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  1. Histoires extraordinaires (texte intégral) : Un recueil de nouvelles fantastiques de Edgar Allan Poe

    Edgar Allan Poe, Charles Baudelaire

  2. 5.0
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    Les Fleurs du Mal : French 1861 version

    Charles Baudelaire

  3. Les Fleurs du mal

    Charles Baudelaire

  4. El spleen de París : Reflexiones existenciales en la melancolía y vida bohemia de París

    Charles Baudelaire

  5. Diarios íntimos : Mi corazón al desnudo

    Charles Baudelaire

  6. La Fanfarlo : Obsesión amorosa y bohemia en el París del siglo XIX

    Charles Baudelaire

  7. El Pintor de la Vida moderna

    Charles Baudelaire

  8. Las flores del mal

    Charles Baudelaire

  9. Las flores del mal : (Selección)

    Charles Baudelaire

  10. La Chute de la Maison Usher & Le Corbeau – Édition illustrée : Deux chefs-d'œuvre d'Edgar Allan Poe interprétés en images par Lucille Cottin, à travers des collages numériques originaux

    Charles Baudelaire, Edgar Allan Poe, Lucille Cottin

  11. 50 Clásicos que debes leer antes de morir

    Dante Alighieri, Aristóteles, Jane Austen, Charles Baudelaire, Giovanni Boccaccio, Anne Brontë, C. Collodi, James Fenimore Cooper, Fedor Mikhaïlovitch Dostoïevski, Arthur Conan Doyle, Alexandre Dumas, José de Espronceda, Gustave Flaubert, Sigmund Freud, Benito Pérez Galdós, Kahlil Gibran, Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Victor Hugo, Thomas Hardy, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Vicente Blasco Ibáñez, Washington Irving, James Joyce, Mariano José de Larra, Jack London, Federico García Lorca, H.P. Lovecraft, Antonio Machado, Gustav Meyrink, John Stuart Mill, Amado Nervo, Friedrich Nietzsche, Solomon Northup, Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin, Francisco de Quevedo, Walter Scott, William Shakespeare, Robert Louis Stevenson, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Jonathan Swift, Mark Twain, Miguel De Unamuno, Ramón María del Valle-Inclán, Julio Verne, Virginia Woolf

  12. Œuvres complètes

    Charles Baudelaire

Unnamed Pleasures: Essential Poems

French poet, essayist, art critic and translator Charles Baudelaire inaugurated a new era in world literature - indeed, he coined the term 'modernity'. This fresh translation of his best poetry, by eminent translator, poet, and novelist Philip Terry, lays bare the richness and the long afterlife of Baudelaire's verse, and brings out all the originality of his ideas.Here, in lushly visual and sonorous verse, we find themes that still preoccupy us today. Baudelaire captured life in the city like no one else, drawing a portrait of Paris as the ultimate glittering seductress - and also as a fragmented landscape peopled by isolated individuals. As much as an urban eyewitness, he was an incisive personal poet, vividly evoking the ebb and flow of desire: the joy of fulfilling it, the agony of feeling, and even worse, not feeling it. Terry's bold, contemporary translation style makes clear why Baudelaire, a century and a half after his death, is still the painter of modern life.