Klingsor, Tristan (pseud. of Léon Leclère) (1874-1966). The work of this French poet, painter, musician, and art critic is distinguished by his love of legends and by his experimentation with metre and with traditional popular verse forms. Whether the legends were those of the Symbolist movement's medieval and Wagnerian themes (Filles-Fleurs, 1895) or those of oriental literature (Schéhérazade, 1903), his mastery of French verse forms and rhythms (including those of the vers libre) resulted in the very personal, flexible, light, and humorous poetry which made Klingsor one of the inspirations of the Fantaisistes in the period immediately preceding World War I.
[James Kearns]




