Arthur Rimbaud (1854-1891) was a French poet who made a remarkable contribution to literature at a remarkably young age. He began producing poems of quality from his teenage years and, after abandoning any formal education, ran away from his family to seek adventure on the open road. He stopped writing at the age of 20 and became an explorer and merchant active in Africa and the Middle East until his death at 37 from cancer. During his career as a writer, Rimbaud and fellow French poet Paul Verlain (1844-1896) engaged in a passionate and often-violent romance – Verlaine was sent to prison for wounding Rimbaud on his wrist with a shot from a pistol. Rimbaud is best known for his collection of prose poems, Illuminations (1886), and a long poem written in prose and verse, A Season in Hell (1873).
Arthur Rimbaud (1854-1891) was a French poet who made a remarkable contribution to literature at a remarkably young age. He began producing poems of quality from his teenage years and, after abandoning any formal education, ran away from his family to seek adventure on the open road. He stopped writing at the age of 20 and became an explorer and merchant active in Africa and the Middle East until his death at 37 from cancer. During his career as a writer, Rimbaud and fellow French poet Paul Verlain (1844-1896) engaged in a passionate and often-violent romance – Verlaine was sent to prison for wounding Rimbaud on his wrist with a shot from a pistol. Rimbaud is best known for his collection of prose poems, Illuminations (1886), and a long poem written in prose and verse, A Season in Hell (1873).
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