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==''Tableaux Parisiens'' (Parisian Scenes)== Baudelaire's section ''Tableaux Parisiens'', added in the second edition (1861), is considered one of the most formidable criticisms of 19th-century French modernity.<ref>[https://www.sparknotes.com/poetry/flowersofevil/plot-analysis/] ''The Flowers of Evil'' Full Book Analysis</ref> This section contains 18 poems, most of which were written during [[Haussmann's renovation of Paris]]. Together, the poems in ''Tableaux Parisiens'' act as 24-hour cycle of Paris, starting with the second poem Le Soleil (The Sun) and ending with the second to last poem Le Crépuscule du Matin (Morning Twilight). The poems featured in this cycle of Paris all deal with the feelings of anonymity and estrangement from a newly modernized city. Baudelaire is critical of the clean and geometrically laid out streets of Paris which alienate the unsung anti-heroes of Paris who serve as inspiration for the poet: the beggar, the blind, the industrial worker, the gambler, the prostitute, the old, and the victim of imperialism. These characters whom Baudelaire once praised as the backbone of Paris are now eulogized in his nostalgic poems. For Baudelaire, the city has been transformed into an anthill of identical bourgeois that reflect the new identical structures that litter a Paris he once called home but can now no longer recognize.<ref>Chambers, Ross. ''The Writing of Melancholy: Modes of Opposition in Early French Modernism''. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1993. Print.</ref><ref>Thompson, William J. ''Understanding Les Fleurs Du Mal: Critical Readings''. Nashville: Vanderbilt UP, 1997. Print.</ref>
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