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.Francis Steegmuller (New York: Farrar, Straus and Young, 1954), p.131.63 I pass entire weeks: Aimee L.McKenzie, trans., The George Sand Gustave FlaubertLetters (New York: Boni and Liveright, 1922), p.46.64 that poor sucker Flaubert: Marion Capron, Dorothy Parker, The Art of Fiction No.13, TheParis Review (Summer 1956).64 all without taking my cigar out of my mouth: Edmond de Goncourt and Jules de Goncourt,The Goncourt Journals, 1851 1870 (New York: Doubleday, 1958), p.198.64 this mode of ejaculation: Davenport-Hines, The Pursuit of Oblivion, p.93.64 Hatred of the bourgeois: McKenzie, trans., The George Sand Gustave Flaubert Letters, p.66.65 Does the reading of such a book: Gustave Flaubert, The Works of Gustave Flaubert (NewYork: Walter J.Black, 1904), p.277.65 You can calculate the worth of a man: Elizabeth M.Knowles, The Oxford Dictionary ofQuotations (London: Oxford University Press, 1999), p.316.65 What a brave man she was: Lady Ritchie, Blackstick Papers (London: Smith, Elder, 1908),p.243.66 too imperious a machine: Natalie Datlof, Jeanne Fuchs, and David A.Powell, The World ofGeorge Sand (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1991), p.xix.66 There is only one happiness in life: André Maurois, Lélia: The Life of George Sand (NewYork: Penguin Books, 1977), p.482.66 in the theater or in your bed: Renee Winegarten, The Double Life of George Sand, Womanand Writer (New York: Basic Books, 1978), p.116.66 She has a grasp of mind: E.C.Gaskell, The Life of Charlotte Brontë, Vol.2 (Leipzig,Germany: Bernhard Tauchnitz, 1857), p.48.67 brother George: Wormeley, A Memoir of Honoré de Balzac, p.254.67 Spare yourself a little: McKenzie, trans., The George Sand Gustave Flaubert Letters, p.48.67 Not to love is to cease to live: Ibid., p.213.67 charming profession: Ibid., p.46.67 I believe that the crowd: Ibid., p.208.67 The world will know and understand: Curtis Cate, George Sand: A Biography (New York:Houghton Mifflin, 1975), p.276.8: THE FLESHLY SCHOOL69 in evil lies all pleasure: F.W.J.Hemmings, Baudelaire the Damned: A Biography (NewYork: Bloomsbury Reader, 2011), Kindle edition: location 4213.69 Women write and write: Charles Baudelaire, Fatal Destinies: The Edgar Poe Essays, trans.Joan Fiedler Mele (Woodhaven, NY: Cross Country Press, 1981), p.37.69 dashes off her masterpieces: Warren U.Ober, ed., The Enigma of Poe (Boston: D.C.Heath, 1969), p.130.70 At school I read: Hemmings, Baudelaire the Damned, Kindle location 682.70 The moment has come: A.E.Carter, Charles Baudelaire (Woodbridge, CT: TwaynePublishers, 1977), p.31.71 weakness for loose ladies: Hemmings, Baudelaire the Damned, Kindle location 755.71 mistress of mistresses: Charles Baudelaire, The Poems and Prose Poems of CharlesBaudelaire (New York: Brentano s, 1919), p.19.72 so as to have peace and quiet: Hemmings, Baudelaire the Damned, Kindle location 2411.72 I am truly glad: Charles Baudelaire, The Letters of Charles Baudelaire to His Mother (NewYork: Haskell House Publishers, 1928), p.45.72 had some qualities: Ibid., pp.44 45.73 Her legs were spread out: Charles Baudelaire, The Flowers of Evil, trans.Jonathan Culler(London: Oxford University Press, 2008), p.59.73 the way to rejuvenate Romanticism: Margaret Gilman, The Idea of Poetry in France(Boston: Harvard University Press, 1958), p.246.73 refinements of excessive civilization: Benjamin R.Barber, The Artist and Political Vision(New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1982), p.32.73 carcass literature: Charles Baudelaire, The Flowers of Evil, p.xix.73 Never, in the space of so few pages: Enid Starkie, Baudelaire (London: Faber and Faber,1971), p.313.74 in mourning for Les fleurs du mal: Hemmings, Baudelaire the Damned, Kindle edition:location 3177.74 It is impossible to scan any newspaper: Charles Baudelaire, The Essence of Laughter andOther Essays, Journals, and Letters, trans.Peter Quennell (New York: Meridian Books,1956), p.195.74 Always you join with the mob: Hemmings, Baudelaire the Damned, Kindle location 3801.75 I detest Paris: Ibid., location 3622.75 an inner weight of woe: Jay Parini, Theodore Roethke, An American Romantic (Boston:University of Massachusetts Press, 1979), p.150.75 One must always be intoxicated: Charles Baudelaire, Arthur Rimbaud, and Paul Verlaine,Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Verlaine: Selected Verse and Prose Poems, ed.Joseph M.Bernstein(New York: Citadel Press, 1947), p.131.76 Here in this world: Edward K.Kaplan, Baudelaire s Prose Poems (Athens: University ofGeorgia Press, 2009), p.32.76 poisonous stimulants seem to me: Charles Baudelaire, On Wine and Hashish, trans.AndrewBrown (London: Hesperus, 2002), p.66.76 Hashish, like all other solitary delights: Baudelaire, The Essence of Laughter and OtherEssays, Journals, and Letters, p.104.77 a dandy of the brothel: Clarence R.Decker, The Victorian Conscience (New York: TwaynePublishers, 1977), p.68.77 to blow out his brains: Hemmings, Baudelaire the Damned, Kindle location 3716.78 now you can get dressed again: Ibid., location 4192.78 won himself a name in literature: Ibid., location 725.9: THE FRENCH DECADENTS81 preposterously French: Victor Plarr, Ernest Dowson 1888 1897 (New York: Laurence J.Gomme, 1919), p.22.81 disregard everything our parents have taught us: Compton Mackenzie, Robert LouisStevenson (London: Chapman and Hall, 1950), p.11.81 my whole life a failure: Ernest Mehew, ed., Selected Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1997), p.29.81 the heaviest affliction: Ibid., p.29.82 bewilder the middle classes: Holbrook Jackson, The Eighteen Nineties (London: Kennerly,1914), p.161.82 an infant Shakespeare: Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 38 (1911): p.371.82 You have caused my misfortune: Arthur Rimbaud, A Season in Hell, trans
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