Charles Baudelaire - traduzione in Inglese
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Charles Baudelaire - traduzione in Inglese

FRENCH POET, ESSAYIST AND ART CRITIC (1821-1867)
Baudelaire; Charles Pierre Baudelaire; Charles-Pierre Baudelaire; Baudelaire, Charles Pierre; Beaudelaire; Baudelaire, Charles
  • [[Apollonie Sabatier]], muse and one-time mistress, painted by [[Vincent Vidal]]
  • Baudelaire, Bibliothèque de la Pléiade, ''Œuvres complètes'' (''Complete Works''), volume I.
  • Portrait of a 23-year-old Baudelaire, painted in 1844 by Émile Deroy (1820–1846)
  • Grave of Baudelaire in [[Cimetière du Montparnasse]]
  • Nadar]], 1855
  • Cenotaph of Charles Baudelaire, Montparnasse Cemetery
  • Charles Baudelaire, de face}} (1869 print of 1865 etching) by [[Édouard Manet]]
  • Illustration cover for ''Les Épaves'', by Baudelaire's friend [[Félicien Rops]]

Charles Baudelaire         
n. Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867), poeta francés conocido por sus imágenes grotescas y horribles y su lenguaje evocador, primer traductor de Edgar Allan Poe al francés
Ray Charles         
  • Charles in 1968
  • Charles meeting with President Richard Nixon, 1972 (photo by [[Oliver F. Atkins]])
  • Statue by Andy Davis in Ray Charles Plaza in Albany, Georgia
  • Charles in 1971
  • Charles at the 2003 [[Montreal International Jazz Festival]], one of his last public performances
  • Star honoring Charles on the [[Hollywood Walk of Fame]], at 6777 Hollywood Boulevard
AMERICAN SINGER AND PIANIST (1930–2004)
Ray charles; Ray Charles Robinson; I Believe to My Soul (song); Ray Charles Band; The Pages of My Mind; The Pages Of My Mind; Raymond Charles Robinson; Ray Charles (musician, born 1930); Ray C. Robinson; Charles, Ray
n. Rey Charles (cantante, compositor y músico americano ciego)
Charles Mingus         
  • Mingus in 1976 playing the [[double bass]]
AMERICAN JAZZ DOUBLE BASSIST, COMPOSER AND BANDLEADER (1922–1979)
Charlie Mingus; Charles Mingus Sextet With Eric Dolphy; Me, Myself an Eye; Me, Myself An Eye; Mingus, Charles
n. Charles Mingus (1922-1979), compositor de jazz y músico bass estadounidense

Definizione

Carlos

Carlos es un nombre propio masculino. Su femenino es Carla o Carolina.

El nombre es de procedencia germana, y significa "hombre libre". El nombre traducido a las lenguas escandinavas Karl significa hombre.

Se trata de un nombre muy popular debido a su uso habitual en las tradicciones de las casas reales, por lo que hay muchas personalidades llamadas Carlos

Wikipedia

Charles Baudelaire

Charles Pierre Baudelaire (UK: , US: ; French: [ʃaʁl(ə) bodlɛʁ] (listen); 9 April 1821 – 31 August 1867) was a French poet who also produced notable work as an essayist, art critic and translator. His poems exhibit mastery of rhyme and rhythm, contain an exoticism inherited from Romantics, and are based on observations of real life.

His most famous work, a book of lyric poetry titled Les Fleurs du mal (The Flowers of Evil), expresses the changing beauty of nature in the rapidly industrializing Paris during the mid-19th century. Baudelaire's original style of prose-poetry influenced a generation of poets including Paul Verlaine, Arthur Rimbaud and Stéphane Mallarmé, among many others. He coined the term modernity (modernité) to designate the fleeting experience of life in an urban metropolis, and the responsibility of artistic expression to capture that experience. Marshall Berman has credited Baudelaire as being the first Modernist.

Esempi dal corpus di testo per Charles Baudelaire
1. Burroughs, Henry Miller and Charles Baudelaire would have been unwelcome in the United States.
2. "I hate this art thought up to the beat of drums, these canvases daubed at the gallop, this painting fabricated by pistol–shot," wrote the poet and critic Charles Baudelaire of the painter Horace Vernet – who, like Gros, pictured Napoleon‘s battles – "just as I hate the army, armed power and anyone who clanks weapons noisily around in a peaceful place.
3. That certainly wasn‘t the modernité Charles Baudelaire was thinking of in 1863 when, in The Painter of Modern Life, he described "modernity" as an exaltation of "the ephemeral, the fugitive, the contingent, the half of art whose other half is the eternal and the immutable". Nor was it what Jonathan Swift complained of in a letter to Alexander Pope – the work of English scribblers "who send us over their trash in Prose and Verse, with abominable curtailings and quaint modernisms". That was in 1737, and was the first and probably the last time that "modernism" and "quaintness" were linked in the same sentence.
4. Handler has cleverly filled them with enough in–jokes and literary references that older readers can also read the books with pleasure. (Listen to Handler describe his "Unfortunate" plan.) "I‘ve autographed a lot of books by Edgar Allan Poe and Charles Baudelaire," he laughed, "that many people thought were extraordinary coincidences until I had to gently tell them that there was some intelligent design, so to speak, at work." His style is engaging, elegant and more than a little sly: "If you have ever peeled an onion, then you know that the first thin papery layer reveals another thin, papery layer, and that layer reveals another, and another, and before you know it you have hundreds of layers all over the kitchen table and thousands of tears in your eyes, sorry that you ever started peeling in the first place," begins "The End." Mr.