Paul Arène
Paul-Auguste Arène was a Provençal poet and French writer.
Biography
Arène was born in Sisteron, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, the son of Adolphe, a clockmaker, and Reine, a cap presser. He studied in Marseille, then in Vannes. A short play which enjoyed some success at the Odéon, Pierrot héritier, led him to leave the university, and to journalism in 1865, aged 23. He started to contribute to Figaro littéraire and composed his first Provençal verses, which were published in the Almanach avignonnais by Joseph Roumanille. He died in Antibes.The subject of all of his Provençal pieces is the area, and particularly the countryside, around Sisteron: Fontfrediero, Lis Estello negro, Raubatori.
In French, Paul Arène published Parnassiculet, in which he talked about his life, in the style of Parnassianism. Like his friend Octave Mirbeau in 1884, Paul Arène collaborated actively with Alphonse Daudet in the publishing of his Provençal chronicles, published in the newspaper L'Événement. In 1869, some of them were republished under the title Lettres de mon moulin.
In 1868, Paul Arène wrote his chef-d'œuvre, Jean des Figues. After 1870, he wrote chronicles, poems, among which Le Tor d'Entraÿs, Le Clos des âmes, Le Canot des six capitaines, Au Bon Soleil and La Gueuse parfumée, and two collections. He also wrote La Chèvre d'or, Les Ogresses, Le Midi bouge and Domnine.
Publications
Pierrot Héritier.Jean-des-Figues.Les Comédiens Errants.Un Duel aux Lanternes.L'Ilote.Le Char. La Gueuse Parfumée.Le Prologue sans le Savoir. Contes de Noël.Les Contes en Cent Lignes.Au Bon Soleil.Paris Ingénu.La Vraie Tentation du Grand Saint-Antoine.Vingt Jours en Tunisie.Mobilier Scolaire.Contes de Paris. Contes de Provence. L'Âne de Nazaire. La Mule.La Chèvre d'Or.Nouveaux Contes de Noël.Le Midi Bouge.Les Ogresses.Des Alpes aux Pyrénées.Domnine.Friquette et Friquets.PosthumousLe Secret de Polichinelle.La Veine d'Argile.
Works in English translationThe Golden Goat.