Louis-Honoré Fréchette (born Nov. 16, 1839, Lévis, Que.—died May 31, 1908, Montreal) was the preeminent French Canadian poet of the 19th century, noted for his patriotic poems.
Fréchette studied law at Laval University, Quebec, and was admitted to the bar in 1864. Discharged as a journalist for liberal views, he went to Chicago (1866–71). There, he wrote La Voix d’un exilé (1866–68; “The Voice of an Exile”), a poem attacking the political and clerical dealings in Quebec in that period of Canadian confederation and voicing a patriotic idealization of the French republic. Returning to Lévis in 1871, Fréchette entered politics, representing that city in the federal House of Commons (1874–78) and from 1889 until his death acting as clerk of the provincial Legislative Council in Quebec City.
Fréchette made literary history when Les Fleurs boréales (1879; “The Northern Flowers”) and Les Oiseaux de neige (1879; “The Snow Birds”) were awarded the Prix Montyon in 1880, the first time the work of a Canadian had been honoured by the French Academy. A controversial representative of liberal nationalism, Fréchette then wrote La Légende d’un peuple (1887; “The Story of a People”), his famous cycle of poems that was an epic chronicle of Canadian history. Other works include Poésies choisies (1908; “Selected Poems”); the prose stories in Originaux et détraqués (1892; “Eccentrics and Lunatics”) and Le Noël au Canada (1900; published first in English as Christmas in French Canada, 1899); the dramas Félix Poutré (1871), Papineau (1880), and Véronica (1908); and the polemical Lettres à Basile (1872). In 1961 a collection of his autobiographical sketches was published as Mémoires intime (“Intimate Memories”).