Verlaine

A Study in Parallels

Fiction & Literature, Literary Theory & Criticism, Poetry History & Criticism, Nonfiction, History, France, Biography & Memoir, Literary
Cover of the book Verlaine by A.E. Carter, University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: A.E. Carter ISBN: 9781442654471
Publisher: University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division Publication: December 15, 1969
Imprint: Language: English
Author: A.E. Carter
ISBN: 9781442654471
Publisher: University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division
Publication: December 15, 1969
Imprint:
Language: English

The contradictions of Verlaine's nature are mirrored in his verse, which is alternately mystic, sensuous, exquisite and prosaic. He had extraordinary lyric powers; he was a master of eerie harmonies such as few other poets have achieved, and, in Sagesse, he produced religious verse which challenges comparison with the very best of its kind. Yet here and there can be found a curious weakening in the texture of thought and inspiration: he turns and twists, takes flight, seeks reassurance in platitude and convention – marriage, dogmatic theology, reactionary political creeds. He is even capable of lamenting (as Rimbaud shows him in Une Saison en Enfer) the emotional and poetic experiments which give his work its supreme value. It is almost as though he were afraid of his own talent. 

The explanation, as far as there is one, lies in a combination of personality and circumstance. This biography attempts to explore the "parallels" (Verlaine's own term) between his life and his poetry. Nearly everything he produced, whether good or bad, was a reflection of some crisis of thought or feeling. No one demonstrates better than Verlaine the antinomies between the artist and his work, between the man and the genius; and in every case we are obliged to admit that the one explains the other. Without the weakness and the squalor we might indeed have had a rational human being and a good husband for Mathilde Mauté, but we should have had no poet, or no poet like Paul Verlaine. Professor Carter concentrates on the combination of Verlaine's personality and experiences that produced some of the most brilliant poetry in the French language. The result is one of the best critical biographies of Verlaine published to date.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The contradictions of Verlaine's nature are mirrored in his verse, which is alternately mystic, sensuous, exquisite and prosaic. He had extraordinary lyric powers; he was a master of eerie harmonies such as few other poets have achieved, and, in Sagesse, he produced religious verse which challenges comparison with the very best of its kind. Yet here and there can be found a curious weakening in the texture of thought and inspiration: he turns and twists, takes flight, seeks reassurance in platitude and convention – marriage, dogmatic theology, reactionary political creeds. He is even capable of lamenting (as Rimbaud shows him in Une Saison en Enfer) the emotional and poetic experiments which give his work its supreme value. It is almost as though he were afraid of his own talent. 

The explanation, as far as there is one, lies in a combination of personality and circumstance. This biography attempts to explore the "parallels" (Verlaine's own term) between his life and his poetry. Nearly everything he produced, whether good or bad, was a reflection of some crisis of thought or feeling. No one demonstrates better than Verlaine the antinomies between the artist and his work, between the man and the genius; and in every case we are obliged to admit that the one explains the other. Without the weakness and the squalor we might indeed have had a rational human being and a good husband for Mathilde Mauté, but we should have had no poet, or no poet like Paul Verlaine. Professor Carter concentrates on the combination of Verlaine's personality and experiences that produced some of the most brilliant poetry in the French language. The result is one of the best critical biographies of Verlaine published to date.

More books from University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division

Cover of the book Representative French Poetry (Second Edition) by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book The Necessity of Music by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book Tending the Student Body by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book Polish Revolutionary Populism by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book Life and Labour in Newfoundland by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book The Manuscript Tradition of Propertius by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book Pirandello's Theatre of Living Masks by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book Alignment of Political Groups in Canada 1841-67 by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book Better Off Forgetting? by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book None Is Too Many by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book Paraphrase on Luke 1 to 10 by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book The Correspondence of Erasmus by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book Resolutions and Decisions of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union Volume 5 by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book Capitalizing Knowledge by A.E. Carter
Cover of the book The Politics of Architecture by A.E. Carter
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy