Charles Baudelaire (or "Chuck"
as we call him around here) is known throughout the world as one of the
greatest French poets of the 19th century. He was radical, brilliant,
and obsessed with all things sensual; so much so that, with other poetic
friends, neighbors, and hangers-on, he formed the literary group known
as "The Decadents" (and proud of it.). Folks like to say that
he led a cynical and despairing lifestyle, but he could sure write a poem.
Chuck was intrigued and fascinated by both Wagner's
music and the work of Edgar Allen Poe. Dealing with what appeared to him
as the timeless conflict between the ideal and the sensual, he represents
romanticism at its most extreme
the eternal despair of yearning.
When his best known collection of poems, Les Fleurs
du Mal or The Flowers of Evil, was first published, Baudelaire,
the publisher, and the printer were all prosecuted and fined for presenting
obscene and blasphemous work. What more of a tribute (or a marketing tactic)
could you ask for?
Charles was born to Joseph-Francois Baudelaire and
Caroline Archimbaut Dufays. His father died when he was six years old,
leaving his mother alone. She then made the "mistake" of marrying
a man Charles disliked, so he started acting up as soon as he got the
chance. Expelled from the lycée he enrolled in law school, but
never finished. He did, however, become addicted to opium and contracted
syphyilis when at law school, so the time wasnt totally wasted.
After all, while both proved to be, ultimately, fatal, they were also
de rigeur for his new career as a writer.
After a disappointing trip to India, he returned early
to Paris and met Jeanne Duval, a woman of mixed race (which we mention
only because she was his "Black Venus", whose dark beauty inspired several
of his most erotic poems.) Other mistresses/muses over the years included
Marie Daubrun, a young actress, and later Apollinaire Sabatier, a beautiful
French hostess whose salon he frequented.
In 1845 he attempted suicide, although nowadays wed
say he was just trying to get attention. His finances, however, were certainly
in shambles; he was heavily in debt; and his health was nothing to brag
about.
He began to publish some essays in 1852 on Edgar Allen
Poe, with whom he was very impressed. In 1857, the first volume of Les
Fleurs du Mal was published. The ensuing fiasco with the law while,
as we pointed out, ultimately very good for sales, was extremely disappointing
to Baudelaire. Coupled with the death of his stepfather, he became more
and more depressed. Finally in 1859 he left Paris and joined his mother
in Honfleur.
In 1861, the second addition of Les Fleurs du Mal
appeared with thirty-five new poems. New disappointments were to come:
refusal of entry into the French Academy, more financial problems, and
personal problems with his mistress. Not long after this he started to
have headaches and nightmares. Failing health and these devastating events
led him to the brink of madness.
He left Paris and moved to Brussels, where he met more
disappointment. His health worsened, when he suffered a stroke of apoplexy.
Partially paralyzed, he spent some time in a Catholic nursing home before
returning to Paris, where on August 31,1867, he died in his Mother's arms
at the age of forty six. |