Roger-Arnould Rivière
French poet
Roger-Arnould Rivière (21 March 1930 – 16 September 1959)[1] was a French poet.
Rivière was born in Tarare, Rhône. Despite not being unpopular among other people, he was disgusted with his looks (especially lips). His poetry both shows and hides this "ugliness". He was an admirer of Dylan Thomas and also Cesare Pavese, whose book he held in his hand when he committed suicide in Lyon by poisoning himself with gas.[2]
Books
- Masques pour une Ordalie (Paragraphes, ed. Millas-Martin, 1953)
- Poésies complètes (ed. Guy Chambelland, 1963; reprinted 1975), published after the author's death
References and external links
- Roger-Arnould Rivière, PDF in French
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- Charles Baudelaire
- Arthur Rimbaud
- Paul Verlaine
- Les Fleurs du mal (Baudelaire)
- Illuminations (Rimbaud)
- Les Poètes maudits (Verlaine)
- Les Chants de Maldoror (Lautréamont)
d'aujourd'hui: 1946–1970
- Antonin Artaud
- Gilberte H. Dallas
- Jean-Pierre Duprey
- André Frédérique
- Roger Milliot
- Gérald Neveu
- Jacques Prevel
- André de Richaud
- Roger-Arnould Rivière
- Armand Robin
- Jean-Philippe Salabreuil
- Ilarie Voronca
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