Memoirs of Hadrian by Marguerite Yournecar is a classic historical novel detailing the life and reign of the Roman emperor Hadrian, as told from the first-person point-of-view of Hadrian himself. The narrative is told in a letter written by the protagonist to his successor, Marcus Aurelius. It details the struggles and triumphs of a leader who made peace his central objective.
- Yourcenar’s narrative is arranged in short blocks clustered under Latin headings, beginning with the first line of a poem addressed by Hadrian to his soul and continuing with phrases that served.
- In Memoirs of Hadrian, Marguerite Yourcenar has given us the fully imagined voice of Publius Aelius Trianus Hadrianus, or Hadrian (76-38 CE), Roman emperor from 117 to 138.
- Memoirs Of Hadrian by Yourcenar, Marguerite. Topics North Collection digitallibraryindia; JaiGyan Language English. Book Source: Digital Library of India Item 2015.
- Yourcenar narrates as though she were Hadrian recalling his passing life. Throughout her narration, Yourcenar (as Hadrian) assigns meaning and significance to the events and people of a time long past- a significance that's aptly valid for our thoughts and our daily situations.
Therefore, although his regime is marked by relative peace, Hadrian is commonly depicted in military attire. Bust of Vibia Sabina, Roman, about A.D. 140, marble Getty Center, Los Angeles, California (Pubic Domain) In 123 AD, Hadrian’s travels took him to Bithynia, where he possibly encountered Antinous for the first time.
When Hadrian begins his letter to Marcus Aurelius, he is an old man dying from heart disease. He intends to give his adopted grandson a true history of his life and reign. Hadrian is born in Italica to a Spanish family. He studies rhetoric, Greek, philosophy and medicine in Spain and Greece, and trains as an army officer. During the waning days of Domitian's reign, he goes to Rome and works several years as a judge. There he lives a life of debauchery, until he returns to active duty in the Pyrenees.
While serving in Spain, Domitian dies and is succeeded by the elderly Nerva, who takes Hadrian's cousin Trajan as his adopted son. Nerva dies, and Hadrian is the first to tell his cousin of his accession. Trajan is uncertain of Hadrian's value and skills, but Hadrian proves himself in the Dacian Wars with acts of valor. Trajan tentatively chooses him as a successor. Hadrian marries into the family and is assisted by the empress, Plotina. Trajan begins a campaign of conquest in Parthia that dominates his reign. Hadrian believes his role as emperor should be to ensure peace and prosperity throughout the Roman world. Trajan dies and Hadrian takes the throne.
Hadrian does not care for Rome and spends most of his reign traveling the provinces. He makes peace with the Parthians, begins rebuilding Athens and Jerusalem, and builds centers of trade throughout the provinces. He also pushes reforms increasing imperial transparency and rights to slaves. While in Bithynia, he meets a beautiful Greek named Antinous and falls in love. The young man becomes his constant companion.
At about this time, Hadrian realizes he is divine. He begins to take his young lover for granted, and Antinous - knowing Hadrian's interest in cults and strange rites - sacrifices himself for the emperor. Hadrian is devastated, and he has Antinous interred in Alexandria. He builds hundreds of statues and sets about creating a cult to his dead lover.
Not long after, Jewish zealots in Jerusalem massacre Roman troops and send the city into revolt. Hadrian sends his best commander, but the battle continues for three years. Jerusalem is reduced to rubble, and the Jewish people become uniformly opposed to Roman rule. Hadrian wonders whether the Roman people are still worthy leaders of the world.
Upon returning to Rome after the Judea battle, Hadrian goes about choosing his successor. He settles on his friend Lucius Ceionius. Unfortunately, Lucius falls suddenly ill and dies. Hadrian then chooses a popular and able Senator, Antoninus, and a prodigious child of a renowned family, Marcus Aurelius, to succeed him. As Hadrian lies on his deathbed, be thinks back on his life and work. He has a achieved prosperity and peace in the Roman world and his lover is an established god, now. He dies contended.
French novelist, poet, essayist, dramatist, world traveller, and translator Marguerite Yourcenar (1903-1987)was the first woman elected to the French Academy.
Marguerite Yourcenar was born on June 8, 1903, and baptized Marguerite Antoinette Ghislaine. Her father, Michel de Crayencour, was a native of Lille and a restless traveller, and it was by chance that she was born during her family's brief sojourn in Brussels. Her mother, Frenande de Cartier de Marchienne, a Belgian, died ten days after the birth of her daughter of puerperal fever. As a young girl Marguerite lived frequently with an aunt in Belgium and with family friends in northern France until 1912 when she and her father settled in Paris. She was educated by a professional teacher, but she was in large measure self-educated by visits to museums, the classical theaters, and extensive reading.
Her first trip beyond the continent was to England in 1914 where she spent a year learning English and visiting famous museums and historical sites. The remaining years of World War I she passed in Paris with her father, who began her instruction in ancient Greek, or in Provence where her father after suffering serious financial losses, attempted to recover his fortune by gambling at Monte Carlo and elsewhere. She continued her education with various private tutors and received a Baccalaureate degree in 1919. At this point her formal education ended.
Yourcenar Hadrian
Between the ages of 19 and 23 she began writing and, with a subsidy from her father, published two books of poems: Le Jardin des Chime‧res (1921) and Les Dieux ne sont pas morts (1922). Equally with the aid of her father she worked out the anagram that became Yourcenar, her pen-name, which became her legal name in 1947. She composed several hundred pages of manuscript during her early years, threw most of them away, yet preserved fragments that she would turn into complete books 30 or more years later. The lucubrations of her youth were seedbeds for her fertile, restless imagination. So were certain events: a visit to the Villa Adriana was the inspiration for her most famous novel, Mémoires d'Hadrien, which was not completed until 1951.
The 1920s were years of continuous travel. In Italy she witnessed Mussolini's march on Rome. Her knowledge of fascism derived from her acquaintance with Italian life and conversations with Italian intellectuals exiled in Switzerland and southern France. From these experiences she published her novel Denier du rêve (1934), revised in 1959. For Yourcenar, a republication became the occasion for rewriting her text, so a new edition was frequently a new book. She travelled extensively in Switzerland, Germany, and Eastern Europe where political transformations were having a degrading effect on the classical culture that had formed the basis of her education. She published several articles in prominent reviews deploring the decline of European culture; she also published several short stories, mostly in the classical style. However, her reading now included contemporary authors as well as the theories of socialism and anarchy, with the result that her outlook assumed a leftward orientation. She even published a story, thanks to Henri Barbusse, in L'Humanité, the French Communist Party's newspaper.
Politics, however, rarely made up the substance of her compositions. In these years she wrote a story—Alexis ou le traité du vain combat (1929)—about a young musician, married and father of a child, who renounced his family in order to follow his bent toward homosexuality. In the 1920s this was a delicate subject, also taken up by André Gide. Its use in fiction was still unusual and provoked perhaps more outrage than her novel Denier du rêve about a failed plot to assassinate Mussolini. Il Duce had many backers in France.
Marguerite Yourcenar Hadrianus Minnen
Yourcenar was remarkably prolific, finding time to think, read, and write while travelling extensively in Greece where she wrote the manuscript of Feux, a series of aphorisms and personal impressions on the subject of passion— above all, carnal passion. A visit to London in 1937 led her to Virginia Woolf, whose novel The Waves she translated into French. Two years later she translated What Maisie Knew by Henry James. Back in Paris she made the acquaintance of an American, Grace Frick, who became a life-time friend and the translator of her major novels. In September 1938 she left for the United States, settled in New Haven where Grace lived, and came to love New England. She also travelled extensively in the upper South, became aware of the condition of the African American population, and began collecting and translating African American spirituals in an anthology which she later published under the appropriate title Fleuve profond, sombre rivie‧re (1964).
In 1938 she settled in a villa on the Isle of Capri where she composed Le Coup de Grâce (1939), a novel based on an event that occurred during the civil war in Russia between the Reds and the Whites. She continued her travels in Europe, returning to the United States when war broke out. She established a residence there for 11 years, meanwhile travelling to Chicago and the Mid-West to lecture and accepting a part-time teaching job at Sarah Lawrence College from 1942 to 1949.
She undertook extensive reading in the libraries of Yale University and other research centers to expand her knowledge of classical antiquity and finally completed the original manuscript of Hadrian's Memoires, first sketched in 1937-1938 and published in 1951. Her second historical novel, L'Oeuvre au noir (1968), came to dominate the historical novel school in France. About her family's origins she published Souvenirs pieux (1974) and Archives du Nord (1977). Her writings represent a form of modern classicism. Her language shows a 'favorable inclination toward the soft, fluid French of the century of Versailles that gives to the least word the retarded grace of a dead language.'
Yourcenar was the recipient of many awards, including the Prix Femina-Vacaresco (1952) for Mémoires d'Hadrien, for which she was also honored by the French Academy; the page one award of the Newspaper Guild of New York in 1955 for Frick's translation of Hadrian's Memoires; the Prix Combat for Sous bénéfice d'inventaire in 1962; the Prix Femina for Oeuvre au noir in 1968; Legion of Honor and officer of the Order of Leopold of Belgium in 1971; the Grand prix national de la Culture in 1974; and the Grand prix de l'Académie Française and the Grande Médaille de Vermeil of the City of Paris in 1977. She received honorary doctorates from Smith College, Colby College, and Harvard University and was a member of the Belgian Academie Royale de Langue et de Littérature Française (1979), the Académie Française (1980), and the American Academy of Arts and Letters (1982).
Marguerite Yourcenar Hadrianus Gedenkschrift
Yourcenar died December 17, 1987, at Mount Desert Island Hospital of complications following a stroke. French premier Jacques Chirac said, 'French letters has just lost an exceptional woman.'
Further Reading on Marguerite Yourcenar
The best English language introduction to the writings of Yourcenar is Frederic Farrell, Marguerite Yourcenar: Criticism and Interpretations (1983). The following sources are all in French: M. Yourcenar, Oeuvres romanesques (Gallimard, 1982), which provides a chronology of events in her life; J. Blot, Marguerite Yourcenar (Seghers, 1971), a useful biographical portrait; R. de Rosbo, Entretiens radiophoniques avec Marguerite Yourcenar (Mercure de France, 1972), an extensive interview; and B. Vercier and J. Lecarme, editors, La Littérature Française depuis 1968 (Bordas, 1982), which is the best study of her writings and her place in French classical literature.
Additional Biography Sources
Savigneau, Josyane, Marguerite Yourcenar: inventing a life, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1993.
Yourcenar, Marguerite, Dear departed, New York: Farrar Straus Giroux, 1991.