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Saint-John
Perse, born in 1887, pseudonym for Alexis Saint-Léger Léger, came from
an old Bourguignon family which settled in the French Antilles in the
seventeenth century and returned to France at the end of the nineteenth
century. Perse studied law at Bordeaux and, after private studies in political
science, went into the diplomatic service in 1914. There he had a brilliant
career. He served first in the Peking embassy, and later in the Foreign
Office where he held top positions under
Aristide Briand and became its
administrative head.
He left France for the United States in 1940 and was deprived of his citizenship
and possessions by the Vichy regime. From 1941 to 1945, he was literary
adviser to the Library of Congress. After the war he did not resume his
diplomatic career and, in 1950, retired officially with the title of Ambassadeur
de France. He has made the United States his permanent residence.
His literary work was published partly under his own name, but chiefly
under the pseudonyms St. J. Perse and Saint-John Perse. After various
poems that reflect the impressions of his childhood, he wrote Anabase
(Anabasis), 1924, while in China. It is an epic poem which puzzled many
critics and gave rise to the suggestion that it could be understood better
by an Asian than by a Westerner. Much of his work was written after he
settled in the United States: Exil (Exile), 1942, in which man and poet
merge and imagery and diction are fully mastered; Poème l'Etrangère (Poem
to a Foreign Lady), 1943; Pluies (Rains), 1943; Neiges (Snows), 1944;
Vents (Winds), 1946, which are the winds of war and peace that blow within
as well as outside of man; Amers (Seamarks), 1957, wherein the sea redounds
as an image of the timelessness of man; and his abstract epic, Chronique
( Chronicle), 1960.
From Nobel Lectures,
Literature 1901-1967.
Saint-John Perse
died in 1975.
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