Charles Pierre Baudelaire (UK: , US: ; French: [ʃaʁl(ə) bodlɛʁ] (listen); 9 April 1821 – 31 August 1867) was a French poet who also produced notable work as an essayist and art critic. His poems exhibit mastery in the handling of rhyme and rhythm, contain an exoticism inherited from Romantics, but are based on observations of real life.His most famous work, a book of lyric poetry titled Les Fleurs du mal (The Flowers of Evil), expresses the changing nature of beauty in the rapidly industrializing Paris during the mid-19th century. Baudelaire's highly original style of prose-poetry influenced a whole generation of poets including Paul Verlaine, Arthur Rimbaud and Stéphane Mallarmé, among many others. He is credited with coining the term modernity (modernité) to designate the fleeting, ephemeral experience of life in an urban metropolis, and the responsibility of artistic expression to capture that experience. Furthermore, Marshall Berman has credited Baudelaire as being the first Modernist.
Charles Baudelaire
Author details
- Born:
- April 9, 1821
- Died:
- Aug. 31, 1867
External links
Books by Charles Baudelaire
![Mary Wollstonecraft, Charles Dickens, Lord Byron, Doris Lessing, Ovid, Charles Baudelaire, Christopher Marlowe, W. H. Auden, Seamus Heaney, Andrew Marvell, Anna Quindlen, Nadine Gordimer, Arthur C. Clarke, Kate Kinsella, Kevin Feldman, Colleen, Ph. D. Shea-stump, Joyce Armstrong Carroll, Edward E. Wilson, Joseph Addison, Anna Akhmatova, Virginia Woolf, Yehuda Amichai, Matthew Arnold, Bashö, Bede, Bei Dao, James Berry, Joanna Baillie, William Blake, Tony Blair, Eavan Boland, James Boswell, Brooke, Rupert, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Robert Browning, Robert Bolt, Charlotte Brontë, Robert Burns, Buson Yosa, Tracy Chapman, Winston Churchill, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Confucius, Daniel Defoe, John Donne, T. S. Eliot, Elizabeth l, Queen of England, Anne Finch, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, Thomas Gray, Thomas Hardy, Heinrich Heine, Robert Herrick, Gerard Manley Hopkins, A. E. Housman, Ken Hughes, Ted Hughes, Kobayashi, Issa, Thomas Jefferson, Francis Jeffrey, Sophocles, Samuel Johnson LL.D., Ben Jonson, John Keats, Amelia Lanier, Philip Larkin, D. H. Lawrence, Richard Lovelace, Thomas Babington Macaulay, Louis MacNeice, Thomas Malory, Catherine McGuinness, Thomas More, Saki, Pablo Neruda, V. S. Naipaul, Sir Isaac Newton, Wilfred Owen - undifferentiated, Margaret Paston, Samuel Pepys, Francesco Petrarca, Alexander Pope, Walter Raleigh, Redgrove, Peter., Arthur Rimbaud, Sappho, Siegfried Sassoon, Graham Greene, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Sir Philip Sidney, Alan Sillitoe, Stevie Smith, Sydney Smith, Muriel Spark, Stephen Spender, Edmund Spenser, Suckling, John Sir, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Dylan Thomas, Emma Thompson, William Trevor, Tu Fu, Suzanne Vega, Derek Walcott, William Wordsworth, William Butler Yeats, Anita Desai, Elizabeth Bowen, Geoffrey Chaucer, Mary Shelley, John Milton, George Orwell, Jane Austen, Jonathan Swift, Edgar Allan Poe, Emily Brontë, Rudyard Kipling, William Shakespeare, Homer, James Joyce, Joseph Conrad, Jorge Luis Borges: Prentice Hall Literature: Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes (Hardcover, 2005, Pearson Prentice Hall)](/images/covers/b7447cae-d76c-46c2-9717-448923d59b4b.jpeg)
Prentice Hall Literature: Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes
by Mary Wollstonecraft, Charles Dickens, Lord Byron, and 119 others