurs du mal demonstrates the magnificent range of Baudelaire's gift, from the exquisite quatrains to the formal challenges of his famous sonnets. |
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http://www.press.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/hfs.cgi/00/13488.ctl
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| | Charles Baudelaire Electronic Library |
 | | This is Sartre's attempt to perform an existentialist psychoanalysis of Baudelaire. |  | | He was known in particular for his poetry and his criticism, which becomes readily apparent in this sensitive appraisal of Baudelaire. |  | | Without Les Fleurs du mal, Baudelaire would have been a footnote to the cultural history of 19th century France. |
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http://supervert.com/elibrary/charles_baudelaire
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| | Charles Baudelaire |
 | | Fleursdumal.org is dedicated to the French poet Charles Baudelaire (1821 - 1867), and in particular to Les Fleurs du mal. |  | | An engaging look at the similarities between Baudelaire and John Ruskin in their approaches to art |  | | The Baudelaire page at the Academy of American Poets website includes the text of four of Baudelaire's poems |
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http://wps.ablongman.com/long_damrosch_wl_1/0,9513,1543279-,00.html
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| | Baudelaire's Paris - FishesEye Publishing |
 | | Visit the places that inspired Charles' Baudelaire's poetic masterpieces, Paris Spleen and Les Fleurs du Mal (Flowers of Evil): Two literary tours through the sites that mark the poet’s life, each ending at his grave. |  | | Translators include the Decadent poet Arthur Symons (the first to translate Baudelaire), the notorious occultist Aleister Crowley, and artist Edna St. Vincent Millay, as well as the author of this book, Nigel Woodhead. |  | | A guided tour through 19th century Bohemian Paris, in the steps of cult French poet Charles Baudelaire. |
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http://www.fisheseye.com/baudelaire.htm
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| | Charles Baudelaire, Frederick Glaysher, literary essays, poems, reviews |
 | | Charles Baudelaire, Frederick Glaysher, literary essays, poems, reviews |  | | Later in the same letter he casually discloses his own doubt, "since you are lucky enough to |  | | paralyzed him and led to his death nearly a year and a half later, Baudelaire sent his mother a |
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http://www.fglaysher.com/Baudelai.htm
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| | Haber's Art Reviews: The Postmodern Paradox |
 | | Start with a poet, a tireless defender of avant-garde painting: This life, this modern life, is a hospital where each patient is obsessed with the desire to change beds. |  | | More than any condition or any arts that Baudelaire could foresee, Postmodernism is "anywhere out of this world." |  | | Baudelaire's prose poem was in a book sometimes called |
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http://www.haberarts.com/postdox.htm
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| | Random House Books Baudelaire: Poems by Charles Baudelaire |
 | | Modern poetry begins with Charles Baudelaire (1821-67), who employed his unequalled technical mastery to create the shadowy, desperately dramatic urban landscape -- populated by the addicted and the damned -- which so compellingly mirrors our modern condition. |  | | Deeply though darkly spiritual, titanic in the changes he wrought, Baudelaire looms over all the work, great and small, created in his wake. |
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http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl/9780679429104.html
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| | LitKicks: Charles Baudelaire |
 | | 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). |  | | by niblo Sep 20, 2001 12:10 PM 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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| | Excerpt, Baudelaire, Selected Poems from Les Fleurs du mal |
 | | Copyright notice: Excerpted from Selected Poems from Les Fleurs du mal by Charles Baudelaire, translated by Norman R. Shapiro, published by the University of Chicago Press. |  | | Excerpt, Baudelaire, Selected Poems from Les Fleurs du mal |  | | This text may be used and shared in accordance with the fair-use provisions of U.S. copyright law, and it may be archived and redistributed in electronic form, provided that this entire notice, including copyright information, is carried and provided that the University of Chicago Press is notified and no fee is charged for access. |
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http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/039250.html
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| | Charles Baudelaire - poetry, poems |
 | | Selected Poems translated by Geoffrey Wagner, which seems to be unavailable at amazon, though I did see it there in the auctions for $2.20 once. |  | | so, charlie baudelaire's a few bottles of wine some naked women and some drugs = YEAH |  | | For a long time I lived under vast colonnades |
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http://www.artofeurope.com/baudelaire
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| | Rotten Tomatoes Forums - Charles Baudelaire On Dreams |
 | | they are not the the finest poems of Baudelaire, but were the most appropriate to MD. |  | | considering Baudelaire (1821-1867) wrote half a century before Freud's "The Interpretation of Dreams" (1900) it is amazing how visionary, and sensible he was to the hidden meaning of our mind at sleep. |  | | It is a dictionary which one must study; a language of which sages may obtain the key. |
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http://www.rottentomatoes.com/vine/showthread.php?threadid=197334
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| | Poe and Baudelaire |
 | | Baudelaire also wrote a poem for Poe's aunt Maria Clemm who was the mother of Virginia (Poe's wife). |  | | France's greatest poet Charles Baudelaire translated many of Poe's short stories into French. |
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http://www.comnet.ca/~forrest/poe_baud.html
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| | Les Litanies De Satan |
 | | This was stolen from some USENET posting, but I forget who posted it [or who he got it from]. |  | | Les Litanies De Satan as written by Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867). |
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http://www.cs.umd.edu/users/chang/poetry.html
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| | Charles Baudelaire: Poems |
 | | - A selected bibliography of the works of Charles Baudelaire available in English; includes a list of critical resources. |
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http://www.poetry-archive.com/b/baudelaire_charles.html
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| | Charles Baudelaire |
 | | Honoré de Balzac, Charles Baudelaire, Ralph Waldo Emerson, |
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http://www.albany.edu/faculty/rlp96/swedenborg.html
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| | ATHENA: BAUDELAIRE, Les Fleurs du Mal; Pierre Perroud |
 | | This document is designed to be viewed using Netscape 3.0's frame features (or higher). |  | | If you don't use Netscape and want to see a sample of BAUDELAIRE, Les Fleurs du Mal, try "noframes" version |  | | ATHENA: BAUDELAIRE, Les Fleurs du Mal; Pierre Perroud |
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http://un2sg4.unige.ch/athena/baudelaire/baud_flm.html
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| | Flowers of Evil:Ask Charles Baudelaire |
 | | XProgramming > XP Magazine > Flowers of Evil:Ask Charles Baudelaire |  | | Frank Gannon wrote this column for New Yorker, if I'm not mistaken, back in 1987. |
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http://www.xprogramming.com/xpmag/FlowersOfEvil.htm
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| | Flowers of Evil and Paris Spleen: Charles Baudelaire |
 | | Flowers of Evil and Paris Spleen: Charles Baudelaire |  | | "I am moved by these translations, by mastery of both languages, plus the total absorption of the spirit of Baudelaire. |  | | preserves the passion and verbal power of Baudelaire, the voice and rhythm of the verse. |
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http://www.boaeditions.org/books/flowers.html
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| | Charles Baudelaire eBooks |
 | | eBook Titles - eBook Authors - Charles Baudelaire eBooks |
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http://www.ebookmall.com/ebooks-authors/charles-baudelaire-ebooks.htm
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