Charles-Marie-René Leconte de Lisle (born Oct. 22, 1818, Saint-Paul, Réunion—died July 17, 1894, Louveciennes, near Paris) was a poet, leader of the Parnassians, who from 1865 to 1895 was acknowledged as the foremost French poet apart from the aging Victor Hugo.
Leconte de Lisle’s theories, reacting against Romanticism and stressing the need for impersonality and discipline in poetry, were expressed with deliberate provocativeness and exaggeration. His epic poetry is often overweighted by erudition and ornamentation, but his shorter poems convey a compelling and individual vision, and “Qaïn” (1869; “Cain”) is one of the most impressive short epics of the 19th century.
Leconte de Lisle was sent to the Université de Rennes in 1837 but gave up law for literature. Recalled to Réunion by his family, he remained unwillingly on the island from 1843 to 1846, when he returned to France to work on La Démocratie pacifique, a daily journal that propagated the utopian social theories of Charles Fourier. In the poems of the next few years he drew on Greek mythology for symbols of his Revolutionary views; he wrote political articles and unsuccessfully attempted practical work for the February Revolution of 1848. Later, while remaining a republican, he became convinced that the poet should not engage in direct political action.
His first volume of poetry was published in 1852. He eventually arranged the poems, which had appeared in different collections during his lifetime, to form Poèmes antiques, Poèmes barbares, and Poèmes tragiques. Derniers poèmes was published in 1895.
He spent most of his life in financial need, attempting to support his mother, sisters, and wife by his writings. He published a series of translations from Greek and Latin; three anticlerical and republican booklets (1871–72); and, under the pseudonym Pierre Gosset, Histoire du Moyen Âge (1876). In 1873 he obtained a sinecure as librarian of the Senate and in 1886 was elected to succeed Hugo as a member of the Académie Française.
At the centre of Leconte de Lisle’s poetry is a sense of the impermanence of a vast and pitiless universe. Influenced by the new study of comparative religion and by contemporary scientific discoveries, his epics show the death of religions and civilizations—Greek, Indian, Celtic, Scandinavian, Polynesian, Jewish, and Christian. Some of Leconte de Lisle’s finest poems describe scenes of cosmic destruction with exultation rather than terror. They assert that, in the face of the cruel forces that create and destroy an ephemeral world, the poet must savour the more sharply its rich physical beauty.