The Flowers of Evil

English language

Published Nov. 3, 1989

ISBN:
978-0-8112-1117-8
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Charles Baudelaire’s The Flowers of Evil (Les Fleurs du mal, 1857) stands as a cornerstone of modernist poetics, fusing romantic sensibility with a bold exploration of decadence, spiritual anguish, and urban alienation. The collection’s thematic tension lies in its paradoxical vision: the coexistence of beauty and corruption, sin and transcendence.

Baudelaire’s speaker navigates a metaphysical landscape marked by erotic longing, ennui, moral conflict, and a profound sense of existential exile. Drawing upon classical forms with radical content, the poet elevates the grotesque and profane to realms of aesthetic sublimity.

His use of synesthesia, rich symbolism, and musical prosody anticipates Symbolist and Decadent movements, while challenging the moral and aesthetic conventions of his time.

The Flowers of Evil is not merely a poetic text but a philosophical inquiry—an interrogation of the self, of society, and of art’s capacity to transform suffering into something darkly luminous.

48 editions