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![Collected Poems](http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0520207114.01.MZZZZZZZ.jpg) |
Collected Poems |
List Price: $24.95
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Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: collected works by father of symbolism Review: Mallarme is a classic poet. His poetry made great impact on almost every important modern poet. He follow a road of Baudelaire and Rimbaud, the hard road. Paul Valery's work, for example, can not be even imagined without Mallarme's poems. This book contains all Mallarme's poetry. It is an essential collection for every poetry fan whose taste is not satisfied with mere cliched rhymes. Mallarme is also a paradigmatical figure of modern literature. He is the author of that famous statement: "The world exists in order to become a book."
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: If you want Mallarmé, this is the one to get. Review: This a beautiful edition of the COMPLETE poems of one of the most important French symbolist poets. If only all French poetry books could be printed in handsome, large-format bilingual editions like this! The translation is not even half-bad, with Weinfeld doing his best to maintain the actual flavor of Mallarmé's words. Best of all, the poems are translated in a faithful stylistic way-- prose poems STAY in prose, and the early-surrealist poem "Un Coup de Des" keeps its complex typesetting. The commentary is substantial and the poems are arranged in order of the books they appeared in, which makes it easier to follow the progression. Sometimes it seems that Mallarmé is left out of his rightful place in poetry, and this edition should help to alleviate that problem.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: The Poet...double-minded visionary...enchanting chanter... Review: This volume of COLLECTED POEMS by Stephane Mallarme and translated with commentary by Henry Weinfield is a joy and a treasure. For it contains Mallarme poems from various of his collections: First Poems, Satirical Parnassus, The Contemporary Parnassus, Other Poems, Album Leaves, Street Songs, Several Sonnets, Homages and Tombs, Other Poems and Sonnets, Poems in Prose, and A Throw of the Dice. The best appreciation of Mallarme is cited by Henry Weinfield in his "Introduction" to this volume. The comments were by Paul Valery (and were about Mallarme): "This poet was the least -primitive- of all poets, yet it came about that by bringing words together in an unfamiliar, strangely melodious, and as it were stupefying chant -- by the musical splendor of his verse as well as by its amazing richness -- he restored the most powerful impression to be derived from primitive poetry: that of the -magical formula-. An exquisite analysis of his art must have led him toward a doctrine, and something like a synthesis, of incantation." This volume contains the texts of the poems in French on the right-hand side of each page -- and the translation in English on the left-hand side. Mallarme is an extremely interesting poet, artist, and human thinker/creator, for he has a spiritual crisis in which he came away perceiving: "Yes, I -know-, we are merely empty forms of matter, but we are indeed sublime in having invented God and our soul. So sublime, my friend, that I want to gaze upon matter, fully conscious that it exists, and yet launching itself madly into Dream, despite its knowledge that Dream has no existence, extolling the Soul and all the divine impresssion of that kind which have collected within us from the beginning of time and proclaiming, in the face of the Void, which is truth, these glorious lies." Yet, even this, is not precisely what Mallarme finally winds up doing... for his is a "quest for Beauty and for a transcendent Ideal and the tragic vision on which that quest is based." And all of this is enveloped in the most beautiful sounds and images...charming and mystifying...for he is also hermetic in his approach, "Everything that is sacred and that wishes to remain so, must envelop itself in mystery." Here is a portion from "The Afternoon of a Faun" in English -- then in French: "...through the motionless and weary swoon/ Of stifling heat that suffocates the morning,/ Save from my flute, no waters murmuring/ In harmony flow out into the groves;" -- "par l'immodible et lasse pamoison/ Suffoquant de chaleurs le matin frais sil lutte/ Ne murmure point d'eau que ne verse ma flute/ Au bosquet arrose d'accords;". "...the ancient technique of verse -- for which I retain a religious veneration and to which I atribute the empire of passion and of dreams..."
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