Showing posts with label Werth (Léon). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Werth (Léon). Show all posts

15 August 2021

Mural of Writers, Saint-Amour (39), Jura (39)

This fresco in the centre of Saint-Amour celebrates notable writers associated with the town. At the top is Guillaume de Saint-Amour (1202-72), who was a theologian who was born and who died in the town. More prominently placed on the bottom left is Lucien Febvre (1878-19), a historian and literary critic who founded L'École des Annales with Marc Bloch: he is buried in the local cemetery. Léon Werth is well-known for fleeing Paris in the June 1940 exodus, which he wrote about in 33 Jours (1992), although he's more famous for the staunchly anti-military novel Clavel Soldat (1919), which is represented in the mural. The significance of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's Le Petit Prince is that Saint-Exup was Werth's friend, and he dedicated the book to him.

6 November 2013

Léon Werth: Père Lachaise Columbarium #3

Léon Werth (1878–1955) was a close friend of Octave Mirbeau, which probably says quite a lot. He was anti-bourgeois, anti-military, anti-clerical, libertarian, etc. In 1913 his novel La Maison Blanche (with a Preface by Mirbeau) got through to the third Goncourt selection but failed to win. Fifteen months in the trenches had convinced him of the folly of war, and the anger it caused in him was translated into Clavel Soldat (1919), which caused a scandal.

Saint-Exupéry was a great friend of Werth's after they met in 1931, and the aviator-writer dedicates Le Petit Prince to him, calling him the best friend he has in the world.