Les Fleurs du mal

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Charles Baudelaire: Les Fleurs du mal (French language, 1968, Les Amis de l'Histoire)

256 pages

French language

Published 1968 by Les Amis de l'Histoire.

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(2 reviews)

73 editions

Perfume and Ashes: My Descent into Baudelaire’s The Flowers of Evil

Reading The Flowers of Evil by Charles Baudelaire felt like wandering through a cathedral built from shadows and perfume. Every poem seemed to whisper something forbidden, something beautiful wrapped in rot. I didn’t just read this collection — I fell into it.

From the first lines, I was struck by Baudelaire’s refusal to flinch. He doesn’t hide from decay, lust, guilt, or despair. He confronts them head-on, then distills them into verses that feel both classical and defiantly modern. The beauty of his language clashes with the darkness of his themes — and that contradiction is where the poems become unforgettable.

I was especially moved by the way Baudelaire treats suffering not as something to escape, but as a gateway to deeper insight. His explorations of sin and redemption, love and death, made me feel uncomfortable in the best way. I found myself questioning my own ideas of beauty, of …

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