Félix-Antoine Savard (born Aug. 31, 1896, Quebec, Que., Can.—died Aug. 24, 1982, Quebec) was a French Canadian priest, poet, novelist, and folklorist whose works show a strong Quebec nationalism and a love of the Canadian landscape.
Savard was ordained a Roman Catholic priest in 1922. He began to lecture in the faculty of arts at Laval University in Quebec in 1943 and was dean of arts there from 1950 to 1957. His works, which have been called both prose poems and novels, displayed a firsthand knowledge of Canadian logging and pioneering—e.g., Menaud, maître-draveur (1937; The Boss of the River), L’Abatis (1943; “The Slaughter”), and La Minuit (1948; “Midnight”). He also wrote Martin et le pauvre (1959; “Martin and the Beggar”), the story of St. Martin of Tours, and La Folle (1960; “The Madwoman”), a drama in free verse. Among Savard’s later works were Le Bouscueil (1972), La Roche Ursule (1972; “The Ursula Stone”), a volume of poems entitled Aux marges du silence (1975; “At the Borders of Silence”), and Discours (1975; “Speeches”).