In reading this poem by Baudelaire think about how he is remembering Paris before Haussmann's renovations. Do not worry about the mythological references early in the poem. It is not necessary to know the story of Andromache to understand how he is reacting to the changes that he has seen in the city in which he grew up. |
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Charles Baudelaire The Swan (1860) To Victor Hugo I Andromache, I think of you! — That little stream, Suddenly made fruitful my teeming memory, I see only in memory that camp of stalls, Once a menagerie was set up there; I saw a swan that had escaped from his cage, Restlessly bathed his wings in the dust Toward the sky at times, like the man in Ovid, II Paris changes! but naught in my melancholy So, before the Louvre, an image oppresses me: Andromache, base chattel, fallen from the embrace I think of the negress, wasted and consumptive, Of whoever has lost that which is never found Thus in the dim forest to which my soul withdraws, — William Aggeler, The Flowers of Evil (Fresno, CA: Academy Library Guild, 1954)
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A photograph by Edouard Baldus of the Cours Carrousel between the wings of the Louvre taken after Haussmann had removed the buildings that had previously occupied the site. It was here that Baudelaire remembered the scenes described in the poem.
Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867 |
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