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Life & Wisdom Quote by Charles Baudelaire

"Always be a poet, even in prose"

About this Quote

A command disguised as a whisper: don’t let the world’s most common forms of language flatten you. Baudelaire’s “Always be a poet, even in prose” isn’t just an aesthetic preference; it’s a survival tactic for modern life, where prose stands in for the everyday - journalism, bureaucracy, conversation, commerce - and where the mind is constantly pressured to speak in the dead idiom of utility.

Baudelaire knew the stakes. Writing in mid-19th-century Paris, he watched the city modernize into a machine of speed, spectacle, and alienation. His project in Les Fleurs du mal and the prose poems of Paris Spleen was to make lyric intensity portable: to smuggle music, metaphor, and moral weather into the very forms that claim they don’t need it. The line is basically a dare to refuse the false neutrality of “plain speech.” Prose pretends to be transparent; Baudelaire insists it’s already full of choices, power, and mood. If you’re going to use it, you might as well use it deliberately.

The subtext is almost combative: poetic perception is not a genre, it’s a stance. Be exact about sensation. Make the sentence do more than deliver information. Keep the capacity for surprise alive. Under Baudelaire’s cynicism sits a romantic insistence that attention can be radical. In a culture that rewards the easily processed, he’s arguing for the right to be difficult in the best sense: not obscure, but awake.

Quote Details

TopicPoetry
Source
Verified source: Journaux intimes (Fusées / Hygiène / Mon cœur mis à nu) (Charles Baudelaire, 1887)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Sois toujours poète, même en prose. Grand style (rien de plus beau que le lieu commun). (Section "Hygiène" (Wikisource), line where the aphorism appears (no stable page # on HTML)). This line appears in Baudelaire’s posthumously published notebook fragments commonly grouped under "Journaux intimes" (including "Fusées" and "Hygiène"). The English quote "Always be a poet, even in prose" is a translation/paraphrase of the French "Sois toujours poète, même en prose." The primary text is Baudelaire’s own, but the FIRST PUBLICATION was posthumous (commonly dated 1887 for the "Journaux intimes" volume; editions vary). Wikisource presents it under "Hygiène" with a publication date of 1887 and preserves the wording shown above.
Other candidates (1)
Writings on Writing (Thomas H. Brennan, 2024) compilation95.0%
... CHARLES BAUDELAIRE, "Artist Unknown," from Les Fleurs du Mal, 1857 301. Always be a poet, even in prose. -CHARLES...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Baudelaire, Charles. (2026, March 5). Always be a poet, even in prose. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/always-be-a-poet-even-in-prose-171302/

Chicago Style
Baudelaire, Charles. "Always be a poet, even in prose." FixQuotes. March 5, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/always-be-a-poet-even-in-prose-171302/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Always be a poet, even in prose." FixQuotes, 5 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/always-be-a-poet-even-in-prose-171302/. Accessed 26 Mar. 2026.

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Always be a poet, even in prose - Charles Baudelaire
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About the Author

Charles Baudelaire

Charles Baudelaire (April 9, 1821 - August 31, 1867) was a Poet from France.

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