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Frédéric
Mistral (1830-1914) came from an old and well-to-do family of landowners
that had settled in Provence in the sixteenth century. He was deeply influenced
by his early years in the leisurely and patriarchal manor of his father.
Mistral read law, but after taking his degree devoted himself entirely
to writing poetry in Provençal, the passion for which had been aroused
during his school days by one of his masters, the Provençal poet Joseph
Roumanille. Mistral's aim was to make neo-Provençal a literary language
conforming to fixed standards of purity. For this purpose he spent many
years on the compilation of the Trésor dou Félibrige, a dictionary of
Provençal published by the «Felibrige», a literary society that Mistral
had founded.
Mistral was both an epic and a lyrical poet. His work is determined by
Provence, not only in language, but in content and feeling. Provence is
the true hero of all his poems. His first great success was Miréio (1859),
a story of two star-crossed lovers. It was followed by Calendau (1867),
a fantastic narrative poem about a Provençal fisherman. Other works include
Lis Isclo d'or (1876) [Islands of Gold], a collection of poems; «Nerto»
(1884), a narrative poem based on a chronicle of the Avignon Popes; La
Rèino Jano (1890); and Lou pouémo dou rose (1897) [The Song of the Rhone].
A five-volume edition of his works appeared between 1887 and 1910; three
volumes of unpublished works appeared posthumously (1926-30). Mistral
wrote an autobiography Moun espelido: Memori è raconte (1906) [Memoirs
of Mistral]. His efforts to revive Provençal were at various times supported
by the Academie Française and the Institut de France.
From Nobel Lectures,
Literature 1901-1967.
Frédéric Mistral
died in 1914.
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