Baudelaire: His Prose and Poetry by Charles Baudelaire

(12 User reviews)   2170
By Margot Miller Posted on Jan 16, 2026
In Category - Team Spirit
Baudelaire, Charles, 1821-1867 Baudelaire, Charles, 1821-1867
English
Hey, I just finished reading this collection of Baudelaire's work, and I need to talk about it. Forget everything you think you know about 19th-century poetry. This isn't just pretty words about flowers. This is about a man walking through the grimy, glorious streets of Paris, finding beauty in the gutter and terror in the salon. Baudelaire's main conflict isn't with society, though he fought with them constantly. It's with himself—a battle between his craving for divine perfection and his pull toward earthly sin, between his love for the ideal and his obsession with the ugly reality around him. In poems like 'The Albatross,' he shows the artist as a majestic creature made clumsy on land. In his prose, he dissects modern life with a surgeon's precision and a poet's heart. Reading this feels like getting a secret tour of a haunted, brilliant mind. If you've ever felt out of step with the world, or if you just want to see where all our modern, edgy art really comes from, you have to meet Baudelaire.
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Okay, let's be clear: this isn't a novel with a plot. 'Baudelaire: His Prose and Poetry' is a journey into a single, spectacularly troubled consciousness. It collects his major works, including the revolutionary poetry collection Les Fleurs du mal (The Flowers of Evil) and his insightful prose pieces like The Painter of Modern Life.

The Story

There's no linear story here. Instead, Baudelaire builds a world. He takes you on walks through 1850s Paris—not the postcard version, but the city of fog, gaslight, crumbling buildings, and bustling crowds. You'll meet characters like the flâneur (the idle observer), the dandy, the prostitute, and the artist. His famous poems are intense, vivid snapshots: the overwhelming sensory experience of 'Correspondences,' the shocking elegance of a carcass in 'A Carcass,' and the crushing weight of time in 'The Clock.' His prose argues for a new kind of beauty, one found in fashion, makeup, and the fleeting moment. The whole book feels like watching someone try to build a palace of art from the rubble of their own despair and wonder.

Why You Should Read It

I love this book because it makes the 'old' feel shockingly new. Baudelaire invented the mood of the modern city. That feeling of being alone in a crowd, of finding strange beauty in urban decay, of wrestling with boredom and desire—he named it all first. His honesty is brutal. He doesn't hide his fascination with vice or his spiritual longing. Reading him, you realize how much of today's music, film, and literature owes him a debt. He gave artists permission to look at the dark, messy parts of life and call it art. It's not always a comfortable read, but it's never boring. It's like a shot of strong espresso for your imagination.

Final Verdict

This is perfect for anyone curious about where modern poetry and thought began. If you like artists who blur the line between beauty and decay, like Edgar Allan Poe (who Baudelaire adored and translated) or certain dark, romantic songwriters, you'll find your ancestor here. It's also great for people who just love Paris and want to see its soul stripped bare. A word of warning: it's not a light, easy read. Come with patience and an open mind. But if you do, you'll meet one of the most important and compelling voices in all of literature.



📜 Public Domain Notice

This masterpiece is free from copyright limitations. Thank you for supporting open literature.

Matthew Garcia
1 year ago

Having read this twice, the author's voice is distinct and makes complex topics easy to digest. One of the best books I've read this year.

Linda Torres
1 year ago

Great reference material for my coursework.

Ethan Thomas
1 year ago

Used this for my thesis, incredibly useful.

Sarah Hill
1 year ago

Compatible with my e-reader, thanks.

Amanda Wright
4 months ago

Amazing book.

5
5 out of 5 (12 User reviews )

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