The prose poems of the great French Symbolist, Arthur Rimbaud
(1854-1891), have acquired enormous prestige among readers everywhere
and have been a revolutionary influence on poetry in the twentieth
century. They are offered here both in their original texts and in
superb English translations by Louise Varèse. Mrs. Varèse first
published her versions of Rimbaud's Illuminations in 1946. Since then
she has revised her work and has included two poems which in the interim
have been reclassified as part of Illuminations. This edition also
contains two other series of prose poems, which include two poems only
recently discovered in France, together with an introduction in which
Miss Varèse discusses the complicated ins and outs of Rimbaldien
scholarship and the special qualities of Rimbaud's writing. Rimbaud was
indeed the most astonishing of French geniuses. Fired in childhood with
an ambition to write, he gave up poetry before he was twenty-one. Yet he
had already produced some of the finest examples of French verse. He is
best known for A Season in Hell, but his other prose poems are no less
remarkable. While he was working on them he spoke of his interest in
hallucinations--"des vertiges, des silences, des nuits." These
perceptions were caught by the poet in a beam of pellucid, and strangely
active language which still lights up--now here, now there--unexplored
aspects of experience and thought.