What is Baudelaire's artistic proposition, the pioneer of symbolism poetry?

As a famous French poet, Baudelaire wrote many poems in his life. The general tone of Baudelaire's works is realism, and he has a profound indirect influence on his own creation. He refused to adopt that traditional writing style and began to innovate poetry. He has many works in his life, among which Flowers of Evil left the deepest impression on people. Here, we will focus on Baudelaire's work Flowers of Evil.

Baudelaire's work Flowers of Evil can be said to be a transitional representative work of Baudelaire's creative style, because in this work, he abandoned the traditional creative style, but the innovative style he pursued has not yet fully formed. This work is a collection of poems, which consists of six parts. The development of these six parts is a gradual process. In the first part, he first expressed the relationship between melancholy and ideal. The second part is Paris in my own eyes. The third part is mainly about the topic of wine, which is the author's intention to express his inner anguish. He is depressed because his ideal life is obviously different from the present situation of Paris society. Now Paris is not a prosperous and harmonious city as the author imagined, but a variety of world conditions are bleak. In the fourth part, the author begins to turn directly to the guilty "flower" through the drunken scene. The fifth part is to express an idea against God, and Baudelaire praises God. The last part is facing death. After experiencing these deformities and sufferings in the world, he feels that death is the best terminator, and death is both an end and a new beginning.