Desires; Sixty-five French Poems Plus a Small But Famous German One

Desires; Sixty-five French Poems Plus a Small But Famous German One

by John Fraser
Desires; Sixty-five French Poems Plus a Small But Famous German One

Desires; Sixty-five French Poems Plus a Small But Famous German One

by John Fraser

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Overview

John Fraser, Desires: Sixty-five French poems and one small but famous German one, translated and introduced by John Fraser.

The core of Desires is a mini-anthology of sixty-five French poems translated by John Fraser and described in the foreword by scholar-translator Benoit Tadié as "beautiful" and "intensely empathetic." Taken from Fraser's major online anthology A New Book of Verse, they belong in an emergent re-seeing of French poetic history.

Part I consists largely of "libertine" (free-thinking) poems from the Renaissance and 17th century, in which the joys of Eros are celebrated within a realworld context of the body's limitations (age, impotence, the pox) and savage punishments for "heresy" (lethal imprisonment, burning at the stake). The language, at times unfussily direct, at others richly figurative, is refreshingly free of Petrarchan and neo-classical clichés.

Among the male poets are Ronsard, Théophile de Viau, and Claude Le Petit. Among the women, witty aristocrats with minds and desires of their own, like Heliette de Vivonne and Louise-Marguerite de Lorraine. The classicism (real, not neo-) of Part I is followed in Part II by the classical romanticism of a variety of 19th and 20th century poems. There had been underground continuities during the neo-classical dominance..

The book includes major discoveries like Le Petit's 300-line "Farewell of the Pleasure Girls to the City of Paris" and Jeanne-Marie Durry's "Orpheus' Plea"; subversive poems by radicals like Louise Michel, Aristide Bruand, and Georges Brassens; and fresh translations of poems by classics like Desbordes-Valmore. Gautier, Laforgue, and Apollinaire, including the last-named's notoriously difficult "Lul de Faltenin." There is a long iconoclastic introduction, numerous notes, and an affectionate appendix on Gerard de Nerval and classical-romanticism, with very funny quotations from his fiction.

The eleven hundred Anglo, French, and German poems in A New Book of Verse can be accessed via Voices in the Cave of Being.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940151528252
Publisher: eBookIt.com
Publication date: 04/29/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

JOHN FRASER grew up in North London, and has degrees from Oxford and the University of Minnesota, where he did a Philosophy minor, co-edited the quarterly GSE, and wrote the article on 20th-century American and British Poetics for the first edition of the Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics

From 1961 until his retirement as George Munro Professor of English, he taught at Dalhousie University. In 1990 he gave the Alexander Lectures at the University of Toronto on "Nihilism, Modernism, and Value"

His three print books were published by Cambridge University Press. Articles of his appeared in Partisan Review, Southern Review, Yale Review, Cambridge Quarterly, Studio International, and other journals.

His widely noticed Violence in the Arts (1974) garnered compliments like "both scholarly and extraordinarily interesting," "continuously stimulating," "profoundly illuminating," "an extremely agile and incessantly active mind."

He was married to the artist Carol Hoorn Fraser (1930–1991), who is featured on his website, www.jottings.ca. He is in Wikipedia as John Fraser (critic). His long interest in France began with a stay with relatives in Versailles in 1934.

His seminar "Traditionalism and Experimentation in Poetry, 1880-1920" included the scrutiny of major French poems. The eleven hundred Anglo, French, and German poems in his online anthology A New Book of Verse can be googled directly or through "Voices in the Cave of Being."
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