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- Soleil_et_chair abstract "Soleil et chair ("Sun and Flesh" in English) is a poem written by Arthur Rimbaud in May 1870. The work, while being unmistakably Rimbaud, nevertheless exhibits the influence that both Romanticism and Latin writers such as Horace, Virgil, and Lucretius had on his early style. It takes the tone of a hymn to the sun and earth—with overt sexual overtones—which periodically lapses into a lament of the abyss that now separates Man from Nature. Throughout, double entendres figure widely, often providing the sexual innuendos. The poem, which consists of four sections, is written in Alexandrines, or 12-syllable lines—typical to French verse in the same way that iambic pentameter is to English. In spite of its relatively classical form, the direct nature of its venereal themes sounds shockingly modern to even today's reader; moreover, the sheer creativity of Rimbaud's imagery would seem to presage his later refinement of this stylistic trait, which has since earned him the title of Visionary.".
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageExternalLink Soleil.html.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageID "26817387".
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageLength "4815".
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageOutDegree "25".
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageRevisionID "673200935".
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Alexandrine.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Alexandrines.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Apostles_Creed.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Rimbaud.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Category:Poems.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Cybele.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Dionysian_orgy.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Double_entendre.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Eros.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Faun.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Horace.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Iambic_pentameter.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Innuendo.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Lucretius.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Monotheism.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Oliver_Bernard.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Orgia.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Paean.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Pan_(god).
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Polytheism.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Romanticism.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Satyr.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Sexual_innuendo.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Symbolism_(arts).
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Symbolist.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Théodore_de_Banville.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Venus_(mythology).
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Victor_Hugo.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLink Virgil.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageWikiLinkText "Soleil et chair".
- Soleil_et_chair hasPhotoCollection Soleil_et_chair.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Multiple_issues.
- Soleil_et_chair wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Soleil_et_chair subject Category:Poems.
- Soleil_et_chair hypernym Poem.
- Soleil_et_chair type Article.
- Soleil_et_chair type Poem.
- Soleil_et_chair type Article.
- Soleil_et_chair comment "Soleil et chair ("Sun and Flesh" in English) is a poem written by Arthur Rimbaud in May 1870. The work, while being unmistakably Rimbaud, nevertheless exhibits the influence that both Romanticism and Latin writers such as Horace, Virgil, and Lucretius had on his early style. It takes the tone of a hymn to the sun and earth—with overt sexual overtones—which periodically lapses into a lament of the abyss that now separates Man from Nature.".
- Soleil_et_chair label "Soleil et chair".
- Soleil_et_chair sameAs m.0bmb9rw.
- Soleil_et_chair sameAs Q7557561.
- Soleil_et_chair sameAs Q7557561.
- Soleil_et_chair wasDerivedFrom Soleil_et_chair?oldid=673200935.
- Soleil_et_chair isPrimaryTopicOf Soleil_et_chair.