Brothers in Paradox: Swinburne, Baudelaire, And the Paradox of Sin (Algernon Charles Swinburne and Charles Baudelaire ) (Critical Essay)
Victorian Poetry 2009, Winter, 47, 4
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Publisher Description
The literary and personal relationship between Algernon Charles Swinburne and Charles Baudelaire appears both signigicant and ill-defined. An often-stressed connection focuses on Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mal and Swinburne's erotic poetry, but lacks clarity. Instead, W. M. Rossetti's comment that Baudelaire acted as Swinburne's Mephistopheles is reiterated making Baudelaire a demonic influence on the susceptible Swinburne. (1) The accusation of obscenity leveled at both poets supports such suggestions and enhances the oddly alluring quality of the relationship as much as it generates ambiguity. An important point of convergence is Swinburne's favorable 1862 review of Les Fleurs du Mal. The review establishes a fundamental but easily overlooked contradiction which reveals Swinburne's interaction with Baudelaire as a figure for admiration rather than direct influence and as a conduit for Swinburne's own poetic ideology. Patricia Clements acknowledges Baudelaire as a source of inspiration that Swinburne "'turned to'" and as "an enlightening grotesque, a confirmation of Swinburne's subversive purpose." (2) Baudelaire becomes Swinburne's "complex construction" that shifts the French poet from the status of influence to a created signifier intertwined with Swinburne's thematic and stylistic agenda. Swinburne's connection to Baudelaire can be focused on his use of paradox, and the connection is best defined as paradoxical. By concentrating on two parallel approaches, we may comprehend both the importance and paradoxical nature of the connection between Swinburne and Baudelaire. Initially, the cultural elements that have informed perceptions of Swinburne's early reliance on Baudelaire--resulting in a derivative and imitative status for Swinburne's Poems and Ballads--will be identified. Critics have aligned Swinburne with Baudelaire because, even though each poet wrote with different intentions, the reaction to Baudelaire's and later Swinburne's poetry was public outrage. The second approach will focus on the poetic and ideological link between Swinburne and Baudelaire by examining the paradox of sin in Les Fleurs du Mal and Poems and Ballads as both a recurring theme and a feature of style. These two approaches are often entangled, further obscuring an understanding of Swinburne's interaction with Baudelaire. Swinburne's status is a challenging combination of imitation and originality that resists easy classification and is due to the paradoxical intentions of his work. Swinburne's connection with Baudelaire is complicated by a combination of both poets' conscious representation of a perplexingly paradoxical existence in their poetry along with the problematic effect of cultural influences on perceptions of their poetry.