Quotes by Maurice Maeterlinck
We are alone, absolutely alone on this chance planet: and, amid all the forms of life that surround us, not one, excepting the dog, has made an alliance with us. |
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An act of goodness is of itself an act of happiness. No reward coming after the event can compare with the sweet reward that went with it. |
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I knew that if I was captured by the Germans I would be shot at once, since I have always been counted as an enemy of Germany because of my play, ''Le Bourgmestre de Stillemonde'', which dealt with the conditions in Belgium during the German Occupation of 1918. |
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Each progressive spirit is opposed by a thousand mediocre minds appointed to guard the past. |
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All our knowledge merely helps us to die a more painful death than the animals that know nothing. A day will come when science will turn upon its error and no longer hesitate to shorten our woes. A day will come when it will dare and act with certainty; when life, grown wiser, will depart silently at its hour, knowing that it has reached its term. |
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The future is a world limited by ourselves; in it we discover only what concerns us and, sometimes, by chance, what interests those whom we love the most. |
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Men's weaknesses are often necessary to the purposes of life. |
Maurice Maeterlinck's Biography
Belgian playwright and poet who was awarded in 1911 the Nobel Prize for Literature. Maurice Maeterlinck was closely associated with the French literary movement called symbolism which used symbols to represent ideas and emotions. Among Maeterlinck's most famous plays is The Blue Bird (1908) a fairy tale with the theme of the search of happiness.
Count Maurice-Polydore-Marie-Bernard Maeterlinck was born in Ghent Belgium into a prosperous family of francophone and Catholic tradition. His father Polydore Maeterlinck was a retired notary and a small land owner and mother Mathilde (Van den Bossche) Maeterlinck was the daughter of an affluent lawyer. The surname is said to have been originated from a bailiff who gave corn to the poor in a year of famine.
As a child Maeterlinck lived in Oostacker. He attended the Jesuit Collège de Ste.-Barge a period of seven years' tyranny as he later recalled. However there he met two future poets Charles van Lerberghe and Grégoire Le Roy. With them he contributed to La Jeune Belgique a nationalistic literary review. His first poem 'The Rushes' Maeterlick published at the age of 21. Because his family objected to his trifling with poetry he was sent to study law at the University of Ghent.
After graduating in 1885 Maeterlinck spent some time in Paris. Maeterlinck became acquainted with the symbolist poets Stéphane Mallarmé and Villiers de l'Isle-Adam who was much interested in occultism. Maeterlinck himself published a translation of Jan van Ruysbroeck L'Ornement des noces spirituelles (Ruysbroeck and the Mystics). After returning to Oostacker Maeterlinck practiced law but did not give up his writing.
In 1889 Maeterlinck published a volume of verse LES CHERRES CHAUDES (Hot House Blooms) full of fin-de-siècle mysterious images. It was followed by LA PRINCESSE MALEINE (Princess Maleine) a play set in an unreal Flanders in an undetermined time. Both were privately printed. Maeterlinck's avant-garde plays did not gain popularity among the public but his literary colleagues in Paris were enthusiastic. Princess Maleine was praised by the influential literary critic Octave Mirbeau who announced that is was a masterpiece "comparable-shall I dare say it?-superior in beauty to the most beautiful in Shakespeare."
In the1890s Maeterlinck wrote several symbolist dramas among them PELLÉAS ET MÉLISANDE later produced with musical setting by Claude Debussy. Maeterlinck was furious when Georgette Leblanc (1895-1941) was replaced in the opera by the American Mary Garden and he wished the production will fail. Debussy's opera was crushed in 1902 by critics but four years later it gained a huge success and was praised among others by the writer Romain Rolland. In the tragic story of lovers Maeterlinck used dark stage sets and haunting sound effects to create an emotional response from the audience. The Finnish composer Jean Sibelius also wrote music for the story.
During the summers Maeterlinck lived quietly at Oostacher his family's country home and returned to Ghent for the rest of the year. In 1895 Maeterlinck met Georgette Leblanc an actress and opera singer. She was unable to get a divorce from her Spanish husband but they lived together for the next twenty-three years. At that time Maeterlinck started to take a more realistic approach to his subjects leaving certain melodramatic aspects of symbolism. He wrote for his wife several plays: AGLAVAINE ET SÉLYSETTE (1896) ARIADNE ET BARBEBLEUE (1901) MONNA VANNA (1902) a historical drama set in the quattrocento Pisa and JOYZELLE (1903) about victorious love.
In 1896 Maeterlinck moved from Ghent to Paris. Leblanc took the leading role in most of his plays and she also prepared The Children's Blue Bird. From this period dates Maeterlinck's metaphysical essays LE TRÉSOR DES HUMBLES (1896 The Treasure of the Humble) LA SAGESSE ET LA DESTINÉE (1898 Wisdom and Destiny ) and LA VIE DES ABEILLES (1901 The Life of the Bee) in which he examined analogies between the activity of the bee and human behavior. Noteworthy bee-keeping had been Maeterlinck's hobbies since youth. In these writings Maeterlinck rejected Schopenhaurian negativism and replaced it with a view tempered with victorious optimism. It is possible he though for human being to alter the destiny if he or she so wills. A human being is double: he or she lives both an inner and exterior existence. "It is always a mistake not to close one's eyes whether to forgive or to look better into oneself" Maeterlinck wrote in Pelleas and Melisande.
Maeterlinck's most famous play The Blue Bird was first produced in 1908 by Konstantin Stanislavski at the Moscow Art Theater where it ran for nearly a year. The work an allegorical fantasy conceived as a play for children have been widely translated and adapted into screen several times. In the story Mytyl and Tyltyl the children of a poor woodcutter fall asleep after a disappointing Christmas. They dream that the fairy Berylune sends them to find 'the bird that is blue'. They set out the journey with a diamond with which they are able to see the souls of the objects that surround them. The children visit the Land of Memory. In the forest they are attacked by animals and trees but the faithful Dog saves Tyltyl's life. The journey continues through the Palace of Happiness and Kingdom of the Future before the children return home and are awakened by their mother. Berlingot (the fairy Berylune) their neighbour begs Tyltyl's little bird for her dying children. Tyltyl notices that the bird is blue and the one they have been looking for. The child recovers but the bird escapes and the children ask the audience to return it.
The Blue Bird was produced in 1909 at the Haymarket Theatre in London rivaling in popularity J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan. A New York performance followed in October 1910 and in 1911 the play was performed in Paris at the Théâtre Réjane Paris. In the United States the play was so popular that its sequel The Betrothal (1918) was first produced there. Walter Lang's film version from 1940 starring Shirley Temple as Mytyl vanished soon. George Cukor's remake from 1976 starring Elizabet Taylor in four roles was a gesture of friendship between East and West. In this Russian-American co-production Russian actors were in minor roles.
During World War I Maeterlinck lectured for the Allied cause in Europe and in the United States. Before the war Maeterlinck had felt a sympathy towards the Germans but the invasion of Belgium changed his atttitude expressing his hatred and patriotic outrage against the destrpoyers of his homeland in LES DÉBRIS DE LA GUERRE (1916 The Wrack of the Storm): "No nation can be deceived that does not wish to be deceived; and it is not intelligence German lacks . . . No nation permits herself to be coerced to the one crime that man cannot pardon. It is of her own accord that she hastens towards it; her chief has no need to persuade it is she who urges him on." Maeterlinck's relationship with Leblanc ended and in 1919 he married Renée Dahon who had acted in The Blue Bird. They made their home outside Paris at the Château de Médan and wintered at a villa near Nice called Les Abeilles. Maeterlinck's interest shifted from fantasies towards naturalistic psychological subject-matters.
Between the wars Materlinck wrote essays and plays among others LA VIE DES TERMITES (1926) which draws paralles between totalitarian systems and termite colonies. In 1932 Maeterlinck was made a count by King Albert. On the eve of World War II Maeterlinck went to Portugal under the protection of Antonio Salazar and then fled to the United States. These years were financially hard for the writer. His works were ignored and he was unable to collect royalties from the sales of his books in Europe. In 1947 he returned to his home in Nice. Maeterlinck died of a heart attack on May 6 1949. He was buried according to his agnostic world view without religious ceremonies.
Like the Spanis philospher Miguel de Unamuno y Jugo Maeterlinck saw that the essential enigma of the human condition is the issue of death. His last book was BULLES BLEUES (1948) a collection of happy reminiscences. It has been argued that Maeterlinck's plays with their unspoken dialogue sense of fatality and mysteries below the everyday surface anticipated the art of Harold Pinter. In The Treasure of the Humble writing of an old man sitting in his armchair Maeterlink said that "I am persuaded that in reality this motionless old man lives much deeper and much human and much broader life than the lover who strangles his mistress the army officer who wins a victory or 'the the husband who avenges his honor'."
Some rights reserved Petri Liukkonen (author) & Ari Pesonen. Kuusankosken kaupunginkirjasto 2008
Count Maurice-Polydore-Marie-Bernard Maeterlinck was born in Ghent Belgium into a prosperous family of francophone and Catholic tradition. His father Polydore Maeterlinck was a retired notary and a small land owner and mother Mathilde (Van den Bossche) Maeterlinck was the daughter of an affluent lawyer. The surname is said to have been originated from a bailiff who gave corn to the poor in a year of famine.
As a child Maeterlinck lived in Oostacker. He attended the Jesuit Collège de Ste.-Barge a period of seven years' tyranny as he later recalled. However there he met two future poets Charles van Lerberghe and Grégoire Le Roy. With them he contributed to La Jeune Belgique a nationalistic literary review. His first poem 'The Rushes' Maeterlick published at the age of 21. Because his family objected to his trifling with poetry he was sent to study law at the University of Ghent.
After graduating in 1885 Maeterlinck spent some time in Paris. Maeterlinck became acquainted with the symbolist poets Stéphane Mallarmé and Villiers de l'Isle-Adam who was much interested in occultism. Maeterlinck himself published a translation of Jan van Ruysbroeck L'Ornement des noces spirituelles (Ruysbroeck and the Mystics). After returning to Oostacker Maeterlinck practiced law but did not give up his writing.
In 1889 Maeterlinck published a volume of verse LES CHERRES CHAUDES (Hot House Blooms) full of fin-de-siècle mysterious images. It was followed by LA PRINCESSE MALEINE (Princess Maleine) a play set in an unreal Flanders in an undetermined time. Both were privately printed. Maeterlinck's avant-garde plays did not gain popularity among the public but his literary colleagues in Paris were enthusiastic. Princess Maleine was praised by the influential literary critic Octave Mirbeau who announced that is was a masterpiece "comparable-shall I dare say it?-superior in beauty to the most beautiful in Shakespeare."
In the1890s Maeterlinck wrote several symbolist dramas among them PELLÉAS ET MÉLISANDE later produced with musical setting by Claude Debussy. Maeterlinck was furious when Georgette Leblanc (1895-1941) was replaced in the opera by the American Mary Garden and he wished the production will fail. Debussy's opera was crushed in 1902 by critics but four years later it gained a huge success and was praised among others by the writer Romain Rolland. In the tragic story of lovers Maeterlinck used dark stage sets and haunting sound effects to create an emotional response from the audience. The Finnish composer Jean Sibelius also wrote music for the story.
During the summers Maeterlinck lived quietly at Oostacher his family's country home and returned to Ghent for the rest of the year. In 1895 Maeterlinck met Georgette Leblanc an actress and opera singer. She was unable to get a divorce from her Spanish husband but they lived together for the next twenty-three years. At that time Maeterlinck started to take a more realistic approach to his subjects leaving certain melodramatic aspects of symbolism. He wrote for his wife several plays: AGLAVAINE ET SÉLYSETTE (1896) ARIADNE ET BARBEBLEUE (1901) MONNA VANNA (1902) a historical drama set in the quattrocento Pisa and JOYZELLE (1903) about victorious love.
In 1896 Maeterlinck moved from Ghent to Paris. Leblanc took the leading role in most of his plays and she also prepared The Children's Blue Bird. From this period dates Maeterlinck's metaphysical essays LE TRÉSOR DES HUMBLES (1896 The Treasure of the Humble) LA SAGESSE ET LA DESTINÉE (1898 Wisdom and Destiny ) and LA VIE DES ABEILLES (1901 The Life of the Bee) in which he examined analogies between the activity of the bee and human behavior. Noteworthy bee-keeping had been Maeterlinck's hobbies since youth. In these writings Maeterlinck rejected Schopenhaurian negativism and replaced it with a view tempered with victorious optimism. It is possible he though for human being to alter the destiny if he or she so wills. A human being is double: he or she lives both an inner and exterior existence. "It is always a mistake not to close one's eyes whether to forgive or to look better into oneself" Maeterlinck wrote in Pelleas and Melisande.
Maeterlinck's most famous play The Blue Bird was first produced in 1908 by Konstantin Stanislavski at the Moscow Art Theater where it ran for nearly a year. The work an allegorical fantasy conceived as a play for children have been widely translated and adapted into screen several times. In the story Mytyl and Tyltyl the children of a poor woodcutter fall asleep after a disappointing Christmas. They dream that the fairy Berylune sends them to find 'the bird that is blue'. They set out the journey with a diamond with which they are able to see the souls of the objects that surround them. The children visit the Land of Memory. In the forest they are attacked by animals and trees but the faithful Dog saves Tyltyl's life. The journey continues through the Palace of Happiness and Kingdom of the Future before the children return home and are awakened by their mother. Berlingot (the fairy Berylune) their neighbour begs Tyltyl's little bird for her dying children. Tyltyl notices that the bird is blue and the one they have been looking for. The child recovers but the bird escapes and the children ask the audience to return it.
The Blue Bird was produced in 1909 at the Haymarket Theatre in London rivaling in popularity J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan. A New York performance followed in October 1910 and in 1911 the play was performed in Paris at the Théâtre Réjane Paris. In the United States the play was so popular that its sequel The Betrothal (1918) was first produced there. Walter Lang's film version from 1940 starring Shirley Temple as Mytyl vanished soon. George Cukor's remake from 1976 starring Elizabet Taylor in four roles was a gesture of friendship between East and West. In this Russian-American co-production Russian actors were in minor roles.
During World War I Maeterlinck lectured for the Allied cause in Europe and in the United States. Before the war Maeterlinck had felt a sympathy towards the Germans but the invasion of Belgium changed his atttitude expressing his hatred and patriotic outrage against the destrpoyers of his homeland in LES DÉBRIS DE LA GUERRE (1916 The Wrack of the Storm): "No nation can be deceived that does not wish to be deceived; and it is not intelligence German lacks . . . No nation permits herself to be coerced to the one crime that man cannot pardon. It is of her own accord that she hastens towards it; her chief has no need to persuade it is she who urges him on." Maeterlinck's relationship with Leblanc ended and in 1919 he married Renée Dahon who had acted in The Blue Bird. They made their home outside Paris at the Château de Médan and wintered at a villa near Nice called Les Abeilles. Maeterlinck's interest shifted from fantasies towards naturalistic psychological subject-matters.
Between the wars Materlinck wrote essays and plays among others LA VIE DES TERMITES (1926) which draws paralles between totalitarian systems and termite colonies. In 1932 Maeterlinck was made a count by King Albert. On the eve of World War II Maeterlinck went to Portugal under the protection of Antonio Salazar and then fled to the United States. These years were financially hard for the writer. His works were ignored and he was unable to collect royalties from the sales of his books in Europe. In 1947 he returned to his home in Nice. Maeterlinck died of a heart attack on May 6 1949. He was buried according to his agnostic world view without religious ceremonies.
Like the Spanis philospher Miguel de Unamuno y Jugo Maeterlinck saw that the essential enigma of the human condition is the issue of death. His last book was BULLES BLEUES (1948) a collection of happy reminiscences. It has been argued that Maeterlinck's plays with their unspoken dialogue sense of fatality and mysteries below the everyday surface anticipated the art of Harold Pinter. In The Treasure of the Humble writing of an old man sitting in his armchair Maeterlink said that "I am persuaded that in reality this motionless old man lives much deeper and much human and much broader life than the lover who strangles his mistress the army officer who wins a victory or 'the the husband who avenges his honor'."
Some rights reserved Petri Liukkonen (author) & Ari Pesonen. Kuusankosken kaupunginkirjasto 2008
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