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Life & Wisdom Quote by Paul Verlaine

"I am the Empire at the end of the decadence"

About this Quote

Verlaine doesn’t just pose as a decadent; he crowns himself the terminal symptom. “I am the Empire at the end of the decadence” compresses a whole historical mood into a single, swaggering “I”: not France, not a generation, not even a movement, but a body and voice that claims to embody collapse with imperial grandeur. It’s a brilliantly unstable boast. Empire suggests power, monumentality, the right to name the world. “At the end of the decadence” flips that glamour into exhaustion: the pageantry is still up, but everyone can smell the rot backstage.

The line lands in a late-19th-century France obsessed with decline narratives: the long shadow of the Second Empire, the bruise of 1870, the modern city’s nervous overstimulation. Decadence, in the literary sense, was both accusation and aesthetic: art that preferred artifice to virtue, sensation to duty, style to moral clarity. Verlaine leans into that stigma and turns it into an identity brand, a strategy as old as dandyism: if society calls you degenerate, become the most exquisite degenerate imaginable.

The subtext is personal as much as cultural. Verlaine’s life - scandal, addiction, volatility, his notorious entanglement with Rimbaud - made him an easy symbol of “late” artistry. By calling himself an empire, he insists that self-ruin can still generate authority. Even in decline, he’s claiming the final word, the last ceremony before the lights go out.

Quote Details

TopicPoetry
Source
Verified source: Le Chat Noir: "Langueur" (pre-original publication) (Paul Verlaine, 1883)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Je suis l’Empire à la fin de la décadence, | qui regarde passer les grands Barbares blancs | en composant des acrostiches indolents | d’un style d’or où la langueur du soleil danse.. The English quote “I am the Empire at the end of the decadence” is a translation/abridgment of the opening of Verlaine’s sonnet "Langueur". A scholarly source (in an academic volume) states that the poem was originally published in the journal Le Chat noir on 26 May 1883, and it reproduces the first stanza (lines 1–4), which contains the quoted line. This identifies the earliest publication venue/date, but does not provide Le Chat Noir issue number or page. The poem was later included in Verlaine’s collection "Jadis et Naguère" (commonly dated 1884), which is not the first publication.
Other candidates (1)
Decadence (David Weir, 2018) compilation95.0%
... Paul Verlaine's sonnet “ Langueur . ” The poem is presented in French because so much of it has no exact equivale...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Verlaine, Paul. (2026, February 21). I am the Empire at the end of the decadence. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-am-the-empire-at-the-end-of-the-decadence-123514/

Chicago Style
Verlaine, Paul. "I am the Empire at the end of the decadence." FixQuotes. February 21, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-am-the-empire-at-the-end-of-the-decadence-123514/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I am the Empire at the end of the decadence." FixQuotes, 21 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-am-the-empire-at-the-end-of-the-decadence-123514/. Accessed 24 Feb. 2026.

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I am the Empire at the end of the decadence - Paul Verlaine
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About the Author

Paul Verlaine

Paul Verlaine (March 30, 1844 - January 8, 1896) was a Poet from France.

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