Remy de Gourmont

Portrait of Gourmont, by Hélène Dufau.

Remy de Gourmont (April 4, 1858 – September 27, 1915) was a French Symbolist poet, novelist, and influential critic. He was widely read in his era, and an important influence on Blaise Cendrars. The spelling Rémy de Gourmont is incorrect, albeit common and used by Ezra Pound in translations of his work.

Life

De Gourmont was born at Bazoches-au-Houlme, Orne, into a publishing family from Cotentin. He was the son of Count Auguste-Marie de Gourmont and his countess, born Mathilde de Montfort. In 1866 he moved to a manor close to Villedieu near La Manche. He studied law at Caen, and was awarded a bachelor's degree in law in 1879; upon his graduation he moved to Paris.

In 1881, de Gourmont was employed by the Bibliothèque nationale. He began to write for general circulation periodicals such as Le Monde and Le Contemporain. He took an interest in ancient literature, following the footsteps of Gustave Kahn. During this period, he also met Berthe Courrière, model for, and heir of, the sculptor Auguste Clésinger, with whom he formed a lifelong attachment, he and Berthe living together for the rest of their lives.

De Gourmont also began a literary alliance with Joris-Karl Huysmans, to whom he dedicated his prose work Le Latin mystique (Mystical Latin). In 1889 de Gourmont became one of the founders of the Mercure de France, which became a rallying point of the Symbolist movement.[1] Between 1893 and 1894 he was the co-editor, along with Alfred Jarry, of L'Ymagier, a magazine dedicated to symbolist wood carvings. In 1891 he published a polemic called Le Joujou Patriotisme (Patriotism, a toy) in which he argued that France and Germany shared an aesthetic culture and urged a rapprochement between the two countries, contrary to the wishes of nationalists in the French government. This political essay led to his losing his job at the Bibliothèque Nationale,[2] despite Octave Mirbeau's chronicles.

During this same period, de Gourmont was stricken with lupus vulgaris.[3] Disfigured by this illness, he largely retired from public view appearing only at the offices of the Mercure de France. In 1910, de Gourmont met Natalie Clifford Barney, to whom he dedicated his Lettres à l'Amazone (Letters to the Amazon).

De Gourmont's health continued to decline and he began to suffer from locomotor ataxia and be increasingly unable to walk. He was deeply depressed by the outbreak of World War I and died in Paris of cerebral congestion in 1915. Berthe Courrière was his sole heir, inheriting a substantial body of unpublished work which she sent to his brother Jean de Gourmont, and dying within the year. De Gourmont is buried in Père-Lachaise Cemetery.

Works

His poetic works include Litanies de la Rose (1892), Les Saintes du Paradis (1898), and Divertissements (1912). His anthology Hieroglyphes (1894), contains his experiments with the possibilities of sound and rhythm.[4] plunge from perhaps ironic piety to equally ironic blasphemy; they reflect, more than anything else, his interest in medieval Latin literature, and his works led to a fad for late Latin literature among authors like Joris-Karl Huysmans. He was also a literary critic and essayist of great importance, most notably his Le Probleme du Style[5] which was a source book for many of the ideas that inspired the literary developments in both England and France[6] and was also admired by T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound in that capacity. In 1922 Aldous Huxley translated de Gourmont's novel 'A Virgin Heart'.[7] Pound observed in 1915 that the English Imagist poetic movement derived from the French Symbolistes,[8] Eliot describing de Gourmant as the "critical conscience of his generation"[9]

Works

Poetry

  • Litanies de la Rose (1892).
  • Fleurs de Jadis (1893).
  • Hiéroglyphes (1894).
  • Les Saintes du Paradis (1899).
  • Oraisons Mauvaises (1900).
  • Simone (1901).
  • Divertissements (1912).
  • Poésies Inédites (1921).
  • Rimes Retrouvées (1979).
  • L'Odeur des Jacynthes (1991).

Fiction

  • Merlette (novel, 1886).
  • Sixtine (novel, 1890).
  • Le Fantôme (1893).
  • Le Château Singulier (1894).
  • Proses Moroses (short stories, 1894).
  • Histoire Tragique de la Princesse Phénissa (1894).
  • Histoires Magiques (1884).
  • Le Pèlerin du Silence (1896).
  • Phocas (1895).
  • Les Chevaux de Diomède (novel, 1897).
  • D'un Pays Lointain. Miracles. Visages de Femmes (1898).
  • Le Songe d'une Femme (novel, 1899).
  • Une Nuit au Luxembourg (1906).
  • Un Cœur Virginal (1907).
  • Couleurs, Contes Nouveaux Suivi de Choses Anciennes (1908).
  • Lettres d'un Satyre (1913).
  • Lettres à l'Amazone (1914).
  • Monsieur Croquant (1918).
  • La Patience de Grisélidis (1920).
  • Lettres à Sixtine (1921).
  • Le Vase Magique (1923).
  • Fin de Promenade et Trois Autres Contes (short stories, 1925).
  • Le Désarroi (novel, 2006).

Theater

  • Lilith (1892).
  • Théodat (1893).
  • Le Vieux Roi (1897).
  • L'Ombre d'une Femme (1923).

Non-fiction

  • Un Volcan en Éruption (1882).
  • Une Ville Ressuscitée (1883).
  • Bertrand Du Guesclin (1883).
  • Tempêtes et Naufrages (1883).
  • Les Derniers Jours de Pompéi (1884).
  • En Ballon (1884).
  • Les Français au Canada et en Acadie (1888).
  • Chez les Lapons, Mœurs, Coutumes et Légendes de la Laponie Norvégienne (1890).
  • Le Joujou Patriotisme (1891).
  • Le Latin Mystique. Les Poètes de l'Antiphonaire et la Symbolique au Moyen Âge (with a preface by J. K. Huysmans, 1892).
  • L'Idéalisme (1893).
  • L'Ymagier (with Alfred Jarry, 1896).
  • La Poésie Populaire (1896).
  • Le Livre des Masques (1896).
  • Almanach de "L'Ymagier", Zodiacal, Astrologique, Littéraire, Artistique, Magique, Cabalistique et Prophétique (1897).
  • Le Deuxième Livre des Masques (1898).
  • Esthétique de la Langue Française (1899).
  • La Culture des Idées (1900).
  • Preface to Les Petites Revues (1900).
  • Le Chemin de Velours (1902).
  • Le Problème du Style (1902).
  • Épilogues: Réflexions sur la Vie, 1895-1898 (1903).
  • Physique de l'Amour. Essai sur l'Instinct Sexuel (1903).
  • Promenades Littéraires (1904).
  • Judith Gautier (1904).
  • Promenades Philosophiques (1905).
  • Dante, Béatrice et la Poésie Amoureuse. Essai sur l'Idéal Féminin en Italie à la Fin du XIIIe Siècle (1908).
  • Le Chat de Misère. Idées et Images (1912).
  • La Petite Ville (1913).
  • Des pas sur le Sable (1914).
  • La Belgique Littéraire (1915).
  • Pendant l'Orage, Bois d'André Rouveyre (1915).
  • Dans la Tourmente (Avril-juillet 1915) (with a preface by Jean de Gourmont, 1916).
  • Pendant la Guerre. Lettres pour l'Argentine (with a preface by Jean de Gourmont, 1917).
  • Les Idées du Jour (1918).
    • Vol. I: (Octobre 1914-avril 1915).
    • Vol. II: (Mai 1915-septembre 1915).
  • Trois Légendes du Moyen Âge (1919).
  • Pensées Inédites (with a Preface by Guillaume Apollinaire, 1920).
  • Le Livret de "L'Ymagier" (1921).
  • Petits Crayons (1921).
  • Le Puits de la Vérité (1922).
  • Dernières Pensées Inédites (1924).
  • Dissociations (1925).
  • Nouvelles Dissociations (1925).
  • La Fin de l'Art (1925).
  • Les Femmes et le Langage (1925).
  • Deux Poètes de la Nature: Bryant et Emerson (1925).
  • Le Joujou et Trois Autres Essais (1926).
  • Lettres Intimes à l’Amazone (1926).
  • Promenades Littéraires (1929).

In English translation

Quotation

Que tes mains soient bénies, car elles sont impures!
Elles ont des péchés cachés à toutes les jointures;
Leur peau blanche s'est trempée dans l'odeur âpre des caresses
Secrètes, parmi l'ombre blanche où rampent les caresses,
Et l'opale prisonnière qui se meurt à ton doigt,
C'est le dernier soupir de Jésus sur la croix.
---Oraisons mauvaises

References

  1. Burne, Glen S. (1963). Remy de Gourmont: His Ideas and Influence in England and America. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.
  2. Curtis, Michael (1959). Three Against the Third Republic: Sorel, Barrès and Maurras. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, p. 40.
  3. Denkinger, Marc (1937). "Remy de Gourmont Critique". PMLA 52 (4): 1148. JSTOR 458509. Denkinger refers to the disease as "lupus tuberculeux", apparently lupus vulgaris, which is a form of tuberculosis of the skin, unrelated to systemic lupus erythematosus, the disease now commonly known as lupus.
  4. Burne (1963).
  5. Gourmont, Remy de (1902). Le Probleme du Style. Paris: Société du Mercure de France.
  6. Read, Herbert (1957). The Tenth Muse. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
  7. A Virgin Heart (translator Aldous Huxley) Toronto: Musson Books, 1922.
  8. The Ezra Pound Encyclopedia, Ed., Demetres P. Tryphonopoulos and Stephen Adams. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2005, p. 227.
  9. Eliot, T.S. (1928). Preface to The Sacred Wood. London: Methuen & Co.

Further reading

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