Frédéric Mistral

born Sept.
8, 1830, Maillane, France
died March 25, 1914, Maillane
poet who led the 19th-century revival of
Occitan (Provençal) language and literature.
He shared the Nobel Prize for Literature in
1904 (with José Echegaray y Eizaguirre) for
his contributions in literature and
philology.
Mistral’s
father was a well-to-do farmer in the former
French province of Provence. He attended the
Royal College of Avignon (later renamed the
Frédéric Mistral School). One of his
teachers was Joseph Roumanille, who had
begun writing poems in the vernacular of
Provence and who became his lifelong friend.
Mistral took a degree in law at the
University of Aix-en-Provence in 1851.
Wealthy
enough to live without following a
profession, he early decided to devote
himself to the rehabilitation of Provençal
life and language. In 1854, with several
friends, he founded the Félibrige, an
association for the maintenance of the
Provençal language and customs, extended
later to include the whole of southern
France (le pays de la langue d’oc, “the
country of the language of oc,” so called
because the Provençal language uses oc for
“yes,” in contrast to the French oui). As
the language of the troubadours, Provençal
had been the cultured speech of southern
France and was used also by poets in Italy
and Spain. Mistral threw himself into the
literary revival of Provençal and was the
guiding spirit and chief organizer of the
Félibrige until his death in 1914.
Mistral
devoted 20 years’ work to a scholarly
dictionary of Provençal, entitled Lou Tresor
dóu Félibrige, 2 vol. (1878). He also
founded a Provençal ethnographic museum in
Arles, using his Nobel Prize money to assist
it. His attempts to restore the Provençal
language to its ancient position did not
succeed, but his poetic genius gave it some
enduring masterpieces, and he is considered
one of the greatest poets of France.
His
literary output consists of four long
narrative poems: Mirèio (1859; Mireio: A
Provencal Poem), Calendau (1867), Nerto
(1884), and Lou Pouèmo dóu Rose (1897; Eng.
trans. The Song of the Rhône); a historical
tragedy, La Reino Jano (1890; “Queen Jane”);
two volumes of lyrics, Lis Isclo d’or (1876;
definitive edition 1889) and Lis Oulivado
(1912); and many short stories, collected in
Prose d’Armana, 3 vol. (1926–29).
Mistral’s
volume of memoirs, Moun espelido (Mes
origines, 1906; Eng. trans. Memoirs of
Mistral), is his best-known work, but his
claim to greatness rests on his first and
last long poems, Mirèio and Lou Pouèmo dóu
Rose, both full-scale epics in 12 cantos.
Mirèio,
which is set in the poet’s own time and
district, is the story of a rich farmer’s
daughter whose love for a poor basketmaker’s
son is thwarted by her parents and ends with
her death in the Church of Les
Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer. Into this poem
Mistral poured his love for the countryside
where he was born. Mirèio skillfully
combines narration, dialogue, description,
and lyricism and is notable for the springy,
musical quality of its highly individual
stanzaic form. Under its French title,
Mireille, it inspired an opera by Charles
Gounod (1863).
Lou Pouèmo
dóu Rose tells of a voyage on the Rhône
River from Lyon to Beaucaire by the barge
Lou Caburle, which is boarded first by a
romantic young prince of Holland and later
by the daughter of a poor ferryman. The
romance between them is cut short by
disaster when the first steamboat to sail on
the Rhône accidentally sinks Lou Caburle.
Though the crew swims ashore, the lovers are
drowned. Although less musical and more
dense in style than Mirèio, this epic is as
full of life and colour. It suggests that
Mistral, late in life, realized that his aim
had not been reached and that much of what
he loved was, like his heroes, doomed to
perish.