This book is the Winner of the 18th Annual PEN USA Award in Translation (2008)
In this new translation of Arthur
Rimbaud – illustrious among
the 19th century symbolists and
one of the most influential poets
upon the modern mind – Donald
Revell captures the child-like
wonder and tortured, revelatory
despair of these poems, which changed,
in so many ways, how we think of
what a poem can say and mean. Revell’s
choice of a most immediate vernacular
gives the modern reader all the
heady brilliance in Rimbaud’s
rebelliousness. Yet, as Revell
explains in his essay “Outrageous
Innocence, Innocence Outraged,” which
is offered as afterword in this
translation of A Season in Hell,
Rimbaud’s rebellious sensuality
was redolent with the oracular.
Revell’s essay offers the
story of Rimbaud – his wildly
creative youth, his years of breaking
with all traditions of morality
and decorum, his fame as the genius
of French letters who is identified
as one of the creators of free
verse because of his rhythm experiments
in prose poems. And Revell’s
essay places these poems in the
larger historical narrative of
the literature of rebellious youth
that has molded much of our contemporary
culture. Published with the French
on facing pages, this translation
will open many readers to the pleasure
of reading this wild child who
was remembered after his death
as one of the masters of French
poetry.
Praise for Donald Revell’s
translation of Arthur Rimbaud’s
A Season in Hell
“Woe to those readers who
are doomed to read Rimbaud only
in French, for in addition to giving
us a bracing translation of Une
Saison en Enfer, Donald Revell
has given birth to a great poem—a
poem that forces us to take Rimbaud
at his word: “I transcribed
the inexpressible.’”
--James Longenbach
“How lucky we are that after
his limber, resourceful translations
of the twentieth century's greatest
pyrotechnician, Apollinaire, Donald
Revell now gives us English for
the culminating work of our greatest
pyromaniac, Arthur Rimbaud, capturing
A Season In
Hell's zealous flamboyance
and its angelic/demonic purge.”
--Dean Young
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