Penny Rimbaud circa 1977 Jeremy John Ratter (born 8th June 1943, Northwood, Middlesex, England) is better known under his pseudonym of Penny Rimbaud. ...
Penny Rimbaud, founder and drummer of the anarchistpunk rock band Crass
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Before he was sixteen, in consequence of a violent quarrel with his mother, the boy escaped from Charleville with a packet of his verse, was arrested as a vagabond, and for a fortnight was locked up in the Mazas prison, Paris.
Rimbaud spent from October 1871 to July 1872 in the capital, partly with Verlaine, partly as the guest of Théodore de Banville, and served in the army of the Paris Commune.
Meanwhile Rimbaud, deeply disillusioned, determined to abandon Europe and literature, and he ceased at the age of nineteen to write poetry.
Arthur Rimbaud was born in Charleville, in the northern Ardennes region of France, as the son of Fréderic Rimbaud, a career soldier, who had served in Algria, and Marie-Catherine-Vitale Cuif, an unsentimental matriarch.
Rimbaud's father left the family and from the age of six young Arthur was raised by her strictly religious mother.
Rimbaud died in Marseilles on November 10, 1891, and was buried in Charleville in strict family intimacy.