Pierre Reverdy was born in Narbonne, France in 1889. He set out on his career as a poet when he moved to Paris in 1910. Reverdy’s financially supportive father died a year later, so the aspiring poet was forced to make a living through his writing. He published his first small volume of poetry, Poems en prose, in 1915, and he continued to write steadily thereafter. Gradually, Reverdy became known in literary circles, frequenting the avant-garde group consisting of such well-known artists and writers as Guillaume Apollinaire, Max Jacob, Pablo Picasso, Juan Gris, and Georges Braque. With these and other artists, Reverdy developed cubism and surrealism. In 1917 he founded the monthly literary review Nord-Sud, which featured work by the first cubists and surrealists—innovative writers such as Apollinaire, Jacob, Louis Aragon, André Breton, and Philippe Soupault. Reverdy’s many subsequent poetry collections include Cravates de chanvre (1922), Coeur de chene (1921), La Guitare endormie (1919), Les Jockeys camoufles (1918), and La Lucarne ovale (1916).

When the collection of his early poems, Les Epaves du ciel, appeared in 1924, Reverdy achieved greater recognition. The loneliness and spiritual apprehension that ran through his work attracted the surrealists, who praised him as the greatest living poet. Cubists admired the sharp visual acuity of his poems. Despite this influence by both modes of thought, Reverdy remained independent and cultivated his own unique voice. He endeavored to find “the sublime simplicity of true reality.” His writing became more mystical; he aimed to uncover concealed truths. Soupault claimed that Reverdy, “with Paul Eluard, … is the purest of the writers of his time.”

Reverdy became a Catholic, and in 1926, he retired to a life of ascetic seclusion near the Benedictine monastery at Solesmes in France. Maintaining his devotion to poetry and spirituality, he lived there until his death on June 17, 1960.

Bibliography

  • Poems en prose, [France], 1915.
  • La Lucarne ovale (poetry; title means "The Attic Window"), [France], 1916.
  • Quelques Poemes, [France], 1916.
  • Le Voleur de Talan(novel), [France], 1917, reprinted, Flammarion, 1967.
  • Les Jockeys camoufles, La Belle, 1918.
  • Les Ardoises du toit, [France], 1918.
  • La Guitare endormie (poetry; title means "The Sleeping Guitar"), [France], 1919.
  • Self-defence, [France], 1919.
  • Coeur de chene, [France], 1921.
  • Cravates de chanvre, [France], 1922.
  • Les Epaves du ciel (title means "The Flotsam of Heaven"), Editions de la Nouvelle Revue Francaise, 1924.
  • Ecumes de la mer, [France], 1925.
  • Grand Nature, [France], 1925.
  • La Peau de l'homme(novel), Nouvelle Revue Francaise, 1926, reprinted, Flammarion, 1968.
  • Le Gant de crin (criticism; title means "The Hair Glove"), Plon, 1927, reprinted, Flammarion, 1972.
  • Flaques de verre (poetry; title means "Pools of Glass"), Gallimard, 1929, reprinted, Flammarion, 1972.
  • Sources du vent (title means "Sources of the Wind"), [France], 1929, reprinted, Gallimard, 1971.
  • Risques et perils, contes, 1915-1928(prose), Gallimard, 1930, reprinted, Flammarion, 1972.
  • Pierres blanches (poetry; title means "White Stones"), [France], 1930.
  • Feraille (poetry; title means "Scrap Iron"), [France], 1937.
  • Plupart du temps, poemes, 1915-1922, Gallimard, 1945.
  • Le Livre de mon bord, notes, 1930-1936(prose), Mercure de France, 1948.
  • Chants des morts (poetry; title means "Song of the Dead"), [France], 1948.
  • Main d'oeuvre, poemes, 1913-1949, Mercure de France, 1949.
  • En vrac(prose), Editions du Rocher, 1956.
  • (With Georges Duthuit) The Last Works of Henri Matisse, 1950-1954, Harcourt, 1958.
  • Plupart du temps: Poemes en prose, Flammarion, 1967.
  • Reverdy, translated by Anne Hyde Greet, Unicorn Press, 1968.
  • Selected Poems, translated by Kenneth Rexroth, New Directions, 1969.
  • Lettres a Jean Rousselot(correspondence), Rougerie, 1973.
  • Note eternelle du present: Ecrits sur l'art, 1923-1960, Flammarion, 1973.
  • Cette Emotion appelee poesie: Ecrits sur la poesie, Flammarion, 1974.
  • Nord-sud: Self-defence et autres ecrits sur l'art et la poesie, 1917-1926, Flammarion, 1975.
  • Painted Stars, translated by Susan Plunket, The News & the Weather, 1976.
  • La Liberte des mers: Sable mouvant et autres poemes, Flammarion, 1978.
  • Roof Slates and Other Poems of Pierre Reverdy, translated, with prefaces by Mary Ann Caws and Patricia Terry, Northeastern University Press, 1981.
  • Die meiste Zeit: Prosagedichte 1915, translated and edited by Dieter Schoeneborn, Universitaet-Gesamthochschule Siegen, 1990.
  • Selected Poems, edited by Timothy Bent, Wake Forest University Press, 1991.

Founder and chief editor of Nord-Sud (literary review), 1917-18.

Further Readings

PERIODICALS

  • Georges Lemaitre, From Cubism to Surrealism, Cambridge University Press, 1941; Henri Peyre, editor, Essays in Honor of Albert Feuillerat, Yale University Press, 1943; Yale French Studies, spring-summer, 1958; Kenyon Review, spring, 1959;Modern Language Review, April, 1963; Alexander Aspel,Contemporary French Poetry, University of Michigan Press, 1965; Mortimer Guiney, La Poesie de Pierre Reverdy, Librairie de L'Universite (Geneva), 1966; Robert W. Greene, The Poetic Theory of Pierre Reverdy, University of California Press, 1967; Anna Balakian, Surrealism: The Road to the Absolute, Dutton, 1970.

OBITUARIES:PERIODICALS

  • Books Abroad, summer, 1961.