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Hi Joanne,

Some background info on the possible origins of the prose poem:

Aloysius Bertrand (1807 - 41) may have established the prose poem as a genre with the publication of "Gaspard de la nuit" in 1842.

Later, Baudelaire - influenced by both Bertrand and Poe - produced "Le Spleen de Paris" (published posthumously in 1869) from which the following is taken:

Windows

A man looking out of an open window never sees as much as
the same man looking directly at a closed window. There is no
object more deeply mysterious, no object more pregnant with
suggestion, more insidiously sinister, in short more truly
dazzling than a window lit up from within by even a single
candle. What we can see out in the sunlight is always less
interesting than what we can perceive taking place behind a
pane of windowglass. In that pit, in that blackness or
brightness, life is being lived, life is suffering, life is
dreaming....
Above the wave-crests of the rooftops across the way I
can see a middle-aged woman, face already wrinkled--a poor
woman forever bending over something, who never seems to
leave her room. From just her face and her dress, from
practically nothing at all, I've re-created this woman's story,
or rather her legend; and sometimes I weep while reciting it to
myself.
Some poor old man would have sufficed just as well; I
could with equal ease have invented a legend for him, too.
And so I go to bed with a certain pride, having lived and
suffered for others than myself.
Of course, you may confront me with: "But are you sure
your story is really the true and right one?" But what does it
really matter what the reality outside myself is, as long as it
has helped me to live, to feel that I am alive, to feel the very
nature of the creature that I am.

regards,

maria