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・ A Scream in the Streets
・ A Screaming Man
・ A Screw
・ A Scriptural, Ecclesiastical, and Historical View of Slavery
・ A Sea Cave Near Lisbon
・ A Sea of Faces
・ A Sea So Far
・ A Sea Symphony
・ A Search for Reason
・ A Searchers EP
・ A Seaside Parish
・ A Seaside Rendezvous
・ A Season Between Heaven and Hell
・ A Season for Miracles
・ A Season in Hakkari
A Season in Hell
・ A Season in Hell (album)
・ A Season in Hell (disambiguation)
・ A Season in Hell (film)
・ A Season in Hell (TV movie)
・ A Season in Purgatory
・ A Season in Sinji
・ A Season in the Life of Emmanuel
・ A Season of Giants
・ A Season of Gifts
・ A Season of Good Rain
・ A Season of Remixes
・ A Season of Stones
・ A Season on the Brink
・ A Season on the Brink (film)


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A Season in Hell : ウィキペディア英語版
A Season in Hell

''A Season in Hell'' ((フランス語:Une Saison en Enfer)) is an extended poem in prose written and published in 1873 by French writer Arthur Rimbaud. It is the only work that was published by Rimbaud himself. The book had a considerable influence on later artists and poets, including the Surrealists.
==Writing and publication history==
Rimbaud began writing the poem in April 1873 during a visit to his family's farm in Roche, near Charleville on the French-Belgian border. According to Bertrand Mathieu, Rimbaud wrote the work in a dilapidated barn.〔Mathieu, Bertrand, "Introduction" in Rimbaud, Arthur, and Mathieu, Bertrand (translator), ''A Season in Hell & Illuminations'' (Rochester, New York: BOA Editions, 1991).〕 In the following weeks, Rimbaud travelled with poet Paul Verlaine through Belgium and to London again. They had begun a complicated homosexual relationship in spring 1872, and they quarreled frequently.〔Bonnefoy, Yves: Rimbaud par lui-meme, Paris 1961, Éditions du Seuil〕 Verlaine had bouts of suicidial behavior and drunkenness. When Rimbaud announced he planned to leave while they stayed in Brussels in July 1873, Verlaine fired three shots from his revolver, wounding Rimbaud once, and after subsequent threats of violence Verlaine was arrested and incarcerated to two years hard labour. After their parting, he returned home to complete the work and published ''A Season in Hell''. However, when his reputation was marred because of his actions with Verlaine, he received negative reviews and was snubbed by Parisian art and literary circles. In anger, Rimbaud burned his manuscripts and likely never wrote poetry again.
According to some sources, Rimbaud's first stay in London in September 1872 converted him from an imbiber of absinthe to a smoker of opium, and drinker of gin and beer. According to biographer, Graham Robb, this began "as an attempt to explain why some of his () poems are so hard to understand, especially when sober". The poem was by Rimbaud himself dated April through August 1873, but these are dates of completion. He finished the work in a farmhouse in Roche, Ardennes.
There is a marked contrast between the hallucinogenic quality of ''Une Saisons second chapter, "Mauvais Sang" ("Bad Blood") and even the most hashish-influenced of the immediately preceding verses that he wrote in Paris. Its third chapter, "Nuit de l'Enfer" (literally "Night of Hell"), then exhibits a refinement of sensibility. The two sections of chapter four apply this sensibility in professional and personal confession; and then, slowly but surely, at age 18, he begins to think clearly about his real future; the introductory chapter being a product of this later phase.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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