Track | Title | Length |
1 | 01 - Benediction | 4:57 |
2 | 02 - Echoes | 1:16 |
3 | 03 - The Sick Muse | 1:15 |
4 | 04 - The Venal Muse | 1:19 |
5 | 05 - The Evil Monk | 1:18 |
6 | 06 - The Enemy | 1:20 |
7 | 07 - Ill Luck | 0:58 |
8 | 08 - Interior Life | 1:07 |
9 | 09 - Man and the Sea | 1:28 |
10 | 10 - Beauty | 1:24 |
11 | 11 - The Ideal | 1:14 |
12 | 12 - The Giantess | 1:13 |
13 | 13 - Hymn to Beauty | 2:25 |
14 | 14 - Exotic Perfume | 1:18 |
15 | 15 - La Chevelure | 2:52 |
16 | 16 - Sonnet XXVIII | 1:18 |
17 | 17 - Posthumous Remorse | 1:22 |
18 | 18 - The Balcony | 2:24 |
19 | 19 - The Possessed One | 1:18 |
20 | 20 - Semper Eadem | 1:20 |
21 | 21 - All Entire | 1:27 |
22 | 22 - Sonnet XLIII | 1:20 |
23 | 23 - The Living Torch | 1:18 |
24 | 24 - The Spiritual Dawn | 1:13 |
25 | 25 - Evening Harmony | 1:35 |
26 | 26 - Overcast Sky | 1:37 |
27 | 27 - Invitation to a Journey | 2:08 |
28 | 28 - Causerie | 1:21 |
29 | 29 - Autumn Song | 2:39 |
30 | 30 - Sisina | 1:19 |
31 | 31 - To a Creolean Lady | 1:13 |
32 | 32 - Moesta et Errabunda | 2:55 |
33 | 33 - The Ghost | 1:03 |
34 | 34 - Autumn Song | 1:16 |
35 | 35 - Sadness of the Moon-Goddess | 1:17 |
36 | 36 - Cats | 1:12 |
37 | 37 - Owls | 1:02 |
38 | 38 - Music | 1:01 |
39 | 39 - The Joyous Defunct | 1:23 |
40 | 40 - The Broken Bell | 1:16 |
41 | 41 - Spleen | 1:10 |
42 | 42 - Obsession | 1:30 |
43 | 43 - Magnetic Horror | 1:11 |
44 | 44 - The Lid | 1:16 |
45 | 45 - Bertha's Eyes | 1:28 |
46 | 46 - The Set of the Romantic S | 1:25 |
47 | 47 - Meditation | 1:26 |
48 | 48 - To a Passer-by | 1:31 |
49 | 49 - Illusionary Love | 2:13 |
50 | 50 - Mists and Rains | 1:22 |
51 | 51 - The Wine of Lovers | 1:03 |
52 | 52 - Condemned Women | 2:33 |
53 | 53 - The Death of the Lovers | 1:21 |
54 | 54 - The Death of the Poor | 1:21 |
Production
Book Coordinator: D. S. Harvey
Meta Coordinator: D. S. Harvey
Proof Listener: D. S. Harvey
Artwork
Cover: Poppies by John Singer Sargent
Inset: Frontispiece to first edition of Fleurs du Mal, 1857,annotated by Charles Baudelaire
Inset: Photograph of Charles Baudelaire, c. 1862 by Etienne Carjat (1828-1906)
Insert: Drawing of Charles Baudelaire by Edouard Manet, 1862 or 1867-1868
- Download and read the eBook at Gutenberg.org
- Download a PDF datasheet
You can find digital download and streaming versions at most online audiobook sellers.
24Symbols | 3 Leaf Group | Amazon/Audible |
Anyplay | Apple | Apple Music |
Audiobooks Now | Audiobooks NZ | Audiobooks.com |
Audiomol | Audioteka | Baker & Taylor, Inc. |
Barnes & Noble | Beek | Bibliotheca, LLC |
BookBeat | BookMate | Calm Radio |
Chirp | Cliq Digital | Deezer |
Divibib | Downpour | EBSCO Information Services |
eStories | Follett Library Resources | Google LLC |
Grupo Vi-Da | hibooks | Hoopla |
Hummingbird Media | Instaread | Kobo |
Libro.FM | ListenerU | Mackin |
Napster | Nextory | Nook |
Odilo | Overdrive | Permabound |
Scribd, Inc. | Skoobe | Spotify |
StoryTel | UBook | Wheelers Book Club Limited |
YouScribe | YouTube Music |
The Flowers of Evil (Les Fleurs du Mal) is a collection of poems by Charles Baudelaire influential on several levels. Fellow artists were impressed and unsettled when it was published in 1857; one described the effect as “immense, prodigious, unexpected, mingled with admiration and some indefinable anxious fear”. Admirers included Victor Hugo and Gustave Flaubert, who wrote “you are as unyielding as marble and as penetrating as English mist”. The general public, however, was scandalized by the themes of sex and death and frank treatment of subjects such as lesbianism, which led to a prosecution of Baudelaire, his publisher and printer for offenses against publish morals. The conviction resulted in a fine and the removal of six poems. A second edition was released in 1861 that deleted the offending poems and added 35 poems, including a new section, Parisian Scenes, which described the effects of modernization symbolized by the identical streets and buildings taking shape during the renovation of Paris and a resulting alienation and estrangement as well as a sense of loss. On a stylistic level, the collection introduced a kind of highly ordered prose poetry and the use of a cynical and ironic voice that broke with Romantic traditions by acknowledging moral complexity, urban corruption, loss of innocence, and indulging in sensual and aesthetic pleasures. The work captures the fleeting sense of life and beauty in the emerging urban industrial world for which Baudelaire coined the term modernity and has had a lasting influence that continues to be an inspiration to this day.
Play sample:
Download a PDF datasheet
Item Info | |
EAN - DVD case | 0701236969566 |
EAN - CD jacket | 0682550992884 |
Media | MP3 CD |
Package | DVD Case |
Author | Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867) |
Translator | Cyril Scott |
Year | 1857 |
Recording | |
Read by | D. S. Harvey |
Length | 1 hour and 23 minutes |
Type of Reading | Solo |
Flowers of Evil
- Author: Charles Baudelaire
- Product Code: DB-1237
- Availability: In Stock
-
$9.99