Maurice Maeterlinck

Belgian author
Also known as: Comte Maeterlinck, Maurice Polydore-Marie-Bernard Maeterlinck
Quick Facts
In full:
Maurice Polydore-Marie-Bernard Maeterlinck
Also called (from 1932):
Comte Maeterlinck
Born:
August 29, 1862, Ghent, Belgium
Died:
May 6, 1949, Nice, France (aged 86)
Awards And Honors:
Nobel Prize (1911)
Movement / Style:
Symbolism
Young Belgium

Maurice Maeterlinck (born August 29, 1862, Ghent, Belgium—died May 6, 1949, Nice, France) was a Belgian Symbolist poet, playwright, and essayist who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1911 for his outstanding works of the Symbolist theatre. He wrote in French and looked mainly to French literary movements for inspiration.

Maeterlinck studied law at the University of Ghent and was admitted to the bar in that city in 1886. In Paris in 1885–86 he met Auguste Villiers de L’Isle-Adam and the leaders of the Symbolist movement, and he soon abandoned law for literature. His first verse collection, Serres chaudes (“Hothouses”), and his first play, La Princesse Maleine, were published in 1889. Maeterlinck made a dramatic breakthrough in 1890 with two one-act plays, L’Intruse (The Intruder) and Les Aveugles (The Blind). His Pelléas et Mélisande (1892), produced in Paris at the avant-garde Théâtre de l’Oeuvre by the director Aurélien Lugné-Poë, is the unquestioned masterpiece of Symbolist drama and provided the basis for an opera (1902) by Claude Debussy. Set in a nebulous, fairy-tale past, the play conveys a mood of hopeless melancholy and doom in its story of the destructive passion of Princess Mélisande, who falls in love with her husband’s younger brother, Pelléas. Though written in prose, Pelléas et Mélisande may be considered the most accomplished of all 19th-century attempts at poetic drama.

Maeterlinck wrote many other plays, including historical dramas such as Monna Vanna (1902). Gradually, his Symbolism was tempered by his interest in English drama, especially William Shakespeare and the Jacobeans. Only L’Oiseau bleu (1908; The Blue Bird) rivaled Pelléas et Mélisande in popularity. An allegorical fantasy conceived as a play for children, it portrays a search for happiness in the world. First performed by the Moscow Art Theatre in 1908, this somewhat sentimental dramatic parable was highly regarded for a time, but its charm has evaporated, and the optimism of the play now seems facile. After he won the Nobel Prize, however, his reputation declined, although his Le Bourgmestre de Stilmonde (1917; The Burgomaster of Stilmonde), a patriotic play in which he explores the problems of Flanders under the wartime rule of an unprincipled German officer, briefly enjoyed great success.

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In his Symbolist plays, Maeterlinck uses poetic speech, gesture, lighting, setting, and ritual to create images that reflect his protagonists’ moods and dilemmas. Often the protagonists are waiting for something mysterious and fearful that will destroy them. The profound and moving atmosphere of the plays, though lacking in intellectual complexity, is augmented by tentative dialogue, based on half-formed suggestions, at times naively repetitious, and occasionally sentimental, but sometimes possessed of great subtlety and power. As a dramatist, Maeterlinck influenced Hugo von Hofmannsthal, W.B. Yeats, John Millington Synge, and Eugene O’Neill. Maeterlinck’s plays have been widely translated, and no Belgian dramatist had greater effect on worldwide audiences.

Maeterlinck’s prose writings are remarkable blends of mysticism, occultism, and interest in the world of nature. They represent the common Symbolist reaction against materialism, science, and mechanization and are concerned with such questions as the immortality of the soul, the nature of death, and the attainment of wisdom. Maeterlinck presented his mystical speculations in Le Trésor des humbles (1896; The Treasure of the Humble) and La Sagesse et la destinée (1898; “Wisdom and Destiny”). His most widely read prose writings, however, are two extended essays, La Vie des abeilles (1901; The Life of the Bee) and L’Intelligence des fleurs (1907; The Intelligence of Flowers), in which Maeterlinck sets out his philosophy of the human condition. Maeterlinck was made a count by the Belgian king in 1932.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Belgian literature, the body of written works produced by Belgians and written in Flemish, which is equivalent to the Standard Dutch (Netherlandic) language of the Netherlands, and in Standard French, which are the two main divisions of literature by language of Belgium. A lesser-known literature of Belgium, Walloon literature, is written in local dialects of French and Latin origin that are spoken in Wallonia (the provinces of Hainaut, Liège, Namur, Luxembourg, and Walloon Brabant). Flemish literature is often discussed with Dutch literature and Belgium’s French-language literature with other French literature. The French-, Flemish-, and Walloon-language literatures of Belgium are discussed in this article.

Flemish

Early literature

Relationship with Dutch literature

Any consideration of the Dutch-language literature of Belgium must take into account that the Belgian territories were broadly united with the Netherlands politically, economically, and culturally until 1579, when, as a result of the Reformation, the northern (Reformed) provinces seceded from the Roman Catholic south. Thus until the early 17th century the literature of Flanders and Holland must be considered as a whole (see Dutch literature). It was in Flanders that the literature of the medieval Low Countries flowered most profusely. It was, moreover, in Flanders and Brabant that learning showed new vigour under the influence of the Renaissance and the Reformation. In literature inspired by the Reformation the tone was set by the glowing satiric verse of the Catholic Anna Bijns and the polemical satire, Biencorf der H. Roomsche Kercke (1569; “The Beehive of the Roman Catholic Church”), of the Calvinist Philips van Marnix, heer van Sint Aldegonde. The Renaissance in the Netherlands began with Lucas de Heere, Carel van Mander, and Jan Baptista van der Noot, all of whom, significantly, had fled from the south for religious reasons.

Decline

Many left the south before 1579 as a result of the regional religious and political troubles, and the budding literary revival in Flanders and Brabant was interrupted. Whereas Holland was approaching its golden age, in the south a decline set in. But Justus de Harduwijn, a lyrical poet in the Classical style of the French Pléiade; Richard Verstegen, a polemicist; Adriaen Poirters, a popular moralist; the dramatists Willem Ogier and Cornelis de Bie; and, especially, Michiel de Swaen, the last important Baroque poet and playwright, who was deeply inspired by his religion, compare favourably with most writers of their time. The decline was most noticeable in the early 18th century, when the aristocracy and intellectual elite came increasingly under French influence.

Revival

Before the end of the 18th century, however, Willem Verhoeven and Jan Baptist Verlooy had started a reaction against this French influence. Like contemporary historical and scientific writers they reverted to the work of the 16th-century humanists but neglected the medieval masterpieces. Revival was helped by the rederijkers (rhetoricians; see rederijkerskamer), who continued, more or less successfully, to use Dutch, not French. Karel Broeckaert wrote dialogues modeled on Joseph Addison’s Spectator essays in a spirit of rational liberalism, creating a literary figure, “Gysken,” the ironic representative of the ancien régime; he also wrote the first Flemish prose story, Jellen en Mietje (1811; “Jellen and Mietje”). The poet Pieter Joost de Borchgrave embodied the transition from Classicism to Romanticism, and Jan Baptist Hofman, a prolific playwright, introduced middle-class sentimental tragedy, or drame bourgeois.

19th-century literary trends

The Romantic movement

Romanticism made its influence felt in the 19th century and was linked to a revival of nationalist consciousness. The older generation of mostly philologists—Jan Frans Willems, Jan Baptist David, Philip Blommaert, and Ferdinand Snellaert—rediscovered the rich medieval inheritance. To their group belonged two important poets of the new age, Karel Lodewijk Ledeganck and Prudens van Duyse. The younger generation was more spontaneously Romantic, as was illustrated by the work of Hendrik Conscience, creator of the Flemish novel. Theodoor van Rijswijck and Johan Alfried de Laet freed poetry from classical concepts and forms, and the ultra-Romantic stories of Eugeen Zetternam and Pieter Frans van Kerckhoven denounced social evils.

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Realism and other post-Romantic trends

Led by a Realist, Domien Sleeckx, a reaction against Romanticism set in about 1860. Writing became characterized by acute observation, description of local scenery, humour, and, not infrequently, a pervasive pessimism, as could be seen in novels such as Anton Bergmann’s Ernest Staes (1874) and Virginie Loveling’s Een dure eed (1892; “A Solemn Oath”). The poets Johan Michiel Dautzenberg, Jan van Beers, and Rosalie Loveling, together with the first important Flemish art and literary critic, Max Rooses, also reflected the new Realism. Their work shuns sentimentalism, didacticism, and over-idealization, opting instead for an everyday language, real-life settings, and the exploration of individual psychology.

Running parallel to this reactionary Realism was a remarkable revival in poetry in West Flanders, headed by Guido Gezelle, a Roman Catholic priest who was the greatest Flemish poet of the 19th century. He displayed his unique linguistic virtuosity in evocative nature poems and a highly personal lyricism. Albrecht Rodenbach wrote militant songs, thoughtful lyrics, monumental epics, and the verse tragedy Gudrun (1882).

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The review Van Nu en Straks (1893–1901; “Of Now and Later”), which was to make Flemish literature of European importance, was influenced more by Gezelle and Rodenbach than by the Dutch generation of the 1880s. Led by Pol de Mont, an already complex modern poet, the writers of the 1880s had, however, widened horizons and, by emphasizing individualism and “art for art’s sake,” prepared the ground for their successors.