Madame Rimbaud showed little affection to her children, instead focusing her ambitions on her two sons. Forbidden to play with other boys, Rimbaud immersed himself in his studies. Stimulated by a yearning for more in life, he became a gifted student.
At age ten, Rimbaud wrote:
Oh! Damn Damn Damn Damn Damn!
...You have to pass an exam, and the jobs that you get are either
to shine shoes, or to herd cows, or to tend pigs. Thank God, I don't want
any of that! Damn it! And besides that they smack you for a reward;
they call you an animal and it's not true, a little kid, etc..
In 1870, restless and despondent over the loss of his favorite teacher (who'd
left to fight in the Franco-Prussian War), Rimbaud ran away from home. He
ran away more than once before finally making it to Paris. Broke, Rimbaud
lived on the city streets. Immersed in his rebellion, he denounced women and
the church. He lived willingly in squalid conditions, studying "immoral"
poets (such as Baudelaire) and reading voraciously everything from occult
to philosophy.
His own poetic philosophy began to take shape at this time. To Rimbaud, the poet was a seer. His job was to jar and jangle the senses. A precursor to surrealism, Rimbaud is also considered to have been one of the creators of the free verse style.
In 1871, Rimbaud met Paul Verlaine -- who was ten years his senior -- and moved into his household. If their friendship was controversial, their sexual relationship was downright scandalous. Though Verlaine vacillated all his life between dark-doings and repentance, Rimbaud was considered at that time to be Verlaine's undoing. Rimbaud's drug taking and generally unclean living eventually alienated everyone except Verlaine. In 1872, Verlaine left his wife. He and Rimbaud moved to London.
By 1873, Rimbaud was disenchanted by his relationship with Verlaine. During
a drunken argument in Brussels, Verlaine shot at Rimbaud, hitting him once in
the wrist. Rimbaud was tired of their downward spiral and called in the
police. Verlaine was sent to prison for 18 months. Rimbaud, feeling both
guilty and exhilarated, wrote feverishly, completing 'A Season in Hell.'
...As for me, I am intact, and I don't care.
(from "Bad Blood" A Season in Hell)
Before his twentieth birthday, Arthur Rimbaud quit writing. He wandered Europe before eventually becoming a trader and gunrunner in Africa. Ill, he returned to Marseilles in June of 1891. His right leg was amputated, probably due to the complications of syphilis, and he was nursed for a time by his tender sister Isabelle. He died on November 10, 1891.
Rimbaud's literary style has influenced almost all modern forms of literature,
including the
Beats.
He has been cited as an inspiration by songwriters like
Jim Morrison
and
Bob Dylan.
Patti Smith has often referred to him in her poetry and songs.
rimbaud. no more the daring young horseman of
high abyssinian plateau. such ardor is petrified for-
ever.
(from "rimbaud dead" by Patti Smith)
Another good Rimbaud web page is Larry Deal's The Drunken Boat.
Literary Kicks
Contributed by
Meg Wise-Lawrence