Shanghai Daily

A tragic tale of love, bitterness and family

- Hugues Honore

It was a romance that helped inspire one of the great works of 20thcentur­y fiction and a bitter conflict between his heirs, but a new book of Antoine de Saint-Exupery’s love letters suggests a reconcilia­tion may finally have been achieved.

French aviator, poet and war hero Antoine de Saint-Exupery’s “The Little Prince” is said to have sold more than 200 million copies in 450 different translatio­ns since it was first published in 1943.

Much of the story hinges around the mysterious star-traveling prince’s relationsh­ip with a rose — delicate and demanding — that he has been tending on his home planet.

Saint-Exupery’s real-life rose was Consuelo Suncin, a Salvadoran artist who cut a swathe through high society in Latin America and beyond before marrying him in 1930.

More than 160 of their letters and telegrams were published in France last week, adorned with dozens of their sketches, photograph­s and other mementoes.

Unsurprisi­ngly for a marriage between a moody, philanderi­ng adventurer and an intensely spirited and sharp-tongued artist, it was tempestuou­s.

“Consuelo my dear, you do not understand how much you make me suffer,” he wrote at one point.

“I cry with emotion, I am so afraid of being exiled from your heart,” she responded.

There were many break-ups and affairs, though just as many reconcilia­tions.

“Consuelo had an exuberant temperamen­t, and he was a great depressive. His multiple affairs were not the sign of a Don Juan, but of an emotional failing,” biographer Alain Vircondele­t said.

But there seems little room for doubt about their underlying feelings in one of Saint-Exupery’s final letters, when he wrote: “Consuelo, thank you from the bottom of my heart for being my wife ... If I am killed, I have someone to wait for in eternity.”

Saint-Exupery, who had joined the French resistance forces from exile in the United States, disappeare­d shortly after setting off on a reconnaiss­ance flight from Corsica in July 1944.

No evidence of the crash was discovered until 1998 when a Marseilles fisherman pulled up a silver identity bracelet. It bore both their names.

Saint-Exupery’s aristocrat­ic family were never keen on Consuelo and after his death all but airbrushed her out of his life story.

“Marrying a foreigner was considered worse than marrying a Jew,” one member of the family told biographer Paul Webster in the 1990s — giving a clear sense of the family’s politics.

She took her revenge, in Webster’s words, by handing her half of the royalty rights to her gardener-chauffeur Jose Fructuoso Martinez when she died in 1979, along with a huge haul of the love letters.

In 2008 the Saint-Exupery family successful­ly sued him after he published a book about Antoine and Consuelo’s relationsh­ip without their permission.

Six years later however he successful­ly sued them to make them pay him a share of revenues from a cartoon version of the book.

The publicatio­n of the love letters represents a reconcilia­tion between the rival estates.

In a press release last month via French publisher Gallimard, the author’s descendant­s spoke of a “fruitless 18-year legal war” before they agreed to collaborat­e on the project.

French scholar Alain Vircondele­t, an expert on the writer, says much more correspond­ence remains unseen. It is now held by the gardener’s widow Martine Martinez Fructuoso.

“She possesses a colossal treasure on Saint-Expury, and every time she tells me about it, I am astonished,” Vircondele­t said.

Still, at the heart of the story is a

romance that sparked one of literature’s most enduring and popular tales, and its roots can be seen in the very first letter Saint-Exupery wrote to his future wife.

“I remember a very old story, I’m changing it a little,” he wrote, shortly after they met in Buenos Aires.

“There was a small boy who discovered a treasure. But the treasure was too beautiful for a child whose eyes didn’t know how to comprehend it or his arms to hold it. So the child grew sad.”

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 ??  ?? “Correspond­ence (1931-1944): Antoine de Saint Exupéry and Consuelo de Saint Exupéry”
“Correspond­ence (1931-1944): Antoine de Saint Exupéry and Consuelo de Saint Exupéry”
 ??  ?? The childhood home of French aviator, poet and war hero Antoine de Saint-Exupery
The childhood home of French aviator, poet and war hero Antoine de Saint-Exupery

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