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=== Travels (1875–1880) === Rimbaud and Verlaine met for the last time in March 1875, in [[Stuttgart]], after Verlaine's release from prison and his [[Religious conversion|conversion]] to Catholicism.{{sfn|Robb|2000|p=264}} By then Rimbaud had given up literature in favour of a steady, working life. [[Stéphane Mallarmé]], in a text about Rimbaud from 1896 (after his death), described him as a "meteor, lit by no other reason than his presence, arising alone then vanishing" who had managed to "surgically remove poetry from himself while still alive".{{refn|« Éclat, lui, d'un météore, allumé sans motif autre que sa présence, issu seul et s'éteignant. » / « Voici la date mystérieuse, pourtant naturelle, si l'on convient que celui, qui rejette des rêves, par sa faute ou la leur, et s'opère, vivant, de la poésie, ultérieurement ne sait trouver que loin, très loin, un état nouveau. » [https://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Divagations_(1897)/Arthur_Rimbaud Complete text on Wikisource].|group=n}} [[Albert Camus]], in ''L'homme révolté'', although he praised Rimbaud's literary works (particularly his later prose works, ''Une saison en enfer'' and ''Illuminations'' – "he is the poet of revolt, and the greatest"), wrote a scathing account of his resignation from literature – and revolt itself – in his later life, claiming that there is nothing to admire, nothing noble or even genuinely adventurous, in a man who committed a "spiritual suicide", became a "bourgeois trafficker" and consented to the materialistic order of things.<ref>Albert Camus, ''L'homme révolté'', "Surréalisme et révolution", p. 118-121.</ref> After studying several languages (German, Italian, Spanish), he went on to travel extensively in Europe, mostly on foot. In May 1876 he enlisted as a soldier in the [[KNIL|Dutch Colonial Army]]{{sfn|Robb|2000|p=278}} to get free passage to [[Java]] in the [[Dutch East Indies]] (now Indonesia). Four months later he [[Desertion|deserted]] and fled into the jungle. He managed to return ''incognito'' to France by ship; as a deserter he would have faced a Dutch firing squad had he been caught.{{sfn|Robb|2000|pp=282–285}} In December 1878, Rimbaud journeyed to [[Larnaca]] in [[Cyprus]], where he worked for a construction company as a stone quarry foreman.{{sfn|Robb|2000|p=299}} In May of the following year he had to leave Cyprus because of a fever, which on his return to France was diagnosed as [[typhoid fever|typhoid]].{{sfn|Porter|1990|pp=251–252}}
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