Vulturnus

Vulturnus

Paperback (30 May 2024)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Nearly 100 years later, a landmark post-Symbolist poem receives its first English translation

When published in 1928, Vulturnus represented a new direction in Léon-Paul Fargue's writing: a shift from the lyrical post-Symbolist melancholy of his early poetry to something more grandiose, dynamic and cosmic. This long prose poem weaves together philosophical dialogue, metaphysical meditation and mournful reminiscence delivered in a language that spirals into scientific terminology and Rabelaisian neologism. Jolted into a nightmare aboard a long-distance train journey, the author finds himself on a voyage that takes him from his hometown to other existences, accompanied by the fanfare of the planets and two companions-Pierre Pellegrin and Joseph Ausudre-who guide him to a terrestrial paradise in quest of a moment of eternity. This first English translation finally introduces an essential yet underrecognized 20th-century voice and includes an essay on the text by René Daumal, who declares that "Vulturnus suffocates me with its obviousness … I see behind Fargue the great frame of Doctor Faustroll."
Léon-Paul Fargue (1876-1947) was a French Symbolist poet and essayist. He was a preeminent figure of the Parisian art scene and counted Marcel Proust and Maurice Ravel among his friends. Walter Benjamin called him "the greatest living poet in France."

Book information

ISBN: 9781939663924
Publisher: Wakefield Press
Imprint: Wakefield Press
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 88
Weight: 91g
Height: 178mm
Width: 114mm
Spine width: 13mm