L'Oeuvre Poètique de Charles Baudelaire: Les Fleurs du Mal by Charles Baudelaire

(8 User reviews)   3720
By Grayson Reyes Posted on Jan 9, 2026
In Category - Spiritual Stories
Baudelaire, Charles, 1821-1867 Baudelaire, Charles, 1821-1867
French
Hey, if you've ever felt torn between wanting to be good and doing what feels good, you need to read Baudelaire. 'Les Fleurs du Mal' isn't just a book of old poems—it's a raw, beautiful, and sometimes shocking diary from a man who stared right into the darkness of the modern city and his own soul. He writes about love, decay, beauty in ugliness, and that constant feeling of being out of step with the world. It's like he took all the messy, complicated parts of being human that we try to hide and turned them into stunning art. Fair warning: it might change how you see the flowers at the corner store.
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Let's be clear: this isn't a book with a plot in the traditional sense. Les Fleurs du Mal is a collection of poems that forms a single, powerful story about one man's inner life. It's the journey of a sensitive soul navigating the grime and glamour of 19th-century Paris. He wrestles with intense love and bitter hatred, finds strange beauty in decay, and feels a deep, spiritual boredom he calls 'spleen.' The book moves from moments of ecstatic beauty to pits of despair, creating a complete portrait of a conflicted modern mind.

Why You Should Read It

You should read it because Baudelaire makes the forbidden and the ugly feel tragically human. He doesn't justify bad behavior; he explores it with heartbreaking honesty. When he writes about love, it's obsessive and painful. When he describes a rotting carcass, he finds a twisted kind of majesty in it. This book gave me permission to acknowledge my own darker, more complicated feelings without judgment. It's art that doesn't flinch.

Final Verdict

This is for the moody daydreamers, the late-night thinkers, and anyone who's ever found beauty in a rainy alley or a sad song. It's perfect for poetry newcomers who think classics are stuffy—Baudelaire is anything but. If you like artists who explore the full spectrum of human emotion, from Nick Cave's music to Francis Bacon's paintings, you'll find a kindred spirit here. Just be ready to see the world a little differently afterward.



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John Harris
4 weeks ago

Wow.

Margaret White
1 year ago

To be perfectly clear, the narrative structure is incredibly compelling. Worth every second.

David White
6 months ago

After hearing about this author multiple times, the atmosphere created is totally immersive. A true masterpiece.

Margaret Thomas
1 year ago

The index links actually work, which is rare!

William Harris
1 year ago

Recommended.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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