Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Charles Baudelaire, a life in writing
- 2 Baudelaire’s politics
- 3 Baudelaire’s poetic journey in Les Fleurs du Mal
- 4 Baudelaire’s versification: conservative or radical?
- 5 The prose poems
- 6 Baudelairean ethics
- 7 Baudelaire’s Paris
- 8 Baudelaire and intoxicants
- 9 Art and its representation
- 10 Music and theatre
- 11 Baudelaire’s literary criticism
- 12 Baudelaire’s place in literary and cultural history
- 13 A woman reading Baudelaire
- 14 Translating Baudelaire
- 15 The stroll and preparation for departure
- Afterword
- Appendix Titles of individual poems and prose poems referred to in the text
- Guide to further reading
- Index
- Index to Baudelaire’s works
- Series list
8 - Baudelaire and intoxicants
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 August 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 Charles Baudelaire, a life in writing
- 2 Baudelaire’s politics
- 3 Baudelaire’s poetic journey in Les Fleurs du Mal
- 4 Baudelaire’s versification: conservative or radical?
- 5 The prose poems
- 6 Baudelairean ethics
- 7 Baudelaire’s Paris
- 8 Baudelaire and intoxicants
- 9 Art and its representation
- 10 Music and theatre
- 11 Baudelaire’s literary criticism
- 12 Baudelaire’s place in literary and cultural history
- 13 A woman reading Baudelaire
- 14 Translating Baudelaire
- 15 The stroll and preparation for departure
- Afterword
- Appendix Titles of individual poems and prose poems referred to in the text
- Guide to further reading
- Index
- Index to Baudelaire’s works
- Series list
Summary
Baudelaire devoted one of the two slim volumes he published in his lifetime to the discussion of intoxicants. While references to drugs, alcohol and tobacco were already to be found in Les Fleurs du Mal and would continue to dot Le Spleen de Paris, it was only with Les Paradis artificiels (The Artificial Paradises), first published as two articles and then as a volume in 1860, that the poet addressed in a systematic way the question of intoxication and literature. Readers have long puzzled over the rationale for his interest in stimulants. Was Baudelaire's treatise an attempt to justify an indulgence in intoxicants, say by celebrating drugs as enhancing the imagination? Did he aim on the contrary to denounce the use of drugs? These are the motives to which the literature on drugs - already beginning to swell by the mid nineteenth century when Baudelaire wrote - is usually ascribed. But in the case of Baudelaire, neither rationale quite fits.
Let's take the question of Baudelaire's drug use first. To all accounts, Baudelaire appears to have used the stimulants favoured by his century only in moderation. He slightly overstated the case when he boasted in one projected preface to Les Fleurs du Mal that his aim was to create a reputation for excess in such matters while remaining strictly sober:
As chaste as paper, as sober as water, as given to devotion as a communicant, as inoffensive as a victim, I would not be displeased to be taken for a libertine, a drunk, an ungodly man and an assassin.
[Chaste comme le papier, sobre comme l’eau, porté à la dévotion comme une communiante, inoffensif comme une victime, il ne me déplairait pas de passer pour un débauché, un ivrogne, un impie et un assassin.
(OC i 185)]- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Baudelaire , pp. 117 - 129Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
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