Jules Laforgue’s
Derniers vers[
Last Verses] is widely held to be the zenith of his poetic achievement. Written in the latter half of 1886, it is also his final work of poetry, as is clear from the title chosen for it by Laforgue’s friends and literary executors Édouard Dujardin and Félix Fénéon when it was first published as a collection in 1890. (Some of the poems had previously been published individually in his friend Gustave Kahn’s journal
La Voguein August and September of 1886, however.) Indeed, it constitutes the last creative work of his life, along with the tales “Les deux Pigeons” and “Pan et la syrinx” from
Moralités légendaires[
Legendary Morality Tales], which were also written towards the end of 1886; in the months leading up to his death in August…
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Citation: Bootle, Samuel Douglas. "Les Derniers Vers de Jules Laforgue". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 18 April 2012 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=24183, accessed 22 November 2024.]