ELUARD, PAUL


Meaning of ELUARD, PAUL in English

born Dec. 14, 1895, Saint-Denis, Paris, Fr. died Nov. 18, 1952, Charenton-le-Pont pseudonym of Eugne Grindel French poet, one of the founders of the Surrealist movement and one of the important lyrical poets of the 20th century. In 1919 luard made the acquaintance of the Surrealist poets Andr Breton, Philippe Soupault, and Louis Aragon, with whom he remained in close association until 1938. Experiments with new verbal techniques, theories on the relation between dream and reality, and the free expression of thought processes produced Capitale de la douleur (1926; Capital of Sorrow ), his first important work, which was followed by La Rose publique (1934; The Public Rose) and Les Yeux fertiles (1936; The Fertile Eyes). The poems in these volumes are generally considered the best to have come out of the Surrealist movement. At this time luard also explored, with Andr Breton, the paths of mental disorders in L'Immacule Conception (1930). After the Spanish Civil War luard abandoned Surrealist experimentations. His late work reflects his political militance and a deepening of his underlying attitudes: the rejection of tyranny, the search for happiness. In 1942 he joined the Communist Party. His poems dealing with the sufferings and brotherhood of man, Posie et vrit (1942; Poetry and Truth), Au rendez-vous allemand (1944; To the German Rendezvous), and Dignes de vivre (1944; Worthy of Living), were circulated clandestinely during World War II and served to strengthen the morale of the Resistance. After the war his Tout dire (1951; Say Everything) and Le Phnix (1951) added, in simple language and vivid imagery, to the great body of French popular lyrical poetry.

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