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"Voyelles" or "Vowels" is a
sonnet A sonnet is a poetic form that originated in the poetry composed at the Court of the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II in the Sicilian city of Palermo. The 13th-century poet and notary Giacomo da Lentini is credited with the sonnet's invention, ...
in
alexandrines Alexandrine is a name used for several distinct types of verse line with related metrical structures, most of which are ultimately derived from the classical French alexandrine. The line's name derives from its use in the Medieval French '' Rom ...
by Arthur Rimbaud, written in 1871 but first published in 1883. Its theme is the different characters of the vowels, which it associates with those of colours. It has become one of the most studied poems in the French language, provoking very diverse interpretations.


History

At least two early manuscript versions of the sonnet exist: the first is in the hand of Arthur Rimbaud, and was given to ; the second is a transcript by Verlaine. They differ mainly in punctuation, though the second word of the fourth line appears as '' bombillent'' in one manuscript and as '' bombinent'' in the other. The meaning in both cases is "buzz". ''Voyelles'' was written by September 1871 and therefore before Rimbaud's 17th birthday. It was Verlaine who published it, in the 5–12 October 1883 number of the review '.


Text

The two texts below are of the 1905 edition, and of a 2015 translation by George J. Dance.


Interpretations and analyses

This sonnet has been written about more than almost any other poem in the French language. Many researchers, teachers, and other scholars, such as , Henri de Bouillane de Lacoste & Pierre Izambard,
Robert Faurisson Robert Faurisson (; born Robert Faurisson Aitken; 25 January 1929 – 21 October 2018) was a British-born French academic who became best known for Holocaust denial. Faurisson generated much controversy with a number of articles published in th ...
,
Claude Lévi-Strauss Claude Lévi-Strauss (, ; 28 November 1908 – 30 October 2009) was a French anthropologist and ethnologist whose work was key in the development of the theories of structuralism and structural anthropology. He held the chair of Social Anthro ...
, and Michel Esnault, developed diverse theories on its sources and meaning. It has been suggested, for example, that the poem draws on Rimbaud's memories of children's coloured cubes marked with the letters of the alphabet that he may have handled in his infancy. Others have seen the influence on Rimbaud of his reading of esoteric and
cabbalistic Kabbalah ( he, קַבָּלָה ''Qabbālā'', literally "reception, tradition") is an esoteric method, discipline and school of thought in Jewish mysticism. A traditional Kabbalist is called a Mekubbal ( ''Məqūbbāl'' "receiver"). The defin ...
literature, or of his own conception of the ''voyant'', "seer", adumbrated in his "Lettre du voyant". According to Robert Faurisson, a secondary school teacher in
Vichy Vichy (, ; ; oc, Vichèi, link=no, ) is a city in the Allier Departments of France, department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region of central France, in the historic province of Bourbonnais. It is a Spa town, spa and resort town and in World ...
in the early 1960s, it is an erotic poem; this interpretation provoked a debate which brought into play the national media, including ''
Le Monde ''Le Monde'' (; ) is a French daily afternoon newspaper. It is the main publication of Le Monde Group and reported an average circulation of 323,039 copies per issue in 2009, about 40,000 of which were sold abroad. It has had its own website si ...
'', and several academics, including René Étiemble. It has also been argued by several critics that there is no system behind the choice of correspondances to the various vowels.


Claude Lévi-Strauss

Claude Lévi-Strauss explained the sonnet, not by the direct relation between vowels and colours stated in the first line, but by an analogy between two oppositions, the opposition between vowels on the one hand, between colours on the other. While the
phoneme In phonology and linguistics, a phoneme () is a unit of sound that can distinguish one word from another in a particular language. For example, in most dialects of English, with the notable exception of the West Midlands and the north-west o ...
/a/ generally evokes the colour red, Rimbaud associates it, like a provocation, with black. In fact, the ''A'' (most saturated phoneme) is opposed to ''E'' (silent e), as black is opposed to white. The red of the ''I'', a more truly chromatic colour, then opposes the achromatic black and white that precede it. The green ''U'' follows the red ''I'', "the ''red/green'' chromatic opposition is maximum like the ''black/white'' achromatic opposition which it succeeds". However, from the phonetic point of view, the strongest opposition to the ''I'' is the sound ''ou'' and not the ''U'': Rimbaud would have chosen to oppose the ''I'' to the ''U'', for lack of a French vowel specific to the sound ''ou''. There remains then only one vowel, the ''O'', but two colours, blue and yellow. Under the blue of the ''O'', the yellow of the ''Clairon'' ("Trumpet") appears in the second tercet, as the bright red was underlying the black ''A'' in the first quatrain: the ''O'' contains the blue/yellow opposition, an opposition analogous to that of red and green. In the last line, blue, the most saturated colour after red, is darkened by mixing it with red, thus referring to the black ''A'' at the beginning of the sonnet.


Note


References

{{Rimbaud 1871 poems Arthur Rimbaud French poems Sonnets Synesthesia