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parisian dream...Parisian Dream To Constantin Guys
By Baudelaire
I
Of this fantastic landscape, That no mortal ever dreams This morning again the image, Distant and vague, delights me.
Sleep is full of miracles! … By a simple decision I banned from the spectacles All the wild vegetation,
And, proud of my creative genius, my painting tasted like thus An intoxicating uniform ether Of steel, and marble and water.
Towers of stairs and arcades, Were an infinite palace Full of pools and waterfalls Raining polished and matte gold;
And massive cataracts, Like crystal curtains, Were suspended, dazzling, To thick high steel walls.
No trees, but colonnades surrounded sleepy ponds Where gigantic naiads, Like women in mirrors, reflected.
Water expanded, blue, Between pink and green jetties, as long as millions of leagues, To the ends of the universe:
They were precious stones In magic waves, they were Immense dazzling mirrors For all that they reflected!
Carefree and reserved, From the Rivers in the firmament, Flowed the treasure inside their urns Into abysses of diamonds.
Architect of my Fantasy, I did, at will, Under a tunnel of jewels Pass a tamed ocean;
And everything, even the colour black, Seemed polished, clear, iridescent; The liquid enshrined its glory In crystal rays.
No other star, no remnant Of sun, even at the end of the sky, To illuminate these wonders, Which shone from their internal fires!
And on these evolving wonders Hovered (fantastic creation! Everything for the eye, nothing to hear!) The silence of eternity.
II
Opening my eyes full of flame I saw the horror of my hovel, And felt, entering my soul, The sword of cursed angsts;
The clock with its funereal stress Brutally struck midday, And the sky poured darkness On this sad numb world.
- Charles Baudelaire (Translation/Adaptation by Jules Letambour)
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molière...
French theatre is gearing up to pay tribute to one of its founding fathers: Molière, the 17th-century playwright whose biting comedies still form many French schoolchildren’s introduction to drama. On 15 January, 400 years after his baptism (the exact date of his birth is unknown), the venerable Comédie-Française company will open this anniversary year with the play that came perilously close to sinking Molière’s career: Tartuffe.
While the first version of the play got the approval of Louis XIV himself in 1664, its satire of Catholic zealots drew the ire of the Catholic church. At the time, accusations of impiety could send a playwright to the stake, and Tartuffe was swiftly forbidden. Yet Molière persisted, switching gears and rewriting the play to suggest that his target wasn’t religion or true believers – but rather the hypocrisy of those who feign virtue. (The word “tartuffe” came to describe such characters in life, too.)
It worked. By 1669, a new, longer version of the play – in five rather than three acts – was allowed and met with acclaim, and researchers now see Molière’s political and social acumen as a key factor in his rise to classic status, even before his death. “Molière was brilliant at this: he had this sense of opportunity, a gift for improvisation,” says Georges Forestier, a Molière specialist and professor emeritus at Sorbonne Université in Paris.
Read more:
https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2022/jan/10/paris-moliere-french-theatre-tartuffe-comedie-francaise
WHERE IS MOLIERE WHEN YOU NEED ONE TO EXPOSE THE "CUNNING" OF A SCOTT MORRISON?
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