Saint-John Perse

French poet
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Also known as: Marie-René-Auguste-Aléxis Saint-Léger
Quick Facts
Pseudonym of:
Marie-René-Auguste-Aléxis Saint-Léger Léger
Born:
May 31, 1887, Saint-Léger-les-Feuilles, Guadeloupe
Died:
Sept. 20, 1975, Presqu’île-de-Giens, France
Also Known As:
Marie-René-Auguste-Aléxis Saint-Léger
Awards And Honors:
Nobel Prize (1960)

Saint-John Perse (born May 31, 1887, Saint-Léger-les-Feuilles, Guadeloupe—died Sept. 20, 1975, Presqu’île-de-Giens, France) was a French poet and diplomat who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1960 “for the soaring flight and evocative imagery of his poetry.”

He studied at the universities of Bordeaux and Paris and in 1914 entered the diplomatic service. He went to China and was successively consul at Shanghai and secretary at Peking. In 1921 he attended the Washington disarmament conference as an expert on East Asian affairs. He was later secretary (1921–32) to the French statesman Aristide Briand. In 1933 he was appointed secretary-general at the Foreign Ministry, with the rank of ambassador. Dismissed from office in 1940 and deprived of French citizenship by the Vichy government, he went to the United States, where he worked as consultant on French literature in the Library of Congress. He returned to France in 1957.

Saint-John Perse’s early poetry, published before his diplomatic career began in earnest, includes Éloges (1911; Éloges, and Other Poems), which shows the influence of Symbolism; he later developed a more personal style. The language of his poetry, admired especially by poets for its precision and purity, is difficult, and he made little appeal to the general public. His poetry has been compared to that of Arthur Rimbaud. His hypnotic vision is conveyed by a liturgical metre and exotic words. The best-known early work is the long poem Anabase (1924; Anabasis, translated by T.S. Eliot). In the poems written in exile—Exile (1942; Exile, and Other Poems), Vents (1946; Winds), Amers (1957; Seamarks), Chronique (1960), and Oiseaux (1962; Birds)—he achieved a deeply personal note. For some, Saint-John Perse is the embodiment of the French national spirit: intellectual yet passionate, deeply conscious of the tragedy of life, a man of affairs with an artist’s feeling for perfection and symmetry. Among his better-known poems translated into English are “I have halted my horse by the tree of the doves,” “And you, Seas,” and “Under the bronze leaves a colt was foaled.”

4:043 Dickinson, Emily: A Life of Letters, This is my letter to the world/That never wrote to me; I'll tell you how the Sun Rose/A Ribbon at a time; Hope is the thing with feathers/That perches in the soul
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