Paul Verlaine

Paul Verlaine
Paul-Marie Verlainewas a French poet associated with the Symbolist movement. He is considered one of the greatest representatives of the fin de siècle in international and French poetry...
NationalityFrench
ProfessionPoet
Date of Birth30 March 1844
CityMetz, France
CountryFrance
beats heart
Here are fruits, flowers, leaves, and branches, And here is my heart which beats only for you.
empires ends decadence
I am the Empire at the end of the decadence.
spring army race
I love this word decadence, all shimmering in purple and gold. It suggests the subtle thoughts of ultimate civilization, a high literary culture, a soul capable of intense pleasures. It throws off bursts of fire and the sparkle of precious stones. It is redolent of the rouge of courtesans, the games of the circus, the panting of the gladiators, the spring of wild beasts, the consuming in flames of races exhausted by their capacity for sensation, as the tramp of an invading army sounds.
mean poetry machines
A poem is really a kind of machine for producing the poetic state by means of words.
air music-is
Music before all else, and for that choose the irregular, which is vaguer and melts better into the air...
adventure funny-travel poet
The poet is a madman lost in adventure.
beautiful dream song
Your soul is a chosen landscape Where charming masked and costumed figures go Playing the lute and dancing and almost Sad beneath their fantastic disguises. All sing in a minor key Of all-conquering love and careless fortune They do not seem to believe in their happiness And their song mingles with the moonlight. The still moonlight, sad and beautiful, Which gives the birds to dream in the trees And makes the fountain sprays sob in ecstasy, The tall, slender fountain sprays among the marble statues.
love flower heart
Here are fruits, flowers, leaves and branches, and here is my heart which beats only for you.
dream book night
The rosy hearth, the lamplight's narrow beam, The meditation that is rather dream, With looks that lose themselves in cherished looks; The hour of steaming tea and banished books; The sweetness of the evening at an end, The dear fatigue, and right to rest attained, And worshipped expectation of the night,— Oh, all these things, in unrelenting flight, My dream pursues through all the vain delays, Impatient of the weeks, mad at the days!
practice
La musique avant toute chose.
law ducks drunk
London, black as crows and noisy as ducks, prudish with all the vices in evidence, everlastingly drunk, in spite of ridiculous laws about drunkenness, immense, though it is really basically only a collection of scandal-mongering boroughs, vying with each other, ugly and dull, without any monuments except interminable docks.
necks eloquence
Take eloquence and wring its neck.
son necks break
Prends l'e loquence et tords-lui son cou! Take eloquence and break its neck!
flower childhood dew
Sap which mounts, and flowers which thrust, Your childhood is a bower: Let my fingers wander in the moss Where glows the rosebud Let me among the clean grasses Drink the drops of dew Which sprinkle the tender flower