Most likely recalling the story from Ovid’s Metamorphoses, a great nineteenth-century poet turns to the legend of Icarus. Icarus flew on artificial wings, which failed him when he flew too close to the sun: Charles Baudelaire feels that he has failed as a poet to soar to the heights to which he aspired, and, like Icarus, has been seared and brought low by the experience. It is another example of the impossibility of engaging with great European writers of the modern era without paying attention to the classical Roman and Greek literature which was one of their most powerful influences.
The reader is Béatrice Damamme-Gilbert.
See and hear Ovid’s version of the Icarus legend here.
See the illustrated blog post here.
To listen, press play: