04 October 2011
from Calligrammes, by Guillaume Apollonaire
image from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Guillaume_Apollinaire_Calligramme.JPG
(Transl: Hello world that I am the eloquent language that your mouth O Paris fires and will fire always at Germans)
This is one of the pieces from the book Calligrammes, which the poem below is also a part of, so you can imagine that the post below would have a visual layout that is much different than we see here. Apollonaire was one of the pioneers of this style of "Concrete" poetry.
Here's a short bio from www.poets.org/php/prmPID/737
Guillaume Apollinaire (Wilhelm Albert Vladimir Apollinaris Kostrowitzky) was born in Rome on August 26, 1880. He purposefully kept his parentage clouded in speculation but was most likely the illegitimate child of Angelica Kostrowitzky, a Polish woman living in the Vatican. Apollinaire was raised in the gambling halls of Monaco, Paris, and the French Riviera; during his education in Cannes, Nice, and Monaco, he assumed the identity of a Russian prince.
In his twenties he worked for a Parisian bank and kept company with artists such as Picasso, Braques, Chagall, Max Jacob, Eric Satie, Marcel Duchamp, and his lover, Marie Laurencin. During this time, he published a number of semi-pornographic books, proclaiming that the writing of the Marquis de Sade would gain prominence in the new century.
Apollinaire's first collection of poetry, L'enchanteur pourrissant, appeared in 1909, and his reputation was established in 1913 with Alcools, a melange of classical versification and modern imagery. Apollinaire had a reputation as a thief-—he was detained for a week in 1911 on suspicion of stealing the Mona Lisa—-and decided to become a French national by enlisting in the infantry during World War I.
He was stationed on the front in Champagne until 1916, when he suffered a head wound and had to be trepanned. He outlined his poetic and political beliefs in L'esprit nouveau et les poëtes in 1917. In 1918, after a series of short-lived affairs, he married Jacqueline Kolb. War-weakened, Apollinaire died shortly after of the Spanish Flu on November 9, 1918, in Paris. Calligrammes, a collection of concrete poetry, was published a few months after his death.
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