Baudelaire fans?

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I've never really connected to Baudelaire for some reason, outside of that one about "you, my hypocrite reader" (which Eliot quotes in The Waste Land). Maybe I'm just more of a Rimbaud guy.

Justyn Dillingham (Justyn Dillingham), Sunday, 18 May 2003 05:42 (twenty years ago) link

im a rimbaud guy too.

anthony easton (anthony), Sunday, 18 May 2003 06:17 (twenty years ago) link

Surely there is room for more than one French poet in yr life!

daria g, Sunday, 18 May 2003 06:58 (twenty years ago) link

thirteen years pass...

https://antiochreviewblog.com/2015/09/23/poem-wednesday-the-bad-glazier-a-translation-by-david-lehman/

“The Bad Glazier,” a translation by David Lehman of Charles Baudelaire’s poem, Le Mauvais vitrier , appeared in the Winter 2014 issue of The Antioch Review.


The Bad Glazier
by Charles Baudelaire
translated by David Lehman

There are people who live entirely in their minds and are
totally impractical, utterly abstract, who can nevertheless, under the
sway of some mysterious force, act so decisively even they cannot
believe it.
One fellow comes home, fearful of bad news, so he paces for
a full hour in front of the concierge’s door, too nervous to knock but
too irresolute to leave; another one holds onto a letter for a fortnight
before he opens it; a third is still wondering, after six months have
gone by, whether to do something he should have done a year ago.
There are times when even such characters spring into action, rudely
propelled by an irresistible force, like an arrow shot from a bow.
The moralist and the physician, with their air of infallibility,
cannot explain where this energy comes from or how a good-for-nothing
idler or voluptuary, ordinarily incapable of running the simplest
errand, can somehow tap into that surfeit of bravery that emboldens
a man to perform the craziest and most reckless stunts.
A friend of mine, as innocuous a daydreamer as has ever
lived, once set a forest on fire just to see, he said, whether fire
spreads as speedily as people think. Ten times the experiment failed.
On the eleventh it succeeded all too well.
Somebody else will light a cigar near a powder keg just
to see, to know, to tempt destiny, to test his mettle, to gamble,
to enjoy the pleasures of anxiety, or for no reason at all, on a whim,
a piece of mischief born of idleness.
For the twin cause of this energy is ennui and fantasy;
and those in whom it manifests itself tend to be, as I have said,
the laziest of day-dreaming louts.
Someone too timid to meet your gaze, who needs to pluck
up all his courage just to enter a cafe or step into the box office
of a theater, where the ticket vendors appear vested with the majesty
of Minos, Eacus, and Rhadamanthus, will suddenly stop an old man in
the street, a stranger, and hug him with a big show of affection
before an astonished crowd.
Why? Because . . . because the man’s face struck him as
irresistibly sympathetic? Maybe. But it is likely he had no idea why
he acted as he did.
More than once have I myself been the victim of these
crises, these impulses that lead us to believe that we are possessed
by malicious Demons, imps of the perverse that make us do their
bidding, whether we will it or not.
One morning I woke up in a bad mood, depressed, exhausted,
yet motivated, as it seemed to me, to do something spectacular--to
attempt some heroic exploit. That is when, alas, I opened the window.
(Observe, please, that the mystical spirit, which, in some
of us, is a sign neither of overwork nor affectation but of inspiration
and good fortune, suggests, in the intensity of desire it rouses, a
certain state of mind--hysterical in the view of doctors, satanic
in the view of those who think more deeply than doctors -- in the
throes of which we may commit deeds as rash and dangerous as they
are transgressive.)
The first person I saw in the street below was a maker of
window glass loudly hawking his wares. He virtually punctured the
pestilential air of Paris with his shouts. I can’t say why the sight
of this poor bastard filled me with a surge of violent hatred,
but it did.
“Hey,” I shouted, motioning him to come upstairs. I grinned
at the thought that the glazier would have to climb six flights of
narrow stairs and that his fragile cargo might not survive intact.
And then there he was. I looked at the panes and said,
“What! No colored glass? No rose-colored glass, red glass, blue glass?
Where are the magic panes, the window-panes of paradise? What
impudence! You barge into this humble neighborhood without even
the decency to bring the glass that can make life beautiful.”
And I pushed him down the stairs.
I went to the balcony with a little flower pot and when he
emerged in front of the door, I dropped my engine of war perpendicularly.
The shock made him fall backward, breaking all the glass that remained
of his itinerant stock. It sounded like the cracking of a crystal palace
split by lightning.
Drunk with the madness of the moment I shouted: “Make life
beautiful! Make life beautiful!”
These impulsive jests are not without their hazards, and
sometimes there is a stiff price to pay. But what does an eternity
of damnation matter to one who has found in a single instant
an infinity of joy?

j., Saturday, 20 August 2016 07:35 (seven years ago) link


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