Augusta Peaux
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Augusta Guerdina Peaux (2 November 1859 – 23 February 1944) was a Dutch poet. She began her publishing career as a writer of prose fiction, in literary magazines and in one collection, and in the early 1900s started publishing poetry, in magazines associated with the literary movement known as the
Tachtigers The Tachtigers ("Eightiers"), otherwise known as the Movement of Eighty (), were a radical and influential group of Dutch writers who developed a new approach in 19th-century Dutch literature. They interacted and worked together in Amsterdam fro ...
, with whom she became associated. With her sister Johanna, she translated poetry by
Dante Gabriel Rossetti Gabriel Charles Dante Rossetti (12 May 1828 â€“ 9 April 1882), generally known as Dante Gabriel Rossetti ( ; ), was an English poet, illustrator, painter, translator, and member of the Rossetti family. He founded the Pre-Raphaelite Brother ...
and
Algernon Charles Swinburne Algernon Charles Swinburne (5 April 1837 – 10 April 1909) was an English poet, playwright, novelist and critic. He wrote many plays – all tragedies – and collections of poetry such as '' Poems and Ballads'', and contributed to the Eleve ...
, and with her friend Truus, with whom she shared a love for Iceland and its literature, she translated stories from the ''
Edda "Edda" (; Old Norse ''Edda'', plural ''Eddur'') is an Old Norse term that has been applied by modern scholars to the collective of two Medieval Icelandic literary works: what is now known as the ''Prose Edda'' and an older collection of poems ( ...
''. Two volumes of her poetry were published; she never sought literary fame, though some fame came to her posthumously.


Biography

Augusta Guerdina Peaux was born in
Simonshaven Simonshaven is a village in the Dutch province of South Holland. It is a part of the municipality of Nissewaard, and lies about 4 km southwest of Spijkenisse. In 2001, the village of Simonshaven had 231 inhabitants. The built-up area of t ...
, a small village in
South Holland South Holland ( ) is a province of the Netherlands with a population of over 3.8 million as of January 2023 and a population density of about , making it the country's most populous province and one of the world's most densely populated areas. ...
, where her father, Pieter Peaux (1835–1914), was a preacher, as were his father and grandfather; her mother was Louisa Cornelia Gerarda Prince (1834–1917). She was the oldest of five. In 1864 the family moved to the
parish house A clergy house is the residence, or former residence, of one or more priests or ministers of a given religion, serving as both a home and a base for the occupant's ministry. Residences of this type can have a variety of names, such as manse, par ...
of nearby
Zwartewaal Zwartewaal is a village in the Dutch province of South Holland, The Netherlands. It is a part of the municipality of Voorne aan Zee and lies about 5 km south of Maassluis. History The village was first mentioned in the middle of the 13t ...
, and in 1868 to Etten and
Hoeven Hoeven is a village in the municipality of Halderberge in the Netherlands. The name Hoeven originated from the purchase of a certain amount of ground in 1282 by the abbey of Cistercians of St. Bernard. This amount was equal to 100 "hoeven", a lo ...
in Brabant, where Pieter Peaux took over the position of his dead father. The children spent much of their time playing outside, in nature, and Augusta had the later poet
Jacques Perk Jacques Fabrice Herman Perk (10 June 1859 – 1 November 1881) was an important Dutch poet of the late 19th century. His crown of sonnets ''Mathilde'', published by Willem Kloos, was the first important announcement of a renewal in Dutch poetry b ...
, the same age as she, as a playmate. Since they now lived in a predominantly Catholic area, the Peaux family occupied a special position, and the two girls were taught at home by teachers brought in from Holland. Beginning in 1873 Augusta attended the MMS in
Dordrecht Dordrecht (), historically known in English as Dordt (still colloquially used in Dutch, ) or Dort, is a List of cities in the Netherlands by province, city and List of municipalities of the Netherlands, municipality in the Western Netherlands, lo ...
, probably while living in a boarding house. The whole family moved to
Haarlem Haarlem (; predecessor of ''Harlem'' in English language, English) is a List of cities in the Netherlands by province, city and Municipalities of the Netherlands, municipality in the Netherlands. It is the capital of the Provinces of the Nether ...
in 1875 because her father temporarily stepped down from his position (for health reasons, it seems), where Augusta finished her schooling and achieved a certificate in French. A good drawer, she also attended a school for applied arts. In the following years, her father went back to the ministry and moved around, the family moving with him: in 1881 to
Wijk aan Zee Wijk aan Zee (; ) is a village on the coast of the North Sea in the municipality of Beverwijk, the province of North Holland of the Netherlands. The prestigious Tata Steel Chess Tournament (formerly called the Corus chess tournament or the Hoogove ...
, in 1896 to
Gulpen Gulpen (; ) is a village in the Netherlands, Dutch province of Limburg (Netherlands), Limburg. It is approximately midway between the Dutch city of Maastricht and the German city of Aachen. Gulpen was a separate municipality until 1999, when it ...
and
Valkenburg Valkenburg means ''falcon castle'' in Dutch and can refer to: * Valkenburg aan de Geul, a town and municipality in the province of Limburg ** Valkenburg Castle, ruined castle near Valkenburg aan de Geul * Valkenburg, South Holland, a village in the ...
. In this period Augusta helped her sister Johanna, who had already become a critic of literature, with translating poetry. In 1889 Augusta translated fourteen of the twenty-four stanzas of
Dante Gabriel Rossetti Gabriel Charles Dante Rossetti (12 May 1828 â€“ 9 April 1882), generally known as Dante Gabriel Rossetti ( ; ), was an English poet, illustrator, painter, translator, and member of the Rossetti family. He founded the Pre-Raphaelite Brother ...
's ''
The Blessed Damozel "The Blessed Damozel" is perhaps the best known poem by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, as well as the title of his painting (and its replica) illustrating the subject. The poem was first published in 1850 in the Pre-Raphaelite journal '' The Germ''. Ro ...
'', which accompanied (and were interspersed with) an article by her sister on Rossetti--the first translation of the poem in Dutch. In 1893 the two published a translation of parts of
Algernon Charles Swinburne Algernon Charles Swinburne (5 April 1837 – 10 April 1909) was an English poet, playwright, novelist and critic. He wrote many plays – all tragedies – and collections of poetry such as '' Poems and Ballads'', and contributed to the Eleve ...
's verse drama ''Chastelard'' (1864).


Literary career

Peaux's publishing career started in 1892, when she began publishing short stories in ''Eigen Haard'', a popular magazine published in Haarlem by Arie Cornelis Kruseman. From Gulpen she regularly sent poems to
Albert Verwey Albert Verwey (May 15, 1865 – March 8, 1937) was a Dutch poet belonging to the " Movement of Eighty". As a translator, staffer, and literary historian he played an important role in the literary life of The Netherlands in the late 19th and ...
, who published them in two of his magazines, ''Tweemaandelijksch Tijdschrift'' and ''De XXe eeuw'', and praised her "little verses". She was hesitant to publish collections of her poems fearing a negative response, but did publish a collection of stories in 1899, ''Op Goudgrond''. A negative review by Frans Coenen in ''De Kroniek'' made her refrain from collecting and publishing her own work, though she continued to publish prose fiction in ''Eigen Haard''. She was drawn to Scandinavia and especially Iceland, where she imagined silent landscapes without people. Literary critic Mea Verwey later praised her prose stories, saying they evidenced a "great heart" and a love for nature and fairy tale. When her father retired in 1901, she moved to
Nijmegen Nijmegen ( , ; Nijmeegs: ) is the largest city in the Dutch province of Gelderland and the ninth largest of the Netherlands as a whole. Located on the Waal River close to the German border, Nijmegen is one of the oldest cities in the ...
with her parents. By then she was 42 and no longer shared her parents' faith; her poetry had no place for Christ, only for pre-Christian gods and an animated nature. She became involved, even if tentatively, with the suffragist movement, becoming friends with people involved in the
Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht The Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht (Association for Women's Suffrage) was a women's rights organization active in the Netherlands from 1894 to 1919. It was devoted to women's suffrage. It was the main women's suffrage movement in the Netherla ...
, especially
Betsy Perk Christina Elizabeth (Betsy) Perk (Delft, March 26, 1833 - Nijmegen, March 30, 1906), was a Dutch author of novels and plays, and a pioneer of the Dutch women's movement, who wrote under the pen names Philemon, Liesbeth van Altena, and Spirito. She ...
, the aunt of her childhood friend Jacques. She also contributed to the local drama societies, and she found a few younger friends among the actors who recited her poetry. One of those was Geertruida (Truus) Meuleman, who lived on the same street as Peaux and was the daughter of the rector of the local gymnasium. Meuleman was educated to be a teacher, and the two shared a love for Scandinavian literature and landscape. (In 1917, they published a translation of the story of
Þrymr In Norse mythology, Þrymr (''Thrymr'', ''Thrym''; "noise"Rudolf Simek, trans. Angela Hall, ''Dictionary of Northern Mythology'', Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1993, repr. 2000, p. 330.John McKinnell, "Myth as Therapy: The Usefulness of ''Þrymskviða ...
as they found it in the ''Edda''.) When in 1909 ''De XXe eeuw'' merged into ''
De Nieuwe Gids (from Dutch: ''The New Guide'') was a Dutch illustrated literary periodical which was published from 1885 to 1943. It played an important role in promoting the literary movement of the 1880s. Its contents covered a wide range of topics, extend ...
'' and became the best-known outlet for the
Tachtigers The Tachtigers ("Eightiers"), otherwise known as the Movement of Eighty (), were a radical and influential group of Dutch writers who developed a new approach in 19th-century Dutch literature. They interacted and worked together in Amsterdam fro ...
, Peaux became acquainted with
Willem Kloos Willem Johannes Theodorus Kloos (; 6 May 1859 – 31 March 1938) was a nineteenth-century Dutch poet and literary critic. He was one of the prominent figures of the Movement of Eighty and became editor in chief of '' De Nieuwe Gids'' after the e ...
. Starting in 1911 she published her poetry in the magazine, and Kloos, with whom she corresponded, asked her to publish her childhood recollections of Jacques Perk, who had died in 1881.


Poetry collections, later years

In 1918, the year she turned 59, she published her first collection of poetry, ''Gedichten'', with Tjeenk Willink. In these "nature poems", as one reviewer called them, natural images and landscapes are central. Peaux expresses her revulsion of World War I, which robbed people of the landscape; Mea Verwey noted the shock effect of World War I on the poet, who now stands estranged from her mother, nature. Verwey also comments that there is little change in the poems, even though they comprise the work of a lifetime, and that Peaux excels in the "small" images but that the introspective poems are the weakest. Kloos praised her poetry in a lengthy review in ''De Nieuwe Gids'', in which he recalled how Jacques Perk first alerted him to her work; at the time, he was puzzled by the fact that there were only two good young talented poets in the country, and Perk offered Peaux as a third. He spoke positively of her imagery and the lyrical quality of her poems, which he said come from an electric spark which only momentarily shows itself but is always palpable. Peaux, he said, is "one of the real poets, whose psychic impressions come from the inner soul, in the way in which they are conceived there by the mediation of the surrounding reality, and then come forth, carried by the mood which results from their coming into existence, uttering itself in song through the rhyme and measure of the verse". J. D. Bierens de Haan, in a short review, saw mostly short, "tasteful" poems, whose naivete was refreshing in troubling times. The collection was reprinted in 1923. In 1926 she published ''Nieuwe gedichten'', also with Tjeenk Willink. Peaux traveled through Iceland in 1923, with two friends, Truus Meuleman and Willy van Hooff. They sought and found an "Iceland of the imagination", always accompanied by the ''
Edda "Edda" (; Old Norse ''Edda'', plural ''Eddur'') is an Old Norse term that has been applied by modern scholars to the collective of two Medieval Icelandic literary works: what is now known as the ''Prose Edda'' and an older collection of poems ( ...
''. Afterward, she lectured on and wrote about her journey. Later, Peaux and Meuleman traveled in the South of France and Denmark. In 1929, on the occasion of her 70th birthday, poet
J. C. Bloem Jakobus Cornelis (Jacques) Bloem (10 May 1887, Oudshoorn – 10 August 1966, Kalenberg) was a Dutch poet and essayist. Between 1921 and 1958 he published fourteen volumes of poetry. In 1949 he won the Constantijn Huygensprijs, one of the country ...
wrote an appraisal of her work, the best of which, he said, had a "curious, wild grandiosity" that he appreciated and that, he said, is rarely found among women. But after 1930 life became more difficult for Peaux as her physical and mental health began to suffer, though her friend Truus Meuleman continued to support her. In 1935, Peaux suffered from depression, which would revisit her in 1942. She remained in Nijmegen, with a brief stay in The Hague in 1940. She died in a boarding house on 23 February 1944, of pneumonia, one day after the Americans bombed the city. She was buried at the cemetery Rustoord in Nijmegen, in the family grave; her name is not on the gravestone.


Legacy

Peaux was written up in local newspapers on her 75th and 80th birthdays, and portrayed as one of the famous Tachtigers; while she deserved to be better known she had no wish to seek the spotlight, according to a newspaper article from 1939. After her death, her "Eenzaam kerkhof" was regularly included in anthologies of poetry, and
Gerrit Komrij Gerrit Jan Komrij (30 March 1944 – 5 July 2012) was a Dutch poet, novelist, translator, critic, polemic journalist and playwright. He rose to prominence in the early 1970s, writing poetry that sharply contrasted with the free form poetry, free- ...
included that and seven other of her poems in his '' De Nederlandse poëzie van de 19de en 20ste eeuw in 1000 en enige gedichten''. Her work was republished in 2014, edited by Mario Molegraaf, with an extensive biography. A poetry festival named for Peaux is held in Simonshaven since 2016.


Publications


Prose

*''Op goudgrond'' (collection of stories, 1899) *"Jeudgherinnering aan Jacques Perk" (1931) *"J.R. Klein-Peaux, Geervliet 19 Januari 1864 – Oosterbeek 30 Juni 1933" (1935)


Poetry

*"Fragmenten uit Swinburne's ''Chastelard''", with Johanna R. Klein-Peaux *"Vervallen woning", "Een avond", "Als toen", "Calle barozzi" (1901) *"Stadstuin", "Stemming", "De berk" (1911) *"De herinnering" (1912) *"Het lied van Thrym" (with G. E. G. Meuleman, 1917) *"Bladvulling" (1926) *"Weelde" (1930) *"In laten herfst", "Het oerwoud", "De kolenkar", "De vogelvrij verklaarde" (1935)


Collections

*''Gedichten'' (1918) *''Nieuwe gedichten'' (1926) *''De wilgen, de velden, het water – Augusta Peaux'', ed. Mario Molegraaf (Dordrecht: Liverse, 2014)


References


External links


"Augusta Peaux"
at Digital Library for Dutch Literature {{DEFAULTSORT:Peaux, Augusta Dutch poets Dutch women poets 1859 births 1944 deaths People from Dordrecht Writers from Nijmegen Translators of the Poetic Edda