Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Poet Du Jour: Arthur Rimbaud


I adore Arthur Rimbaud. He's that quintessential dirty poet that all Bohemians aspired to be because he reached fame at such a young age. He's also raw; he lived the life of pure emotion and expatriation that I can only dream about. Instead of continuing this exaltation, I'll just post my most preferred poem by Rimbaud.

Romance

I


When you are seventeen you aren't really serious.
- One fine evening, you've had enough of beer and lemonade,
And the rowdy cafes with their dazzling lights!
- You go walking beneath the green lime trees of the promenade.

The lime trees smell good on fine evenings in June!
The air is so soft sometimes, you close your eyelids;
The wind, full of sounds, - the town's not far away -
Carries odours of vines, and odours of beer...


II


- Then you see a very tiny rag
Of dark blue, framed by a small branch,
Pierced by an unlucky star which is melting away
With soft little shivers, small, perfectly white...

June night! Seventeen! - You let yourself get drunk.
The sap is champagne and goes straight to your head...
You are wandering; you feel a kiss on your lips
Which quivers there like something small and alive...


III



Your mad heart goes Crusoeing through all the romances,
- When, under the light of a pale street lamp,
Passes a young girl with charming little airs,
In the shadow of her father's terrifying stiff collar...

And because you strike her as absurdly naif,
As she trots along in her little ankle boots,
She turns, wide awake, with a brisk movement...
And then cavatinas die on your lips...


IV


You're in love. Taken until the month of August.
You're in love - Your sonnets make Her laugh.
All your friends disappear, you are not quite the thing.
- Then your adored one, one evening, condescends to write to you...!

That evening,... - you go back again to the dazzling cafes,
You ask for beer or for lemonade...
- You are not really serious when you are seventeen
And there are green lime trees on the promenade...






Romance was written in 1870 but it rings so true today.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Bohemian Must Reads


One of the pre-reqs of being a boho is literature. Even for those bohos whose primary art is not writing, reading is a M-U-S-T.

The lovely Laren Stover of Bohemian Manifesto includes a section of books that all bohos must read. Because of this crappy economy and the crappy libraries in my area, I can't find/buy a great deal of these books so I turned to the ever lovely Gutenberg! No, not the guy who made the printing press and the Bible. I fell in love with the site Gutenberg because it has a ton of hard to find classics for free. *squee*

Sooo, to save you all the trouble, I found some of Stover's boho must reads & a few of my own.

Scenes de la Boheme - Henry Murger This isn't an optional read!!

The Devil's Dictionary - Ambrose Bierce (If you haven't read it already, I recommend An Occurrence At Owl Creek Bridge. Soooo haunting!)

The Communist Manifest - Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels (Everyone should read this; not just bohos.)

Therese Raquin - Emile Zola (Stover recommends Nana as well but Gutenberg didn't have an English translation.)

Les Fleurs du Mal - Charles Baudelaire (Even if you can't read it in French, do so anyways. The beauty of the poems in their original language cannot be found in the translations.)

Les Miserables - Victor Hugo (I recommend Hernani as well.)

Anything by Poe.

The Picture of Dorian Gray - Oscar Wilde

Anything by Byron.

Alice in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll

Candide - Voltaire

The Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas

Cousin Betty - Honore Balzac

Madame Bovary - Gustave Flaubert

Wasteland - T.S. Eliot

What is lamentably missing from this list is the works of Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and Rimbaud. Gutenberg currently does not have any of their works.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Girls Say Yes!



I love both of these posters but apparently the girls at Salon.com don't. Considering the inordinate amount of sexism in this political race, I can see why they don't like the variation of the Joan Baez poster. I personally love it because it's very tongue in cheek. If these women were nearly nude or had something porny on, I could totally see why the Salon chicks think that this is sexual.
Sexual? No. Empowering? Yes.
These women picture aren't selling their bodies for a candidate or offer sexual favors for a candidate. It's just saying fuck yeah! I can vote for a non-female canidate and be damn proud!

Monday, October 20, 2008

Biblioburro



The name Biblioburro put a smile on my face alone.

Luis Soriano of Colombia takes his two donkeys (Alfa & Beto) and uses them as a makeshift book mobile. I personally think that the idea is really ingenious and cute.

After having a really shitty week, this really cheered me up. It's nice to see people doing something for their fellow man.

Everything stolen from the
International Herald Tribune