Charles Baudelaire

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Standard Name: Baudelaire, Charles

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending Excerpt
Textual Production Edna St Vincent Millay
Flowers of Evil by George Dillon and ESVM , their translation of Baudelaire 's Les Fleurs du Mal, was published by Harper . Individual poems bore the initials of one or other or both translators.
Milford, Nancy. Savage Beauty: The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay. Random House.
398
Textual Production Ouida
Ouida published a novel entitled Folle-Farine: the edition of 1883 used for the Victorian Women Writers Project quotes Baudelaire on its title-page.
Athenæum. J. Lection.
2287 (26 August 1871): 263-4
Willett, Perry, and Perry Willett, editors. “Victorian Women Writers Project”. Indiana University.
Intertextuality and Influence Sylvia Plath
This poem, which reflects her reading in Henry James , Scott Fitzgerald , and Charles Baudelaire , expresses whimsical regret that the days of ogres and dragons, perils and combat, knights and princesses, have passed.
Plath, Sylvia. “Ennui”. Blackbird: an online journal of literature and the arts, Vol.
5
, No. 2.
Occupation Edgar Allan Poe
EAP laboured for years as a journalist and editor. Although he had many publications prior to the 1845 publication of The Raven and Other Poems, it was this work that firmly established his popular...
Intertextuality and Influence Sally Purcell
On a Cenotaph quotes a phrase from Baudelaire 's poem Lesbos: the shocking juxtaposition of a dead body with adoration in le cadavre adoré di Sapho . Though SP supplied notes to some things...
Education Michèle Roberts
As a child, says MR , she lived much of the time in my imagination and in books. The bookcase her mother had had as a student, the local public library, and the local church...
Textual Production Michèle Roberts
MR had another play, Child Lover, premiered at the Tramway Theatre in Glasgow in 1993. The television adaptation of her story Ma Semblable Ma Soeur (titled from Baudelaire , with her script), aired on...
Intertextuality and Influence Edith Sitwell
Charles Henri Ford dedicated to ES his study The Mirror of Baudelaire.
Clements, Patricia. Baudelaire and the English Tradition. Princeton University Press.
250
Cultural formation Edith Sitwell
She had been interested in Catholicism for many years, and had allied her thinking with neo-Thomism, a reaching back to medieval thought which saw material world as a reflection of the immaterial reality of God...
Intertextuality and Influence Edith Sitwell
ES loved Christina Rossetti from her childhood, and later thoroughly admired Gertrude Stein . As a young woman, however, she believed: Women's poetry, with the exception of Sappho . . . and Goblin MarketChristina Rossetti and...
Intertextuality and Influence Edith Sitwell
Some aspects of this fiction suggest an allegory on ES 's relation with Tchelitchew.
Glendinning, Victoria. Edith Sitwell. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
209
Her Swift, named Jonathan Hare, explores the deepest circles of Hell,
Clements, Patricia. Baudelaire and the English Tradition. Princeton University Press.
248-9
the depths of rage and disgust, in a...
Textual Features Edith Sitwell
French as well as English poetry is much in evidence here, predominantly Gérard de Nerval , Baudelaire , Stéphane Mallarmé , Verlaine , and Rimbaud , all of whom she much admired. ES groups her...
Textual Production Muriel Spark
She had completed the narrative title poem (whose title comes from Baudelaire ) the previous year. The Fanfarlo is an exotic lover or muse or alter ego to Baudelaire's character Samuel Cramer. The conception fed...
Intertextuality and Influence Muriel Spark
The protagonist is of this light-heartedly surrealist and paradoxically serious tale is Samuel Cramer, the main character of a Charles Baudelaire story,, now unnaturalistically aged and running a rooming-house in Africa. He has written a...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Maud Sulter
Pursuing her established interest in the Black presence in Europe, MS here relates the story of Duval , mistress of the French poet Charles Baudelaire , the Black Venus of his poetry, who was fictionalised...

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