Claudel was always a controversial figure during his lifetime, and remains so today. His devout Catholicism and his right-wing political views, both unfashionable stances among many of his intellectual peers, made him, and continue to make him, unpopular in many circles. His address of a poem ("Paroles au Marechal", "Words to the Marshal") to
Marshal Petain after the defeat of France in 1940, commending Petain for picking up and salvaging France's broken, wounded body, has been unflatteringly remembered, though it is less a paean to Petain than a patriotic lament over the condition of France. As a Catholic, he could not avoid a certain sense of bitter satisfaction at the fall of the
anti-clerical French Third Republic. However, accusations that he was a collaborationist based on the 1940 poem ignore the fact that support for Marshal Petain and the surrender was, in the catastrophic atmosphere of defeat, emotional collapse and exhaustion in 1940, widespread throughout the French populace (witness the large majority vote in favour of Petain and the dissolution of the Third Republic in the French Parliament in 1940, with support stretching across the political spectrum). Claudel's diaries make clear his consistent contempt for Nazism (condemning it as early as 1930 as "demonic" and "wedded to Satan", and referring to
Communism and
Nazism as "
Gog and Magog"), and his attitude to the Vichy regime quickly hardened into opposition.
Despite sharing in his earlier years in the old-fashioned anti-semitism of conservative France, his response to the radical racialist Nazi version was unequivocal; he had written an open letter to the World Jewish Conference in 1935 condemning the Nuremberg Laws as "abominable and stupid". The sister of his daughter in law had married a Jew, Paul-Louis Weiller, who was arrested by the Vichy government in October 1940. Claudel went to Vichy to intercede for him, to no avail; luckily Weiller managed to escape (with Claudel's assistance, the authorities suspected) and flee to
New York. Claudel made known his anger at the Vichy government's anti-Jewish legislation, courageously writing a published letter to the Chief Rabbi, Israel Schwartz, in 1941 to express "the disgust, horror, and indignation that all decent Frenchmen and especially Catholics feel in respect of the injustices, the despoiling, all the ill treatment of which our Jewish compatriots are now the victims...Israel is always the eldest son of the promise [of God], as it is today the eldest son of suffering." The Vichy authorities responded by having Claudel's house searched and keeping him under observation. His support for
de Gaulle and the Free French forces culminated in his victory ode addressed to
de Gaulle when Paris was liberated in 1944.
Claudel, a
conservative of the old school, was clearly not a fascist. The French writers who were attracted by, and collaborated with, the Nazi "New Order" in Europe, much younger men like
Celine and
Drieu la Rochelle, tended to come from a very different background to Claudel's,
nihilists, ex-
dadaists, and
futurists rather than old-fashioned Catholics (neither of the other two major French Catholic writers,
Francois Mauriac and
Georges Bernanos, were supporters of the Nazi occupation or the Vichy regime).
An interesting parallel to Claudel, for Anglophones, is
T.S. Eliot, whose later political and religious views were similar to Claudel's. As with Eliot, even those (including the majority, no doubt, of the modern and postmodern intelligentsia) who dislike Claudel's religious and political beliefs, have generally admitted his genius as a writer. The British poet
W.H. Auden, at that time an agnostic left-winger, acknowledged the importance of Paul Claudel in his famous poem "In Memory of W.B. Yeats" (1939). Writing about Yeats, Auden says in lines 52-55:
"Time that with this strange excuse/Pardoned Kipling and his views,/And will pardon Paul Claudel,/Pardons him for writing well." (These lines are from the originally published version; they were excised by Auden in a later revision.)
For believing Catholics, in contrast, far from his religious views needing 'pardoning', Claudel must claim to rank as one of the greatest poets of the twentieth century in any language, because of the extraordinary artistic power and beauty with which he presents a Catholic worldview.
Paul Claudel was elected at the
Académie française on
April 4, 1946.