Les amours jaunes by Tristan Corbière

(13 User reviews)   4029
By Ashley Gutierrez Posted on Jan 2, 2026
In Category - Ecology
Corbière, Tristan, 1845-1875 Corbière, Tristan, 1845-1875
French
Have you ever felt like an outsider, even in your own life? That's the world of Tristan Corbière's 'Les amours jaunes.' It's not your typical poetry collection—it's raw, sarcastic, and refuses to play nice. Forget pretty verses about love and nature. Corbière gives us the gritty, unglamorous side of a sailor's life in Brittany, his own poor health, and a love that feels more like a bruise than a blessing. The main conflict isn't with some villain; it's the constant, weary fight between the romantic soul he might have been and the cynical, isolated man he became. It's brutally honest, and weirdly beautiful because of it.
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And of all these Mighty Folk, Jupiter was by far the mightiest. [Illustration] THE GOLDEN AGE. Jupiter and his Mighty Folk had not always dwelt amid the clouds on the mountain top. In times long past, a wonderful family called Titans had lived there and had ruled over all the world. There were twelve of them--six brothers and six sisters--and they said that their father was the Sky and their mother the Earth. They had the form and looks of men and women, but they were much larger and far more beautiful. The name of the youngest of these Titans was Saturn; and yet he was so very old that men often called him Father Time. He was the king of the Titans, and so, of course, was the king of all the earth besides. Men were never so happy as they were during Saturn's reign. It was the true Golden Age then. The springtime lasted all the year. The woods and meadows were always full of blossoms, and the music of singing birds was heard every day and every hour. It was summer and autumn, too, at the same time. Apples and figs and oranges always hung ripe from the trees; and there were purple grapes on the vines, and melons and berries of every kind, which the people had but to pick and eat. Of course nobody had to do any kind of work in that happy time. There was no such thing as sickness or sorrow or old age. Men and women lived for hundreds and hundreds of years and never became gray or wrinkled or lame, but were always handsome and young. They had no need of houses, for there were no cold days nor storms nor anything to make them afraid. Nobody was poor, for everybody had the same precious things--the sunlight, the pure air, the wholesome water of the springs, the grass for a carpet, the blue sky for a roof, the fruits and flowers of the woods and meadows. So, of course, no one was richer than another, and there was no money, nor any locks or bolts; for everybody was everybody's friend, and no man wanted to get more of anything than his neighbors had. When these happy people had lived long enough they fell asleep, and their bodies were seen no more. They flitted away through the air, and over the mountains, and across the sea, to a flowery land in the distant west. And some men say that, even to this day, they are wandering happily hither and thither about the earth, causing babies to smile in their cradles, easing the burdens of the toilworn and sick, and blessing mankind everywhere. What a pity it is that this Golden Age should have come to an end! But it was Jupiter and his brothers who brought about the sad change. It is hard to believe it, but men say that Jupiter was the son of the old Titan king, Saturn, and that he was hardly a year old when he began to plot how he might wage war against his father. As soon as he was grown up, he persuaded his brothers, Neptune and Pluto, and his sisters, Juno, Ceres, and Vesta, to join him; and they vowed that they would drive the Titans from the earth. Then followed a long and terrible war. But Jupiter had many mighty helpers. A company of one-eyed monsters called Cyclopes were kept busy all the time, forging thunderbolts in the fire of burning mountains. Three other monsters, each with a hundred hands, were called...

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Let's be clear: 'Les amours jaunes' ('The Yellow Loves') isn't a story with a plot in the usual sense. It's a collection of poems that feel like a diary written with acid instead of ink. Published in 1873, it barely made a ripple until after Corbière's death, when other poets realized how groundbreaking it was.

The Story

There's no linear narrative. Instead, you step into the mind of Tristan Corbière. You see the rough seas and lonely ports of his native Brittany through the eyes of a sailor who's part of the scene yet completely detached from it. You feel the ache of his physical ailments and the sharper pain of his romantic disappointments. The 'love' in the title isn't joyful; it's jaundiced, bitter, and tinged with irony. The 'story' is the portrait of a man building a wall of sarcasm to protect a deeply sensitive heart.

Why You Should Read It

I love this book for its sheer nerve. Corbière wasn't trying to please anyone. He used slang, broke all the formal rules of French poetry, and painted himself as a kind of anti-hero. His voice is so modern—you can hear echoes of his cynical wit in songwriters and poets today. Reading him feels like finding a friend who's willing to say the bleak, funny, uncomfortable things everyone else is thinking but is too polite to voice.

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who think classic poetry is too stuffy and want something that feels alive and prickly. If you enjoy authors who blend darkness with humor, or if you've ever felt like a bit of a misfit, Corbière is your 19th-century soulmate. Just be ready—he doesn't offer comfort, but he offers a fierce, unforgettable kind of truth.



ℹ️ Community Domain

This book is widely considered to be in the public domain. Feel free to use it for personal or commercial purposes.

George Young
2 years ago

The index links actually work, which is rare!

Noah Torres
1 month ago

Beautifully written.

Sarah King
1 year ago

To be perfectly clear, it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. Truly inspiring.

Liam Young
2 years ago

Very helpful, thanks.

Noah Wright
11 months ago

I didn't expect much, but the arguments are well-supported by credible references. Don't hesitate to start reading.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (13 User reviews )

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