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Across the room, Manet's "Lady With Fan (Baudelaire's Mistress)" (1862) is dissolving in another way.
WSJ: A Rustling Theater of the Self | Impressionism, Fashion, and Modernity | Metropolitan Museum of Art | By Laura Jacobs
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Barrie's "Peter Pan, " and two songs by Charles Martin Loeffler (1861-1935) to poems by Charles Baudelaire and Paul Verlaine.
WSJ: The First Sounds of Spring | Savannah Music Festival | By Barrymore Laurence Scherer
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Absinthe inspired poets and artists, like Oscar Wilde, Charles Baudelaire and Edouard Manet - and has given regulators headaches for decades.
BBC: Europe
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Inspired by famed writers and poets, each room is individually designed to reflect the musings of greats such as Baudelaire, Calderon and Diderot.
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Only in France could you record a reggae version of your national anthem, outraging upright citizens, and then, at your death, be compared to Baudelaire by the President.
NEWYORKER: Private Wars
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Under his own name and his nom de plume, Mr. Handler has written more than two dozen books, including "A Series of Unfortunate Events, " about the misadventures of the orphaned Baudelaire children.
WSJ: Cooking With Lemony Snicket | In My Kitchen
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The poems came slowly, as did the vision of the sort of poet Crane believed he was destined to become something soaring and visionary in the mould of his greatest literary heroes: Rimbaud, Blake, Baudelaire.
ECONOMIST: Lives (7): American poets
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Rather than depicting a specific location, Ensor offers a telling amalgam and carnivalesque inversion of an entire genre that, as articulated by the French poet Charles Baudelaire, celebrated the spectacle of modern urban life.
WSJ: A Macabre Kingdom of Masks | James Ensor | Christ's Entry Into Brussels in 1889 | By Mary Tompkins Lewis
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Drawings of James McNeill Whistler, Charles Baudelaire and Max Beerbohm, followed by 20th-century photographs of Le Corbusier, Frank Lloyd Wright and Andy Warhol, make the case for dandyism as an aesthetic stance, the domain of artists.
WSJ: Beau Brummell and His Heirs | Men of Fashion | RISD Museum | By Laura Jacobs
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Thomson, paraphrasing Baudelaire, attacked his chief competition, the New York Times, for what he termed a bourgeois complacency in its approach to local news and its assembling of a national audience at the expense of local readers.
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