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Arthur Rimbaud

Walt Whitman, William Blake, and Arthur Rimbaud are three nineteenth century poets who shared styles, philosophies, and views of the world. They were writers searching for enlightenment and understanding of the world in which they lived; a world held in contempt for the injustices and inhumanities suffered by or because of it’s people. Many of these authors’ works would embody a clear disdain for ideals that went against those Whitman, Blake, and Rimbaud held so dear. They told their stories though vivid imagery, touching into taboo topics that frequently reflected aspects of their lives. Sexual, and sometimes homosexual, notions tended to appear in the poetry and prose of these three writes.

Blake dabbled with provocative imagery in the poem The Sick Rose; “The invisible worm…has found out thy bed of crimson joy.” There are subtle sexual allusions in the tale of a worm that flies through the night and destroys the life of a fragile flower. The poem possesses a frailty, c...

Posted by: Melissa T. Littlefield

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