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Saint-John Perse

Alexis Leger (pronounced [ləʒe]; 31 May 1887 – 20 September 1975), better known by his pseudonym Saint-John Perse (French: [pɛʁs]; also Saint-Leger Leger),[1] was a French poet-diplomat, awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1960 "for the soaring flight and evocative imagery of his poetry." He was a major French diplomat from 1914 to 1940, after which he lived primarily in the United States until 1967.

Saint-John Perse
BornAlexis Leger
(1887-05-31)31 May 1887
Pointe-à-Pitre, Guadeloupe
Died20 September 1975(1975-09-20) (aged 88)
Giens Peninsula, Provence, France
Pen nameSaint-John Perse
OccupationPoet, diplomat
Alma materUniversity of Bordeaux
Notable awardsNobel Prize in Literature
1960

Early life

Alexis Leger was born in Pointe-à-Pitre, Guadeloupe. His great-grandfather, a solicitor, had settled in Guadeloupe in 1815. His grandfather and father were also solicitors; his father was also a member of the city council. The Leger family owned two plantations, one of coffee (La Joséphine) and the other of sugar (Bois-Debout).

In 1897, Hégésippe Légitimus, the first native Guadeloupan elected president of the Guadeloupe General Council, took office with a vindictive agenda towards colonists. The Leger family returned to metropolitan France in 1899 and settled in Pau. The young Alexis felt like an expatriate and spent much of his time hiking, fencing, riding horses and sailing in the Atlantic. He enrolled at Lycée Louis-Barthou and passed the baccalauréat with honours and began studying law at the University of Bordeaux. When his father died in 1907, the resulting strain on his family's finances led Leger to temporarily interrupt his studies, but he eventually completed his degree in 1910.

In 1904, he met the poet Francis Jammes at Orthez, who became a close friend. He frequented cultural clubs, and met Paul Claudel, Odilon Redon, Valery Larbaud and André Gide.[2] He wrote short poems inspired by the story of Robinson Crusoe (Images à Crusoe) and undertook a translation of Pindar. He published his first book of poetry, Éloges, in 1911.

Diplomatic service

In 1914, he joined the French diplomatic service, and spent some of his first years in Spain, Germany and the United Kingdom. When World War I broke out, he was a press corps attaché for the government. From 1916 to 1921, he was secretary to the French embassy in Peking. He probably had a secret relationship with Madame Dan Pao Tchao (née Nellie Yu Roung Ling), although according to the latter, he was just using her for obtaining information from Peking high society.[3] In 1921 in Washington, DC, while taking part in a world disarmament conference, he was noticed by Aristide Briand, Prime Minister of France, who recruited him as his assistant. In Paris, he got to know the fellow intellectual poet Larbaud, who used his influence to get the poem Anabase [fr] published, written during Leger's stay in China.

Leger was warm to classical music and knew Igor Stravinsky, Nadia Boulanger, and Les Six.

 
Saint-John Perse attends the negotiations for the Munich Agreement on 29 September 1938. He stands behind Mussolini, right.

While in China, Leger had written his first extended poem Anabase, publishing it in 1924 under the pseudonym "Saint-John Perse", which he employed for the rest of his life. He then published nothing for two decades, not even a re-edition of his debut book, as he believed it inappropriate for a diplomat to publish fiction. After Briand's death in 1932, Leger served as the General Secretary of the French Foreign Office (Quai d'Orsay) until 1940.

Within the Foreign Office he led the optimist faction that believed that Germany was unstable and that if Britain and France stood up to Hitler, he would back down.[4] He accompanied the French Prime Minister Édouard Daladier at the Munich Conference in 1938, where the cession of part of Czechoslovakia to Germany was agreed to. He was dismissed from his post right after the Fall of France in May 1940, as he was a known anti-Nazi. In mid-July 1940, Leger began a long exile in Washington, DC.

Later life

In 1940, the Vichy government dismissed him from the Légion d'honneur order and revoked his French citizenship (it was reinstated after the war). He was in some financial difficulty as an exile in Washington until Archibald MacLeish, the director of the Library of Congress and himself a poet, raised enough private donations to enable the library to employ him until his official retirement from the French civil service in 1947. He declined a teaching position at Harvard University.

During his American exile, he wrote his long poems Exil, Vents, Pluies, Neiges, Amers, and Chroniques. He remained in the US long after the end of the war. He travelled extensively, observing nature and enjoying the friendship of US Attorney General Francis Biddle and his spouse, philanthropist Beatrice Chanler,[5] and author Katherine Garrison Chapin. He was on good terms with the UN Secretary General and author Dag Hammarskjöld.

In 1957, American friends gave him a villa at Giens, Provence, France. He then split his time between France and the United States. In 1958, he married the American Dorothy Milburn Russell.

In 1960, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. After receiving the Nobel Prize, he wrote the long poems Chronique, Oiseaux and Chant pour un équinoxe and the shorter Nocturne and Sécheresse. In 1962, Georges Braque worked with master printmaker Aldo Crommelynck to create a series of etchings and aquatints, L'Ordre des Oiseaux,[6] which was published with the text of Perse's Oiseaux by Au Vent d'Arles.[7]

A few months before he died, Leger donated his library, manuscripts and private papers to Fondation Saint-John Perse, a research centre devoted to his life and work (Cité du Livre, Aix-en-Provence), which remains active to the present day. He died in his villa in Giens and is buried nearby.

Works

  • Éloges (1911, transl. Eugène Jolas in 1928, Louise Varèse in 1944, Eleanor Clark and Roger Little in 1965, King Bosley in 1970)
  • Anabase (1924, transl. T.S. Eliot in 1930, Roger Little in 1970)
  • Exil (1942, transl. Denis Devlin, 1949)
  • Pluies (1943, transl. Denis Devlin in 1944)
  • Poème à l'étrangère (1943, transl. Denis Devlin in 1946)
  • Neiges (1944, transl. Denis Devlin in 1945, Walter J. Strachan in 1947)
  • Vents (1946, transl. Hugh Chisholm in 1953)
  • Amers (1957, transl. Wallace Fowlie in 1958, extracts by George Huppert in 1956, Samuel E. Morison in 1964)
  • Chronique (1960, transl. Robert Fitzgerald in 1961)
  • Poésie (1961, transl. W. H. Auden in 1961)
  • Oiseaux (1963, transl. Wallace Fowlie in 1963, Robert Fitzgerald in 1966, Roger Little in 1967, Derek Mahon in 2002)
  • Pour Dante (1965, transl. Robert Fitzgerald in 1966)
  • Chanté par celle qui fut là (1969, transl. Richard Howard in 1970)
  • Chant pour un équinoxe (1971)
  • Nocturne (1973)
  • Sécheresse (1974)
  • Collected Poems (1971) Bollingen Series, Princeton University Press.
  • Œuvres complètes (1972), Bibliothèque de la Pléiade, Gallimard. The definitive edition of his work. Leger designed and edited this volume, which includes a detailed chronology of his life, speeches, tributes, hundreds of letters, notes, a bibliography of the secondary literature, and extensive extracts from those parts of that literature the author liked. Enlarged edition, 1982.

Homages[8]

See also

Secondary literature in English

1936

  • S. A. Rhodes, "Poetry of Saint-John Perse", The Sewanee Review, vol. XLIV, no. 1, January – March 1936

1944

  • Paul Rosenfeld, "The Poet Perse", The Nation, New York, vol. CLVIII, no. 20, 15 May 1944
  • John Gould Fletcher, "On the Poetry of Alexis Saint-Leger Leger", Quarterly Review of Literature, vol. II, Autumn 1944
  • Edouard Roditi, "Éloges and other poems, Saint-John Perse", Contemporary Poetry, Baltimore, vol. IV, no. 3, Autumn 1944

1945

  • Conrad Aiken, "Rains, by Saint-John Perse. Whole Meaning or Doodles", New Republic, Washington, no. CXII, 16 April 1945

1948

  • David Gascoigne, "Vents by Saint-John Perse", Poetry, London, June–July 1948

1949

  • Valery Larbaud, préface à Anabasis, translated by Jacques Le Clerq, in Anabasis, New York, Harcourt, Brace and C°, 1949
  • Hugo von Hofmannsthal, préface à Anabasis, translated by James Stern, ibid.
  • Giuseppe Ungaretti, préface à Anabasis, translated by Adrienne Foulke, ibid.
  • Archibald MacLeish, "The Living Spring", Saturday Review, vol. XXXII, no. 24, 16 July 1949
  • Hubert Creekmore, "An Epic Poem of the Primitive Man", New York Times Book Review, 25 December 1949

1950

  • Allen Tate, "Hommage to Saint-John Perse", Poetry, Chicago, LXXV, January 1950
  • Harold W. Watts, "Anabase: The Endless Film", University of Toronto Quarterly, vol XIX, no. 3, April 1950
  • Stephen Spender, "Tribute to Saint-John Perse", Cahiers de la Pléiade, Paris, Summer–Autumn 1950

1952

  • Amos Wilder, "Nature and the immaculate world in Saint-John Perse", in Modern Poetry and the Christian tradition, New York, 1952
  • Katherine Garrison Chapin, "Saint-John Perse. Notes on Some Poetic Contrasts", The Sewanee Review

1953

  • Paul Claudel, "A Poem by St.-John Perse", translation by Hugh Chisholm, in Winds, New York, Pantheon Books, Bollingen Series, no. 34, 1953.
  • Gaëtan Picon, "The Most Proudly Free", translation by Willard R. Trask, ibid, 1st edition in Les Cahiers de la Pléiade, no. 10, été–automne 1950.
  • Albert Béguin, "A Poetry Marked by Scansion", translation by Willard R. Trask, ibid, 1st edition in Les Cahiers de la Pléiade, no. 10, été–automne 1950.
  • Gabriel Bounoure, "St.-John Perse and Poetic Ambiguity", translation by Willard R. Trask, ibid, 1st edition in Les Cahiers de la Pléiade, no. 10, été–automne 1950
  • Wallace Fowlie, "The Poetics of Saint-John Perse", Poetry,, Chicago, vol. LXXXII, no. 6, September 1953
  • Hayden Carruth, "Winds by Saint-John Perse... Parnassus stormed", The Partisan Review, vol. XX, no. 5, September–October 1953
  • Henri Peyre, "Exile by Saint-John Perse", Shenandoah, Lexington, vol. V, Winter 1953

1956

  • "Tribute to Saint-John Perse", The Berkeley Review (Arthur J. Knodel, René Girard, Georges Huppert), vol. I, no. 1, Berkeley, 1956

1957

  • Archibald MacLeish, "Saint-John Perse. The Living Spring", in A continuing journey. Essays and Addresses, Boston, 1957
  • Wallace Fowlie, "Saint-John Perse", in A Guide to Contemporary French Literature, From Valéry to Sartre, New York, 1957
  • Anonymous, "Saint-John Perse, Poet of the Far Shore", Times Literary Supplement, London, 2 March 1957
  • Paul West, "The Revival of Epic", The Twentieth Century, London, July 1957

1958

  • Conrad Aiken, A Reviewer's A.B.C., Collected criticism from 1916, New York, 1958
  • Jacques Guicharnaud, "Vowels of the Sea: Amers", Yale French Studies, no. 21, Spring–Summer 1958
  • Martin Turnell, "The Epic of Saint-John Perse", The Commonweal, LXX, 17 July 1958
  • W. H. Auden, "A Song of Life's Power to Renew", New York Times Book Review, vol. LXIII, no. 30, 27 July 1958
  • Melvin Maddocks, "Perse as Cosmologist", Christian Science Monitor, 4 September 1958
  • John Marshall, "The Greatest Living French Poet", The Yale Review, XLVIII, September 1958
  • Katherine Garrison Chapin, "Perse On the Sea With Us: Amers", The New Republic, Washington, CXXXIX, 27 October 1958

1959

  • H.-J. Kaplan,"Saint-John Perse: The Recreation of the World", The Reporter, XV, 22 January 1959
  • Raymond Mortimer, "Mr Eliot and Mr Perse: Two Fine Poets in tandem", Sunday Times, London, May 1959
  • Philip Toynbee, "A Great Modern Poet", The Observer, London, 31 May 1959
  • Charles Guenther, "Prince Among the Prophets", Poetry, Chicago, vol. XCIII, no. 5, 1959

1976

  • Joseph Henry McMahon, A Bibliography of works by and about Saint-John Perse, Stanford University, 1959

1960

  • Stanley Burnshaw, "Saint-John Perse", in The Poem Itself, New York, 1960
  • Joseph MacMahon, "A Question of Man", Commonweal, LXXIII, 13 January 1960
  • Byron Colt, "Saint-John Perse", Accent, New York, XX, 3, Summer 1960
  • Joseph Barry, "Science and Poetry Merge in the Crucial Stage of Creation", New York Post, 12 December 1960

1961

  • Bernard Weinberg, The Limits of Symbolism. Studies of Five Modern French Poets. Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Mallarmé, Valéry, Saint-John Perse, Manchester, 1961
  • Anthony Hartley, "Saint-John Perse", Encounter, London, no. 2, Feb. 1961
  • Octavio Paz, "Saint-John Perse as Historian", The Nation, New York, 17 June 1961
  • Donald Davis, "Chronique by Saint-John Perse", New Statesman, London, LXII, 26 July 1961
  • John Montague, "The Poetry of Saint-John Perse", Irish Times, Dublin, 25 August 1961
  • Léon-S. Roudiez, "The Epochal Poetry of Saint-John Perse", Columbia University Forum, New York, vol. IV, 1961

1962

  • Anthony Curtis, "Back to the Elements", The Sunday Telegraph, London, 7 January 1962
  • Amos Wilder, "St-John Perse and the Future of Man", Christianity and Crisis, New York, vol. XXI, no. 24, 22 January 1962
  • Ronald Gaskell, "The Poetry of Saint-John Perse", The London Magazine, vol. I, no. 12, March 1962
  • Peter Russel, "Saint-John Perse's Poetical works", Agenda, London, May–June 1962
  • Cecil Hemley, "Onward and Upward", Hudson Review, XV, Summer 1962

1963

  • Eugenia Maria Arsenault, Color Imagery in the Vents of Saint-John Perse, Catholic University of America, Washington, 1963

1964

  • Arthur J. Knodel, "Towards an Understanding of Anabase", PMLA, June 1964
  • Eugenia Vassylkivsky, The Main Themes of Saint-John Perse, Columbia University, 1964

1966

  • Arthur J. Knodel, Saint-John Perse. A Study of His Poetry, Edimburg, 1966
  • R. W. Baldner, "Saint-John Perse as Poet Prophet" in Proceedings of the Pacific Northwest Conference on Foreign Languages, vol. XVII, no. 22, 1966

1967

  • Roger Little, Word Index of the Complete Poetry and Prose of Saint-John Perse, Durham, 1966 and 1967
  • M. Owen de Jaham, An Introduction to Saint-John Perse, University of South Western Louisiana, 1967

1968

  • Kathleen Raine, "Saint-John Perse, Poet of the Marvellous", Encounter, vol. IV, no. 29, October 1967; idem in Defending Ancient Springs, Oxford, 1968

1969

  • Roger Little, "T. S. Eliot and Saint-John Perse", The Arlington Quarterly Review, University of Texas, vol. II, no. 2, Autumn 1969

1970

  • Charles Delamori, "The Love and Aggression of Saint-John Perse's Pluies", Yale French Studies, 1970
  • Richar O. Abel, The Relationship Between the Poetry of T. S. Eliot and Saint-John Perse, University of Southern California, 1970

1971

  • Roger Little, Saint-John Perse. A Bibliography for Students of His Poetry, London, 1971
  • Ruth N. Horry, Paul Claudel and Saint-John Perse. Parallels and Contrasts, University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, 1971
  • Pierre Emmanuel, Praise and Presence, with a Bibliography, Washington, 1971
  • Candace Uter De Russy, Saint-John Perse's Chronique: A study of Kronos and Other Themes through Imagery, Tulane University, 1971
  • Marc Goodhart, Poet and Poem in Exile, University of Colorado, 1971

1972

  • René Galand, Saint-John Perse, New York, 1972
  • Richard Ruland, America as Metaphor in Modern French Letters. Celine, Julien Green and Saint-John Perse, New York, 1972

1973

  • Roger Little, Saint-John Perse, University of London, 1973
  • Carol Nolan Rigolot, The Dialectics of Poetry: Saint-John Perse, University of Michigan, 1973

1974

  • Richard-Allen Laden, Saint-John Perse's Vents: From Theme to Poetry, Yale University, 1974

1976

  • Elizabeth Jackson, Worlds Apart Structural Parallels in the Poetry of Paul Valéry, Saint-John Perse, Benjamin Perret and René Char, The Hague, 1976
  • Arthur J. Knodel, Saint-John Perse: Lettres, Princeton, 1979
  • Edith Jonssen-Devillers, Cosmos and the Sacred in the Poetics of Octavio Paz and Saint-John Perse, San Diego, University of California, 1976
  • John M. Cocking, "The Migrant Muse: Saint-John Perse", Encounter, London, XLVI, March 1976
  • Elizabeth Jennings, "Saint-John Perse: the Worldly Seer", in Seven Men of Vision: an Appreciation, London, 1976
  • Roger Little, "A Letter About Conrad by Saint-John Perse", Conradiana, Lubbock, Texas, VIII, no. 3, Autumn 1976
  • Anonymous, "An Exile for Posterity", The Times Literary Supplement, London, no. 3860, 5 March 1976

1977

  • Roger Little, "The Eye at the Center of Things", Times Literary Supplement, London, no. 3941, 7 October 1977
  • Roger Little, "Saint-John Perse and Joseph Conrad: Some Notes and an Uncollected Letter", Modern language Review, Cambridge, LXII, no. 4, October 1977
  • Roger Little, "The World and the Word in Saint-John Perse", in Sensibility and Creation: Essays in XXth Century French Poetry, London and New York, 1977
  • John D. Price, "Man, Women and the Problem of Suffering in Saint-John Perse", Modern Language Review, Cambridge, LXII, no. 3, July 1977

1978

  • Reino Virtanen, "Between Saint-John and Persius: Saint-John Perse and Paul Valéry", Symposium, Summer 1978
  • Roger Little, "Saint-John Perse and Denis Devlin: A compagnonage", Irish University Review, Dublin, VIII, Autumn 1978

1979

  • Roger Little, "Claudel and Saint-John Perse. The Convert and the Unconvertible", Claudel Studies, VI, 1979

1982

  • Steven Winspur, "Saint-John Perse's Oiseaux: the Poem, the Painting and Beyond", L'Esprit Créateur, Columbia University, XXII, no. 4, Winter 1982

1983

  • William Calin, "Saint-John Perse", in A Muse for Heroes: Nine Centuries of the Epic in France, University of Toronto Press, 1983
  • Steven Winspur, "The Poetic Significance of the Thing-in-itself", Sub-stance, no. 41, 1983
  • Joseph T. Krause, "The Visual Form of Saint-John Perse's Imagery", Aix-en-Provence, 1983
  • Peter Fell, "A Critical Study of Saint-John Perse's Chronique" . MA dissertation, University of Manchester, 1983

1984

  • Saint-John Perse: Documentary Exhibition and Works on the Poem Amers, Washington, 1984–1985

1985

  • Erika Ostrovsky, Under the Sign of Ambiguity: Saint-John Perse/Alexis Leger, New York, 1985

1988

  • Steven Winspur, Saint-John Perse and the Imaginary Reader, Geneva, 1988
  • Peter Baker, "Perse on Poetry", The Connecticut Review, Willimantic, XI, no. 1, 1988
  • Peter Baker, "Saint-John Perse, Alexis Leger, 1960", The Nobel Prize Winners: Literature, April 1988

1990

  • Peter Baker, "Exile in Language", Studies in 20th century Literature, Manhattan (Kansas) and Lincoln (Nebraska), XIV, no. 2, Summer 1990
  • Erika Ostrovsky, "Saint-John Perse", The Twentieth Century, New York, 1990

1991

  • Luigi Fiorenzato, Anabasis/Anabase: T. S. Eliot translates Saint-John Perse, Padova, 1991–1992
  • Peter Baker, "Metric, Naming and Exile: Perse, Pound, Genet", in The Scope of Words in Honor to Albert S. Cook, New York, 1991
  • Peter Baker, Obdurate Brilliance: Exteriority and the Modern Long Poem, University of Florida Press, 1991

1992

  • Josef Krause, "The Two Axes of Saint-John Perse's Imagery", Studi Francesi, Torino, XXXVI, no. 106, 1992
  • Carol Rigolot, "Ancestors, Mentors and 'Grands Aînés': Saint-John Perse's Chronique", Literary Generations, Lexington, 1992

1994

  • Richard L. Sterling, The Prose Works of Saint-John Perse. Towards an Understanding of His Poetry, New York, 1994

1996

  • Richard A. York, "Saint-John Perse, the Diplomat", Claudel Studies, XXIII, 1–2, 1996

1997

  • Judith Urian, The Biblical Context in Saint-John Perse's Work, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 1997

1999

  • Mary Gallagher, "Seminal Praise: The Poetry of Saint-John Perse", in An Introduction to Caribbean Francophone writing, Oxford, 1999
  • Carol Rigolot, "Saint-John Perse's Oiseaux: from Audubon to Braque and Beyond", in Resonant Themes: Literature, History and the Arts in XIXth and XXth Century Europe, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 1999
  • Judith Urian, "Delicious Abyss: the Biblical Darkness in the Poetry of Saint-John Perse", Comparative literature studies, XXXVI, no. 3, 1999

2000

  • Jeffrey Mehlman, Émigré New York. French Intellectuals in Wartime, Manhattan, 1940–1944, Baltimore and London, 2000
  • Zeyma Kamalick, In Defense of Poetry: T. S. Eliot's Translation of Anabase by Saint-John Perse, Princeton, 2000

2001

  • Emmanuelle Hériard Dubreuil, Une certaine idée de la France: Alexis Leger's Views During the Occupation of France June 1940 – August 1944, London School of Economics, 2001
  • Pierre Lastenet, Saint-John Perse and the Sacred, University of London, 2001
  • Marie-Noëlle Little, The Poet and the Diplomat [Correspondence Saint-John Perse/Dag Hammarskjöld], Syracuse University Press, 2001
  • Marie-Noëlle Little, "Travellers in Two Worlds: Dag Hammarskjöld and Alexis Leger", in Development Dialogue, Uppsala, 2001

2002

  • Carol Rigolot, Forged Genealogies: Saint-John Perse's Conversations with Culture, The University of North Carolina Press, 2002

2003

  • Mary Gallagher, "Remembering Caribbean Childhoods, Saint-John Perse's Éloges and Patrick Chamoiseau's Antan d'enfance", in The Francophone Caribbean Today: Literature, Language, Culture, The University of West Indies Press, 2003

2004

  • Colette Camelin, "Hermes and Aphrodite in Saint-John Perse's Winds and Seamarks", in Hermes and Aphrodite Encounters, Birmingham, 2004
  • Patrick Chamoiseau, "Excerpts Freely Adapted From Meditations for Saint-John Perse", Literature and Arts of the Americas, XXXVII, no. 1

2005

  • Henriette Levillain, Saint-John Perse, Ministère des Affaires étrangères, Paris, 2005
  • Joseph Acquisto, "The Lyric of Narrative: Exile, Poetry and Story in Saint-John Perse and Elisabeth Bishop", Orbis Litterarum, no. 5, 2005
  • Xue Die, "Saint-John Perse's Palm Trees", American Letters and Commentary, no. 17, 2005
  • Valérie Loichot, "Saint-John Perse's Imagined Shelter: J'habiterai mon nom, in Discursive Geographies, Writing Space and Place in French, Amsterdam, 2005
  • Carol Rigolot, "Blood Brothers: Archibald MacLeish and Saint-John Perse", Archibald MacLeish Journal, Summer 2005
  • Carol Rigolot, "Saint-John Perse", in Transatlantic relations, France and the Americas, Culture, Politics, History, Oxford and Santa Barbara, 2005

2007

  • Valérie Loichot, Orphan Narratives: The Postplantation Literature of Faulkner, Glissant, Morrison and Saint-John Perse, University of Virginia Press, 2007
  • Harris Feinsod, "Reconsidering the 'Spiritual Economy': Saint-John Perse, His Translators and the Limits of Internationalism", "Benjamin, Poetry and Criticism", Telos, New York, no. 38, 2007
  • Peter Poiana, "The Order of Nemesis in Saint-John Perse's Vents", Neophilologus, vol. 91, no. 1, 2007
  • Jeffrey Meyers, "The Literary Politics of the Nobel Prize", Antioch Review, vol. 65, no. 2, 2007

Notes

  1. ^ During his lifetime, he wanted to make believe that Saint-Leger Leger was his real name.
  2. ^ They are some of the intellectual friendships over the course of his lifetime that are attested to by the correspondence published in his Œuvres Complètes.
  3. ^ Meltz, Renaud (2008). Alexis Léger dit Saint-John Perse (in French). Paris: Éditions Flammarion. p. 200. ISBN 978-2-0812-0582-6.
  4. ^ May, Ernest Strange Victory, New York: Hill & Wang, 2000, p. 150.
  5. ^ Hunt, Gérard M., author. (March 2010). Rambling on Saint Martin : a witnessing. ISBN 978-1-4269-0045-7. OCLC 673142947. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Grimes, William (January 29, 2009). "Aldo Crommelynck, Master Printer for Prominent Artists, Is Dead at 77". The New York Times. Retrieved 2012-05-27.
  7. ^ Mellby, Julie L. (November 30, 2011). "L'ordre des oiseaux". Highlights from the Graphic Arts Collection, Princeton University Library. Retrieved 2012-05-27.
  8. ^ "Saint-John Perse", Wikipédia (in French), 2022-11-19, retrieved 2022-11-19
  9. ^ "À propos | Lycée Saint-John Perse". Lycée SJ Perse (in French). Retrieved 2022-11-19.

External links

  • Fondation Saint-John Perse, Aix-en-Provence, Website of the Aix-en-Provence Fondation about the poet and diplomat (in French)
  • Saint-John Perse on Nobelprize.org  
  • Saint-John Perse, le poète aux masques, site devoted to the author (in French)
  • Liste de diffusion SJPinfo (news) devoted to Saint-John Perse

saint, john, perse, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2011, learn, when, remove, this, template, message,. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alexis Leger pronounced leʒe 31 May 1887 20 September 1975 better known by his pseudonym Saint John Perse French pɛʁs also Saint Leger Leger 1 was a French poet diplomat awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1960 for the soaring flight and evocative imagery of his poetry He was a major French diplomat from 1914 to 1940 after which he lived primarily in the United States until 1967 Saint John PerseBornAlexis Leger 1887 05 31 31 May 1887Pointe a Pitre GuadeloupeDied20 September 1975 1975 09 20 aged 88 Giens Peninsula Provence FrancePen nameSaint John PerseOccupationPoet diplomatAlma materUniversity of BordeauxNotable awardsNobel Prize in Literature 1960 Contents 1 Early life 2 Diplomatic service 3 Later life 4 Works 5 Homages 8 6 See also 7 Secondary literature in English 8 Notes 9 External linksEarly life EditAlexis Leger was born in Pointe a Pitre Guadeloupe His great grandfather a solicitor had settled in Guadeloupe in 1815 His grandfather and father were also solicitors his father was also a member of the city council The Leger family owned two plantations one of coffee La Josephine and the other of sugar Bois Debout In 1897 Hegesippe Legitimus the first native Guadeloupan elected president of the Guadeloupe General Council took office with a vindictive agenda towards colonists The Leger family returned to metropolitan France in 1899 and settled in Pau The young Alexis felt like an expatriate and spent much of his time hiking fencing riding horses and sailing in the Atlantic He enrolled at Lycee Louis Barthou and passed the baccalaureat with honours and began studying law at the University of Bordeaux When his father died in 1907 the resulting strain on his family s finances led Leger to temporarily interrupt his studies but he eventually completed his degree in 1910 In 1904 he met the poet Francis Jammes at Orthez who became a close friend He frequented cultural clubs and met Paul Claudel Odilon Redon Valery Larbaud and Andre Gide 2 He wrote short poems inspired by the story of Robinson Crusoe Images a Crusoe and undertook a translation of Pindar He published his first book of poetry Eloges in 1911 Diplomatic service EditIn 1914 he joined the French diplomatic service and spent some of his first years in Spain Germany and the United Kingdom When World War I broke out he was a press corps attache for the government From 1916 to 1921 he was secretary to the French embassy in Peking He probably had a secret relationship with Madame Dan Pao Tchao nee Nellie Yu Roung Ling although according to the latter he was just using her for obtaining information from Peking high society 3 In 1921 in Washington DC while taking part in a world disarmament conference he was noticed by Aristide Briand Prime Minister of France who recruited him as his assistant In Paris he got to know the fellow intellectual poet Larbaud who used his influence to get the poem Anabase fr published written during Leger s stay in China Leger was warm to classical music and knew Igor Stravinsky Nadia Boulanger and Les Six Saint John Perse attends the negotiations for the Munich Agreement on 29 September 1938 He stands behind Mussolini right While in China Leger had written his first extended poem Anabase publishing it in 1924 under the pseudonym Saint John Perse which he employed for the rest of his life He then published nothing for two decades not even a re edition of his debut book as he believed it inappropriate for a diplomat to publish fiction After Briand s death in 1932 Leger served as the General Secretary of the French Foreign Office Quai d Orsay until 1940 Within the Foreign Office he led the optimist faction that believed that Germany was unstable and that if Britain and France stood up to Hitler he would back down 4 He accompanied the French Prime Minister Edouard Daladier at the Munich Conference in 1938 where the cession of part of Czechoslovakia to Germany was agreed to He was dismissed from his post right after the Fall of France in May 1940 as he was a known anti Nazi In mid July 1940 Leger began a long exile in Washington DC Later life EditIn 1940 the Vichy government dismissed him from the Legion d honneur order and revoked his French citizenship it was reinstated after the war He was in some financial difficulty as an exile in Washington until Archibald MacLeish the director of the Library of Congress and himself a poet raised enough private donations to enable the library to employ him until his official retirement from the French civil service in 1947 He declined a teaching position at Harvard University During his American exile he wrote his long poems Exil Vents Pluies Neiges Amers and Chroniques He remained in the US long after the end of the war He travelled extensively observing nature and enjoying the friendship of US Attorney General Francis Biddle and his spouse philanthropist Beatrice Chanler 5 and author Katherine Garrison Chapin He was on good terms with the UN Secretary General and author Dag Hammarskjold In 1957 American friends gave him a villa at Giens Provence France He then split his time between France and the United States In 1958 he married the American Dorothy Milburn Russell In 1960 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature After receiving the Nobel Prize he wrote the long poems Chronique Oiseaux and Chant pour un equinoxe and the shorter Nocturne and Secheresse In 1962 Georges Braque worked with master printmaker Aldo Crommelynck to create a series of etchings and aquatints L Ordre des Oiseaux 6 which was published with the text of Perse s Oiseaux by Au Vent d Arles 7 A few months before he died Leger donated his library manuscripts and private papers to Fondation Saint John Perse a research centre devoted to his life and work Cite du Livre Aix en Provence which remains active to the present day He died in his villa in Giens and is buried nearby Works EditEloges 1911 transl Eugene Jolas in 1928 Louise Varese in 1944 Eleanor Clark and Roger Little in 1965 King Bosley in 1970 Anabase 1924 transl T S Eliot in 1930 Roger Little in 1970 Exil 1942 transl Denis Devlin 1949 Pluies 1943 transl Denis Devlin in 1944 Poeme a l etrangere 1943 transl Denis Devlin in 1946 Neiges 1944 transl Denis Devlin in 1945 Walter J Strachan in 1947 Vents 1946 transl Hugh Chisholm in 1953 Amers 1957 transl Wallace Fowlie in 1958 extracts by George Huppert in 1956 Samuel E Morison in 1964 Chronique 1960 transl Robert Fitzgerald in 1961 Poesie 1961 transl W H Auden in 1961 Oiseaux 1963 transl Wallace Fowlie in 1963 Robert Fitzgerald in 1966 Roger Little in 1967 Derek Mahon in 2002 Pour Dante 1965 transl Robert Fitzgerald in 1966 Chante par celle qui fut la 1969 transl Richard Howard in 1970 Chant pour un equinoxe 1971 Nocturne 1973 Secheresse 1974 Collected Poems 1971 Bollingen Series Princeton University Press Œuvres completes 1972 Bibliotheque de la Pleiade Gallimard The definitive edition of his work Leger designed and edited this volume which includes a detailed chronology of his life speeches tributes hundreds of letters notes a bibliography of the secondary literature and extensive extracts from those parts of that literature the author liked Enlarged edition 1982 Homages 8 EditA bronze monument Hommage a Saint John Perse sculpted by Patrice Alexandre ordered by the french Ministry of Culture in 1985 was inaugurated in 1992 in the garden of the National Museum of Natural History in Paris Andras Beck notably produced a bronze mask of Saint John Perse covered with gold leaf which served as a cover vignette for his work in the edition of the Bibliotheque de la Pleiade The Saint John Perse Museum is partly dedicated to him in Point a Pitre his birthplace His name was given to various streets and libraries in France The 2007 promotion of heritage curators from the french National Heritage Institute bears his name A Reims tramway station bears his name In October 1980 the French Post dedicated a stamp to him with a face value of 1 40 0 30 francs available simultaneously in Pointe a Pitre and Aix en Provence For the centenary of the creation of the Nobel Prizes the British Virgin Islands issued in 2001 a 40 cent stamp bearing his image The Saint John Perse high school in Pau bears his name 9 See also EditLe Monde s 100 Books of the Century a list which includes AmersSecondary literature in English Edit1936 S A Rhodes Poetry of Saint John Perse The Sewanee Review vol XLIV no 1 January March 19361944 Paul Rosenfeld The Poet Perse The Nation New York vol CLVIII no 20 15 May 1944 John Gould Fletcher On the Poetry of Alexis Saint Leger Leger Quarterly Review of Literature vol II Autumn 1944 Edouard Roditi Eloges and other poems Saint John Perse Contemporary Poetry Baltimore vol IV no 3 Autumn 19441945 Conrad Aiken Rains by Saint John Perse Whole Meaning or Doodles New Republic Washington no CXII 16 April 19451948 David Gascoigne Vents by Saint John Perse Poetry London June July 19481949 Valery Larbaud preface a Anabasis translated by Jacques Le Clerq in Anabasis New York Harcourt Brace and C 1949 Hugo von Hofmannsthal preface a Anabasis translated by James Stern ibid Giuseppe Ungaretti preface a Anabasis translated by Adrienne Foulke ibid Archibald MacLeish The Living Spring Saturday Review vol XXXII no 24 16 July 1949 Hubert Creekmore An Epic Poem of the Primitive Man New York Times Book Review 25 December 19491950 Allen Tate Hommage to Saint John Perse Poetry Chicago LXXV January 1950 Harold W Watts Anabase The Endless Film University of Toronto Quarterly vol XIX no 3 April 1950 Stephen Spender Tribute to Saint John Perse Cahiers de la Pleiade Paris Summer Autumn 19501952 Amos Wilder Nature and the immaculate world in Saint John Perse in Modern Poetry and the Christian tradition New York 1952 Katherine Garrison Chapin Saint John Perse Notes on Some Poetic Contrasts The Sewanee Review1953 Paul Claudel A Poem by St John Perse translation by Hugh Chisholm in Winds New York Pantheon Books Bollingen Series no 34 1953 Gaetan Picon The Most Proudly Free translation by Willard R Trask ibid 1st edition in Les Cahiers de la Pleiade no 10 ete automne 1950 Albert Beguin A Poetry Marked by Scansion translation by Willard R Trask ibid 1st edition in Les Cahiers de la Pleiade no 10 ete automne 1950 Gabriel Bounoure St John Perse and Poetic Ambiguity translation by Willard R Trask ibid 1st edition in Les Cahiers de la Pleiade no 10 ete automne 1950 Wallace Fowlie The Poetics of Saint John Perse Poetry Chicago vol LXXXII no 6 September 1953 Hayden Carruth Winds by Saint John Perse Parnassus stormed The Partisan Review vol XX no 5 September October 1953 Henri Peyre Exile by Saint John Perse Shenandoah Lexington vol V Winter 19531956 Tribute to Saint John Perse The Berkeley Review Arthur J Knodel Rene Girard Georges Huppert vol I no 1 Berkeley 19561957 Archibald MacLeish Saint John Perse The Living Spring in A continuing journey Essays and Addresses Boston 1957 Wallace Fowlie Saint John Perse in A Guide to Contemporary French Literature From Valery to Sartre New York 1957 Anonymous Saint John Perse Poet of the Far Shore Times Literary Supplement London 2 March 1957 Paul West The Revival of Epic The Twentieth Century London July 19571958 Conrad Aiken A Reviewer s A B C Collected criticism from 1916 New York 1958 Jacques Guicharnaud Vowels of the Sea Amers Yale French Studies no 21 Spring Summer 1958 Martin Turnell The Epic of Saint John Perse The Commonweal LXX 17 July 1958 W H Auden A Song of Life s Power to Renew New York Times Book Review vol LXIII no 30 27 July 1958 Melvin Maddocks Perse as Cosmologist Christian Science Monitor 4 September 1958 John Marshall The Greatest Living French Poet The Yale Review XLVIII September 1958 Katherine Garrison Chapin Perse On the Sea With Us Amers The New Republic Washington CXXXIX 27 October 19581959 H J Kaplan Saint John Perse The Recreation of the World The Reporter XV 22 January 1959 Raymond Mortimer Mr Eliot and Mr Perse Two Fine Poets in tandem Sunday Times London May 1959 Philip Toynbee A Great Modern Poet The Observer London 31 May 1959 Charles Guenther Prince Among the Prophets Poetry Chicago vol XCIII no 5 19591976 Joseph Henry McMahon A Bibliography of works by and about Saint John Perse Stanford University 19591960 Stanley Burnshaw Saint John Perse in The Poem Itself New York 1960 Joseph MacMahon A Question of Man Commonweal LXXIII 13 January 1960 Byron Colt Saint John Perse Accent New York XX 3 Summer 1960 Joseph Barry Science and Poetry Merge in the Crucial Stage of Creation New York Post 12 December 19601961 Bernard Weinberg The Limits of Symbolism Studies of Five Modern French Poets Baudelaire Rimbaud Mallarme Valery Saint John Perse Manchester 1961 Anthony Hartley Saint John Perse Encounter London no 2 Feb 1961 Octavio Paz Saint John Perse as Historian The Nation New York 17 June 1961 Donald Davis Chronique by Saint John Perse New Statesman London LXII 26 July 1961 John Montague The Poetry of Saint John Perse Irish Times Dublin 25 August 1961 Leon S Roudiez The Epochal Poetry of Saint John Perse Columbia University Forum New York vol IV 19611962 Anthony Curtis Back to the Elements The Sunday Telegraph London 7 January 1962 Amos Wilder St John Perse and the Future of Man Christianity and Crisis New York vol XXI no 24 22 January 1962 Ronald Gaskell The Poetry of Saint John Perse The London Magazine vol I no 12 March 1962 Peter Russel Saint John Perse s Poetical works Agenda London May June 1962 Cecil Hemley Onward and Upward Hudson Review XV Summer 19621963 Eugenia Maria Arsenault Color Imagery in the Ventsof Saint John Perse Catholic University of America Washington 19631964 Arthur J Knodel Towards an Understanding of Anabase PMLA June 1964 Eugenia Vassylkivsky The Main Themes of Saint John Perse Columbia University 19641966 Arthur J Knodel Saint John Perse A Study of His Poetry Edimburg 1966 R W Baldner Saint John Perse as Poet Prophet in Proceedings of the Pacific Northwest Conference on Foreign Languages vol XVII no 22 19661967 Roger Little Word Index of the Complete Poetry and Prose of Saint John Perse Durham 1966 and 1967 M Owen de Jaham An Introduction to Saint John Perse University of South Western Louisiana 19671968 Kathleen Raine Saint John Perse Poet of the Marvellous Encounter vol IV no 29 October 1967 idem in Defending Ancient Springs Oxford 19681969 Roger Little T S Eliot and Saint John Perse The Arlington Quarterly Review University of Texas vol II no 2 Autumn 19691970 Charles Delamori The Love and Aggression of Saint John Perse s Pluies Yale French Studies 1970 Richar O Abel The Relationship Between the Poetry of T S Eliot and Saint John Perse University of Southern California 19701971 Roger Little Saint John Perse A Bibliography for Students of His Poetry London 1971 Ruth N Horry Paul Claudel and Saint John Perse Parallels and Contrasts University of North Carolina Press Chapel Hill 1971 Pierre Emmanuel Praise and Presence with a Bibliography Washington 1971 Candace Uter De Russy Saint John Perse s Chronique A study of Kronos and Other Themes through Imagery Tulane University 1971 Marc Goodhart Poet and Poem in Exile University of Colorado 19711972 Rene Galand Saint John Perse New York 1972 Richard Ruland America as Metaphor in Modern French Letters Celine Julien Green and Saint John Perse New York 19721973 Roger Little Saint John Perse University of London 1973 Carol Nolan Rigolot The Dialectics of Poetry Saint John Perse University of Michigan 19731974 Richard Allen Laden Saint John Perse sVents From Theme to Poetry Yale University 19741976 Elizabeth Jackson Worlds Apart Structural Parallels in the Poetry of Paul Valery Saint John Perse Benjamin Perret and Rene Char The Hague 1976 Arthur J Knodel Saint John Perse Lettres Princeton 1979 Edith Jonssen Devillers Cosmos and the Sacred in the Poetics of Octavio Paz and Saint John Perse San Diego University of California 1976 John M Cocking The Migrant Muse Saint John Perse Encounter London XLVI March 1976 Elizabeth Jennings Saint John Perse the Worldly Seer in Seven Men of Vision an Appreciation London 1976 Roger Little A Letter About Conrad by Saint John Perse Conradiana Lubbock Texas VIII no 3 Autumn 1976 Anonymous An Exile for Posterity The Times Literary Supplement London no 3860 5 March 19761977 Roger Little The Eye at the Center of Things Times Literary Supplement London no 3941 7 October 1977 Roger Little Saint John Perse and Joseph Conrad Some Notes and an Uncollected Letter Modern language Review Cambridge LXII no 4 October 1977 Roger Little The World and the Word in Saint John Perse in Sensibility and Creation Essays in XXth Century French Poetry London and New York 1977 John D Price Man Women and the Problem of Suffering in Saint John Perse Modern Language Review Cambridge LXII no 3 July 19771978 Reino Virtanen Between Saint John and Persius Saint John Perse and Paul Valery Symposium Summer 1978 Roger Little Saint John Perse and Denis Devlin A compagnonage Irish University Review Dublin VIII Autumn 19781979 Roger Little Claudel and Saint John Perse The Convert and the Unconvertible Claudel Studies VI 19791982 Steven Winspur Saint John Perse s Oiseaux the Poem the Painting and Beyond L Esprit Createur Columbia University XXII no 4 Winter 19821983 William Calin Saint John Perse in A Muse for Heroes Nine Centuries of the Epic in France University of Toronto Press 1983 Steven Winspur The Poetic Significance of the Thing in itself Sub stance no 41 1983 Joseph T Krause The Visual Form of Saint John Perse s Imagery Aix en Provence 1983 Peter Fell A Critical Study of Saint John Perse s Chronique MA dissertation University of Manchester 19831984 Saint John Perse Documentary Exhibition and Works on the Poem Amers Washington 1984 19851985 Erika Ostrovsky Under the Sign of Ambiguity Saint John Perse Alexis Leger New York 19851988 Steven Winspur Saint John Perse and the Imaginary Reader Geneva 1988 Peter Baker Perse on Poetry The Connecticut Review Willimantic XI no 1 1988 Peter Baker Saint John Perse Alexis Leger 1960 The Nobel Prize Winners Literature April 19881990 Peter Baker Exile in Language Studies in 20th century Literature Manhattan Kansas and Lincoln Nebraska XIV no 2 Summer 1990 Erika Ostrovsky Saint John Perse The Twentieth Century New York 19901991 Luigi Fiorenzato Anabasis Anabase T S Eliot translates Saint John Perse Padova 1991 1992 Peter Baker Metric Naming and Exile Perse Pound Genet in The Scope of Words in Honor to Albert S Cook New York 1991 Peter Baker Obdurate Brilliance Exteriority and the Modern Long Poem University of Florida Press 19911992 Josef Krause The Two Axes of Saint John Perse s Imagery Studi Francesi Torino XXXVI no 106 1992 Carol Rigolot Ancestors Mentors and Grands Aines Saint John Perse s Chronique Literary Generations Lexington 19921994 Richard L Sterling The Prose Works of Saint John Perse Towards an Understanding of His Poetry New York 19941996 Richard A York Saint John Perse the Diplomat Claudel Studies XXIII 1 2 19961997 Judith Urian The Biblical Context in Saint John Perse s Work Hebrew University of Jerusalem 19971999 Mary Gallagher Seminal Praise The Poetry of Saint John Perse in An Introduction to Caribbean Francophone writing Oxford 1999 Carol Rigolot Saint John Perse s Oiseaux from Audubon to Braque and Beyond in Resonant Themes Literature History and the Arts in XIXth and XXth Century Europe Chapel Hill North Carolina 1999 Judith Urian Delicious Abyss the Biblical Darkness in the Poetry of Saint John Perse Comparative literature studies XXXVI no 3 19992000 Jeffrey Mehlman Emigre New York French Intellectuals in Wartime Manhattan 1940 1944 Baltimore and London 2000 Zeyma Kamalick In Defense of Poetry T S Eliot s Translation ofAnabaseby Saint John Perse Princeton 20002001 Emmanuelle Heriard Dubreuil Une certaine idee de la France Alexis Leger s Views During the Occupation of France June 1940 August 1944 London School of Economics 2001 Pierre Lastenet Saint John Perse and the Sacred University of London 2001 Marie Noelle Little The Poet and the Diplomat Correspondence Saint John Perse Dag Hammarskjold Syracuse University Press 2001 Marie Noelle Little Travellers in Two Worlds Dag Hammarskjold and Alexis Leger in Development Dialogue Uppsala 20012002 Carol Rigolot Forged Genealogies Saint John Perse s Conversations with Culture The University of North Carolina Press 20022003 Mary Gallagher Remembering Caribbean Childhoods Saint John Perse s Eloges and Patrick Chamoiseau s Antan d enfance in The Francophone Caribbean Today Literature Language Culture The University of West Indies Press 20032004 Colette Camelin Hermes and Aphrodite in Saint John Perse s Winds and Seamarks in Hermes and Aphrodite Encounters Birmingham 2004 Patrick Chamoiseau Excerpts Freely Adapted From Meditations for Saint John Perse Literature and Arts of the Americas XXXVII no 12005 Henriette Levillain Saint John Perse Ministere des Affaires etrangeres Paris 2005 Joseph Acquisto The Lyric of Narrative Exile Poetry and Story in Saint John Perse and Elisabeth Bishop Orbis Litterarum no 5 2005 Xue Die Saint John Perse s Palm Trees American Letters and Commentary no 17 2005 Valerie Loichot Saint John Perse s Imagined Shelter J habiterai mon nom in Discursive Geographies Writing Space and Place in French Amsterdam 2005 Carol Rigolot Blood Brothers Archibald MacLeish and Saint John Perse Archibald MacLeish Journal Summer 2005 Carol Rigolot Saint John Perse in Transatlantic relations France and the Americas Culture Politics History Oxford and Santa Barbara 20052007 Valerie Loichot Orphan Narratives The Postplantation Literature of Faulkner Glissant Morrison and Saint John Perse University of Virginia Press 2007 Harris Feinsod Reconsidering the Spiritual Economy Saint John Perse His Translators and the Limits of Internationalism Benjamin Poetry and Criticism Telos New York no 38 2007 Peter Poiana The Order of Nemesis in Saint John Perse s Vents Neophilologus vol 91 no 1 2007 Jeffrey Meyers The Literary Politics of the Nobel Prize Antioch Review vol 65 no 2 2007Notes Edit During his lifetime he wanted to make believe that Saint Leger Leger was his real name They are some of the intellectual friendships over the course of his lifetime that are attested to by the correspondence published in his Œuvres Completes Meltz Renaud 2008 Alexis Leger dit Saint John Perse in French Paris Editions Flammarion p 200 ISBN 978 2 0812 0582 6 May Ernest Strange Victory New York Hill amp Wang 2000 p 150 Hunt Gerard M author March 2010 Rambling on Saint Martin a witnessing ISBN 978 1 4269 0045 7 OCLC 673142947 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Grimes William January 29 2009 Aldo Crommelynck Master Printer for Prominent Artists Is Dead at 77 The New York Times Retrieved 2012 05 27 Mellby Julie L November 30 2011 L ordre des oiseaux Highlights from the Graphic Arts Collection Princeton University Library Retrieved 2012 05 27 Saint John Perse Wikipedia in French 2022 11 19 retrieved 2022 11 19 A propos Lycee Saint John Perse Lycee SJ Perse in French Retrieved 2022 11 19 External links EditFondation Saint John Perse Aix en Provence Website of the Aix en Provence Fondation about the poet and diplomat in French Saint John Perse on Nobelprize org Saint John Perse le poete aux masques site devoted to the author in French Liste de diffusion SJPinfo news devoted to Saint John Perse Portals Poetry Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saint John Perse amp oldid 1122777466, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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