Early life and family The poet's paternal family had arrived in
Wallachia during the early 19th century. Of
South Slav origin per
George Călinescu they were descended from Serb insurgents in
Ottoman-ruled
Macedonia. However, according to
Radu Florescu they were of
Bulgarian origin. Per Romanian historian Constantin Velichi his grandfather was as a Bulgarian who later became
Romanianized. Alexandru's grandfather Dimitrie and Dimitrie's brother
Pavel participated in the 1821 uprising against the
Phanariote administration, and in alliance with the
Filiki Eteria; Dimitrie made the object of controversy when, during the final stage of the revolt, he sided with the Eteria in its confrontation with Wallachian leader
Tudor Vladimirescu, taking an active part in the latter's killing. Both Macedonski brothers had careers in the Wallachian military forces, at a time when the country was governed by
Imperial Russian envoys, when the
Regulamentul Organic regime recognized the family as belonging to Wallachia's nobility. Dimitrie married Zoe, the daughter an
ethnic Russian or
Polish officer; their son, the Russian-educated Alexandru, climbed in the military and political hierarchy, joining the
unified Land Forces after his political ally,
Alexander John Cuza, was elected
Domnitor and the two
Danubian Principalities became
united Romania. Both the officer's uncle Pavel were amateur poets. Macedonski's mother, Maria Fisența (also
Vicenț or
Vicența), was from an aristocratic environment, being the scion of
Oltenian
boyars. Through her father, she may have descended from Russian immigrants who had been absorbed into Oltenia's nobility. Maria had been adopted by the boyar Dumitrache Pârâianu, and the couple had inherited the Adâncata and Pometești estates in
Goiești, on the
Amaradia Valley. Both the poet and his father were dissatisfied with accounts of their lineage, contradicting them with an account that researchers have come to consider spurious. Although adherents of the
Romanian Orthodox Church, the Macedonskis traced their origin to
Rogala-bearing
Lithuanian nobility from the defunct
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. While the writer perpetuated his father's claim, it is possible that he also took pride in investigating his
Balkan roots: according to literary historian
Tudor Vianu, who, as a youth, was a member of his circle, this tendency is attested by two of Macedonski's poems from the 1880s, where the South Slavs appear as icons of freedom. Vianu's contemporary, literary historian
George Călinescu, postulated that, although the family had been absorbed into the ethnic and cultural majority, the poet's origin served to enrich
local culture by linking it to a "
Thracian" tradition and the spirit of "adventurers". The family moved often, following General Macedonski's postings. Born on 14 March 1854, in
Bucharest, Macedonski-son was the third of four siblings, the oldest of whom was a daughter, Caterina. Before the age of six, he was a sickly and nervous child, who is reported to have had regular
tantrums. In 1862, his father sent him to school in Oltenia, and he spent most time in the Amaradia region. The nostalgia he felt for the landscape later made him consider writing an
Amărăzene ("Amaradians") cycle, of which only one poem was ever completed. Macedonski's father had by then become known as an authoritarian commander, and, during his time in
Târgu Ocna, faced a
mutiny which only his wife could stop by pleading with the soldiers (an episode which made an impression on the future poet). A stern parent, he took an active part in educating his children. Having briefly served as
Defense Minister, the general was mysteriously dismissed by Cuza in 1863, and his pension became the topic of a political scandal. It ended only under the rule of
Carol I, Cuza's
Hohenzollern successor, when
Parliament voted against increasing the sum to the level demanded by its recipient. Having preserved a negative impression of the
1866 plebiscite, during which Cuza's dethronement had been confirmed, Macedonski remained a committed opponent of the new ruler. As a youth and adult, he sought to revive his father's cause, and included allusions to the perceived injustice in at least one poem.
Debut years '', 1872 Macedonski left Romania in 1870, traveling through
Austria-Hungary and spending time in
Vienna, before visiting Switzerland and possibly other countries; according to one account, it was here that he may have first met (and disliked) his rival poet
Mihai Eminescu, at a time a Viennese student. Macedonski's visit was meant to be preparation for entering the
University of Bucharest, but he spent much of his time in the
bohemian environment, seeking entertainment and engaging in romantic escapades. He was however opposed to the lifestyle choices of people his age, claiming that they were engaged in "orgy after orgy". At around that date, the young author had begun to perfect a style heavily influenced by
Romanticism, and in particular by his Wallachian predecessors
Dimitrie Bolintineanu and
Ion Heliade Rădulescu. He was for a while in
Styria, at
Bad Gleichenberg, a stay which, George Călinescu believes, may have been the result of a medical recommendation to help him counter excessive nervousness. The landscape there inspired him to write an
ode. Also in 1870, he published his first lyrics in
George Bariț's
Transylvanian-based journal
Telegraful Român. The following year, he left for Italy, where he visited
Pisa,
Florence,
Venice, and possibly other cities. His records of the journey indicate that he was faced with financial difficulties and plagued by disease. Macedonski also claimed to have attended college lectures in these cities, and to have spent significant time studying at
Pisa University, but this remains uncertain. He eventually returned to Bucharest, where he entered the Faculty of Letters (which he never attended regularly). According to Călinescu, Macedonski "did not feel the need" to attend classes, because "such a young man will expect society to render upon him its homages." He was again in Italy during spring 1872, soon after publishing his debut volume
Prima verba (
Latin for "First Word"). Having also written an anti-Carol piece, published in
Telegraful Român during 1873, Macedonski reportedly feared political reprisals, and decided to make another visit to Styria and Italy while his case was being assessed. It was in Italy that he met French
musicologist Jules Combarieu, with whom he corresponded sporadically over the following decades. During that period, Macedonski became interested in the political scene and political journalism, first as a sympathizer of the
liberal-radical current—which, in 1875, organized itself around the
National Liberal Party. In 1874, back in Craiova, Macedonski founded a short-lived literary society known as
Junimea, a title which purposefully or unwittingly copied that of the influential
conservative association with whom he would later quarrel. It was then that he met journalist and pedagogue
Ștefan Velescu, a meeting witnessed by Velescu's pupil, the future liberal journalist
Constantin Bacalbașa, who recorded it in his
memoirs.
Oltul magazine, which he had helped establish and which displayed a liberal agenda, continued to be published until July 1875, and featured Macedonski's translations from
Pierre-Jean de Béranger,
Hector de Charlieu and
Alphonse de Lamartine, as well as his debut in
travel writing and short story. At age 22, he worked on his first play, a
comedy titled
Gemenii ("The Twins"). In 1874 that he came to the attention of young journalist future dramatist
Ion Luca Caragiale, who
satirized him in articles for the magazine
Ghimpele, ridiculing his claim to Lithuanian descent, and eventually turning him into the character
Aamsky, whose fictional career ends with his death from exhaustion caused by contributing to "for the country's political development". This was the first episode in a consuming polemic between the two figures. Reflecting back on this period in 1892, Macedonski described Caragiale as a "noisy young man" of "
sophistic reasoning", whose target audience was to be found in "
beer gardens".
1875 trial and office as prefect In March 1875, Macedonski was arrested on charges of
defamation or
sedition. For almost a year before, he and
Oltul had taken an active part in the campaign against
Conservative Party and its leader,
Premier Lascăr Catargiu. In this context, he had demanded that the common man "rise up with weapons in their hands and break both the government agents and the government", following up with similar messages aimed at the
Domnitor. He was taken to Bucharest's
Văcărești Prison and confined there for almost three months. Supported by the liberal press and defended by the most prestigious pro-liberal attorneys (
Nicolae Fleva among them), Macedonski faced a jury trial on 7 June, being eventually cleared of the charges. Reportedly, the Bucharest populace organized a spontaneous celebration of the verdict. In 1875, after the National Liberal
Ioan Emanoil Florescu was assigned the post of Premier by Carol, Macedonski embarked on an administrative career. The poet was upset by not being included on the National Liberal list for the
1875 suffrage. This disenchantment led him into a brief conflict with the young liberal figure
Bonifaciu Florescu, only to join him soon afterward in editing
Stindardul journal, alongside
Pantazi Ghica and
George Fălcoianu. The new cabinet eventually appointed him
Prefect of
Bolgrad region, in the
Budjak (at the time part of Romania). In parallel, he published his first translation, a version of
Parisina, an 1816
epic poem by
Lord Byron, and completed the original works
Ithalo and
Calul arabului ("The Arab's Horse"). He also spoke at the
Romanian Atheneum, presenting his views on the state of
Romanian literature (1878). His time in office ended upon the outbreak of the
Russo-Turkish War. At the time, Russian volunteers were amassed on the Budjak border, requesting from the Romanian authorities the right of free passage into the
Principality of Serbia. The National Liberal Premier
Ion Brătianu, who was negotiating an anti-
Ottoman alliance, sent Macedonski signals to let them pass, but the prefect, obeying the official recommendation of
Internal Affairs Minister George D. Vernescu, decided against it, and was consequently stripped of his office. Their history is connected with that of the Russo-Turkish War, at the end of which Romanian participation on the Russian side resulted in her independence. Macedonski remained committed to the anti-Ottoman cause, and, some thirty years later, stated: "We want no
Turkey in Europe!" By 1879, the poet, who continued to voice criticism of Carol, had several times switched sides between the National Liberals and the opposition Conservatives.
Early Literatorul years With the 1880s came a turning point in Alexandru Macedonski's career. Vianu notes that changes took place in the poet's relationship with his public: "Society recognizes in him the nonconformist. [...] The man becomes singular; people start talking about his oddities." Macedonski's presumed frustration at being perceived in this way, Vianu notes, may have led him closer to the idea of
poète maudit, theorized earlier by
Paul Verlaine. In this context, he had set his sight on promoting "social poetry", the merger between
lyricism and political militantism. Meanwhile, according to Călinescu, his attacks on the liberals and the "daft insults he aimed at [Romania's] throne" had effectively ruined his own chance of political advancement. Florescu parted with the group soon after, due to a disagreement with Macedonski, and was later attacked by the latter for allegedly accumulating academic posts.
Literatorul aimed to irritate
Junimist sensibilities from its first issue, when it stated its dislike for "political prejudice in literature." This was most likely an allusion to the views of
Junimist figure
Titu Maiorescu, being later accompanied by explicit attacks on him and his followers. An early success for the new journal was the warm reception it received from
Vasile Alecsandri, a Romantic poet and occasional
Junimist whom Macedonski idolized at the time, and the collaboration of popular memoirist
Gheorghe Sion. Another such figure was the intellectual
V. A. Urechia, whom Macedonski made president of the
Literatorul Society. In 1881,
Education Minister Urechia granted Macedonski the
Bene-Merenti medal 1st class, although, Călinescu stresses, the poet had only totaled 18 months of public service. '', 1882 In parallel, Macedonski used the magazine to publicize his disagreement with the main
Junimist voice,
Convorbiri Literare. Among the group of contributors, several had already been victims of Maiorescu's irony: Sion, Urechia, Pantazi Ghica and
Petru Grădișteanu. While welcoming the debut of its contributor,
Parnassian-
Neoclassicist novelist and poet
Duiliu Zamfirescu, However,
Literatorul was also open to contributions from some
Convorbiri Literare affiliates (Zamfirescu,
Matilda Cugler-Poni and
Veronica Micle). In November 1880, Macedonski's plays
Iadeș! ("Wishbone!", a comedy first printed in 1882) and
Unchiașul Sărăcie ("Old Man Poverty") premiered at the
National Theatre Bucharest. A sign of government approval, this was followed by Macedonski's appointment to a minor administrative office, as Historical Monuments Inspector. Nevertheless, both plays failed to impose themselves on public perception, and were withdrawn from the program by 1888. Călinescu asserts that, although Macedonski later claimed to have always been facing poverty, his job in the administration, coupled with other sources of revenue, ensured him a comfortable existence. In 1881, Macedonski published a new collection of poetry. Titled
Poezii, it carries the year "1882" on its original cover. Again moving away from liberalism, Macedonski sought to make himself accepted by
Junimea and Maiorescu. He consequently attended the
Junimea sessions, and gave a public reading of
Noaptea de noiembrie ("November Night"), the first publicized piece in his lifelong
Nights cycle. It reportedly earned him the praise of historian and poet
Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu, who, although an anti-
Junimist, happened to be in the audience. Despite rumors according to which he had applauded Macedonski, Maiorescu himself was not impressed, and left an unenthusiastic account of the event in his private diary.
Against Alecsandri and Eminescu Macedonski's open conflict with
Junimea began in 1882, when he engaged in a publicized polemic with Alecsandri. It was ignited when, through Macedonski's articles,
Literatorul criticized Alecsandri for accepting
Romanian Academy prizes despite being its member, and later involved Sion (whose replies on behalf of the academy were derided by Macedonski). Macedonski also took distance from Alecsandri's style, publishing a "critical analysis" of his poetry in one issue of
Literatorul. In turn, Alecsandri humiliated his young rival by portraying him as
Zoilus, the prototype of slanderers, and himself as the model poet
Horace in the 1883 play
Fântâna Blanduziei. The two were eventually reconciled, and Macedonski again spoke of Alecsandri as his ideological and stylistic predecessor. In April 1882, Eminescu had also replied to Macedonski in
Timpul journal, referring to an unnamed poet who "barely finishes high-school, comes over to Bucharest selling nick-nacks and makeup [and goes into] literary dealership". Reproaching Macedonski's attacks on Alecsandri, Eminescu makes a
nationalist comment about the young poet bearing "the bastard instincts of those foreigners who were
Romanianized only yesterday", and attributes him "the physiognomy of a hairdresser". Through the articles of
Petru Th. Missir,
Convorbiri Literare gave
Poezii a negative review, deemed "malevolent" by literary historian
Mircea Anghelescu. At the other end of the political and cultural spectrum, Macedonski faced opposition from the intellectuals attracted to
socialism, in particular
Contemporanul editors
Constantin Mille and
Ioan Nădejde, with whom he was engaged in an extended polemic. In the meantime, Macedonski published his own play, which had Cuza for its main character and was eponymously titled
Cuza-Vodă, In 1883, he also contributed his first
sketch story,
Casa cu nr. 10 ("The House at Number 10"). In early 1883, he married Ana Rallet-Slătineanu. Wealthy and supposedly related to Romanian aristocrats, she would bear him five children in all: the painter
Alexis was the eldest, followed by Nikita; the three youngest were two sons (Panel and Constantin Macedonski) and a daughter, Anna (also known as Nina). His heterosexual lifestyle notwithstanding, Macedonski remained a self-avowed admirer of male beauties, and was rumored to be a closeted homosexual. The intense anti-
Literatorul press campaign was initiated in August, when writer
Grigore Ventura issued an article condemning Macedonski's attitude (published in the Bucharest-based newspaper ''
L'Indépendance Roumaine), with Macedonski responding in the National Liberal organ Românul. During one evening, Macedonski is reported to have been assaulted by anonymous supporters of Eminescu. His previous conflict with Nădejde was also affected by this renewed controversy: while opposed to Junimist
policies, the socialists at Contemporanul'' voiced their admiration for Eminescu's art. Late in 1883, Macedonski and his friends unveiled
Ion Georgescu's statue of their mentor Bolintineanu in the National Theater lobby. The circumstances in which this took place rose suspicion of foul play; on this grounds, Macedonski was ridiculed by his former friend Zamfirescu in the journal
România Liberă, which left him embittered. Călinescu proposes that, although such negative reactions were invoked by Macedonski's supporters as a sign of their mentor having been marginalized, Macedonski had expressed his dissatisfaction with the cultural environment long before that moment, and was still a respected figure even after the incidents took place.
First Paris sojourn and Poezia viitorului '' (February 1885) Having been stripped of his administrative office by the new Brătianu cabinet, Macedonski faced financial difficulties, and was forced to move into a house on the outskirts of Bucharest, and later moved between houses in northern Bucharest. According to Călinescu, the poet continued to cultivate luxury and passionately invested in the
decorative arts, although his source of income, other than the supposed assistance "of [European] ruling houses", remains a mystery. Arguing that Macedonski was "always in need of money" to use on his luxury items, poet
Victor Eftimiu claimed: "He did not shy away from sending emphatic notes to the potentates of his day [...], flattering some, threatening others. He would marry off or simply mate some of his disciples with aging and rich women, and then he would squeeze out their assets." Macedonski eventually left Romania in 1884, visiting
Paris. On his way there, he passed through Craiova, where he met aspiring author
Traian Demetrescu, whose works he had already hosted in
Literatorul and who was to become his friend and protégé. Demetrescu later recalled being gripped by "tremors of emotion" upon first catching sight of Macedonski. In France, Macedonski set up contacts within the French literary environment, and began contributing to French or
Francophone literary publications—including the Belgian Symbolist platforms
La Wallonie and ''
L'Élan littéraire. His collaboration with La Wallonie'' alongside
Albert Mockel, Tudor Vianu believes, makes Alexandru Macedonski one in the original wave of European Symbolists. This adaptation to Symbolism also drew on his marked
Francophilia, which in turn complemented his tendencies toward
cosmopolitanism. He became opposed to Carol I, who, in 1881, had been granted the
Crown of the
Romanian Kingdom. In addition to his admiration for Cuza and the
1848 Wallachian revolutionaries, the poet objected to the King's sympathy for France's main rival, the
German Empire. In January 1885, after having returned from the voyage, he announced his retirement from public life, claiming that German influence and its exponents at
Junimea had "conquered"
Romanian culture, and repeating his claim that Eminescu lacked value. In the meantime,
Literatorul went out of print, although new series were still published at irregular intervals until 1904 (when it ceased being published altogether). The magazine was reportedly hated by the public, causing Macedonski, Stoenescu, Florescu, Urechia and educator
Anghel Demetriescu to try to revive it as
Revista Literară ("The Literary Review", published for a few months in 1885). The poet attempted to establish other magazines, all of them short-lived, and, in 1887, handed for print his
Naturalist novella Dramă banală ("Banal Drama") while completing one of the most revered episodes in the
Nights series,
Noaptea de mai ("May Night"). Also in 1886, he worked on his other Naturalist novellas:
Zi de august ("August Day"),
Pe drum de poștă ("On the Stagecoach Trail"),
Din carnetul unui dezertor ("From the Notebook of a Deserter"),
Între cotețe ("Amidst Hen Houses") and the eponymous
Nicu Dereanu. However, late in the same year, he returned to the liberal mainstream, being assigned a weekly column in
Românul newspaper. Two years later, he attempted to relaunch
Literatorul under the leadership of liberal figure
Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu, but the latter eventually settled for founding his own
Revista Nouă. Around 1891, he saluted
Junimeas own break with the Conservatives and its entry into politics at the Conservative-Constitutional Party, before offering an enthusiastic welcome to the 1892
Junimist agitation among university students. His literary thesis of the time was titled
Poezia viitorului ("The Poetry of the Future"). It upheld Symbolist authors as the models to follow, while Macedonski personally began producing what he referred to as "instrumentalist" poems, composed around musical and
onomatopoeic elements, and showing a preference for
internal rhymes. Such an
experimental approach was soon after
parodied and ridiculed by Ion Luca Caragiale, who had by then affiliated and parted with
Junimea, in his new
Moftul Român magazine. The poet sought to reconcile with his rival, publicizing a claim that Caragiale was being unjustly ignored by the cultural establishment, but this attempt failed to mend relations between them, and the conflict escalated further. While, in 1893,
Literatorul hosted fragments of
Thalassa in its
Romanian-language version, the author also launched a daily,
Lumina ("The Light"). Two years later, the two
Literatorul editors made headlines as pioneers of
cycling. An enthusiastic promoter of the sport, Macedonski joined fellow poet
Constantin Cantilli on a marathon, pedaling from Bucharest across the border into Austria-Hungary, all the way down to
Brașov.
Late 1890s Macedonski also returned with a new volume of poetry,
Excelsior (consecutive editions in 1895 and 1896), and founded
Liga Ortodoxă ("The Orthodox League"), a magazine noted for hosting the debut of
Tudor Arghezi, later one of the most celebrated figures in Romanian literature. Macedonski commended his new protégé for reaching "the summit of poetry and art" at "an age when I was still prattling verses".
Liga Ortodoxă also hosted articles against Caragiale, which Macedonski signed with the pseudonym
Sallustiu ("
Sallustius"). The magazine was additional proof of Macedonski's return to conservatism, and largely dedicated to defending the cause of
Romanian Orthodox Metropolitan Ghenadie, deposed by the
Romanian Synod following a political scandal. It defended Ghenadie up until he chose to resign, and subsequently went out of print. Macedonski was shocked to note that Ghenadie had given up his own defense. In 1895, his
Casa cu nr. 10 was translated into French by the
Journal des Débats, whose editors reportedly found it
picturesque. Although it was positively reviewed by
Mercure de France magazine,
Bronzes was largely unnoticed by the French audience, a fact which Tudor Vianu attributes to Bogdan-Pitești's lack of qualification for the cultural mission Macedonski had trusted him with. By that time, his circle had come to be frequented with regularity by Bogdan-Pitești's friend and collaborator, the celebrated painter
Ștefan Luchian, who was in the Symbolist and
Art Nouveau stage of his career. By 1898, Macedonski was again facing financial difficulties, and his collaborators resorted to organizing a
fundraiser in his honor. His rejection of the Orthodox establishment was documented by his political tract, published that year as ''''.
Traian Demetrescu, who recorded his visits with Macedonski, recalled his former mentor being opposed to his
positivist take on science, claiming to explain the workings of the Universe in "a different way", through "imagination", but also taking an interest in
Camille Flammarion's
astronomy studies. Macedonski was determined to interpret death through
parapsychological means, and, in 1900, conferenced at the Atheneum on the subject
Sufletul și viața viitoare ("The Soul and the Coming Life"). The focal point of his vision was that man could voluntarily stave off death with words and gestures, a concept he elaborated upon in his later articles. In one such piece, Macedonski argued: "man has the power [...] to compact the energy currents known as thoughts to the point where he changes them, according to his own will, into objects or soul-bearing creatures." He also attempted to build a machine for extinguishing
chimney fires. Later, Nikita Macedonski registered the invention of
nacre-treated paper, which is sometimes attributed to his father.
Caion scandal and expatriation The few issues of
Literatorul that were printed in 1899-1900 saw the circle being joined by the young Symbolist poet
Ștefan Petică. This he did by hosting the articles of aspiring journalist
Constantin Al. Ionescu-Caion, who accused Caragiale of having
plagiarized a
Hungarian author by the name of Kemény in his tragedy play
Năpasta. Kemény turned out to be non-existent. According to Vianu, Macedonski had no prior knowledge of the fraud, but had also been "blinded" by his resentments instead of displaying "discernment", and had even showed evidence of "insanity". Most in Macedonski's own series of anti-Caragiale articles were unsigned, or signed with pseudonyms such as
Luciliu ("
Gaius Lucilius"). Like in the case of Eminescu's conflict with Macedonski, the polemic enlisted a negative response from the public. The poet's associate
Th. M. Stoenescu convinced himself that Caragiale was being framed, and refused to allow
Revista Literară to be used for endorsing Caion, which caused Macedonski to shun him. Macedonski refused to withdraw his support for the cause even after Caragiale sued Caion, but
Forța Morală soon went out of print. Before it did so, the journal hosted some of Macedonski's most renowned poems, including
Lewki and
Noaptea de decemvrie ("December Night"), together with his article on
Remy de Gourmont's thoughts on
poetics. In his article of 1903, titled ''
("Toward Occultism. Later Orientations toward Theosophy and Social Philosophy"), the poet envisaged making his interest in esoteric subjects the basis of a new literary movement. Also that year, poet George Bacovia began attending the literary circle, and gave a reading of his celebrated Plumb'' poem, being welcomed by Macedonski with a flattering epigram. Macedonski's series of short-lived periodicals resumed in 1905, when he founded
Le Beau Danube Bleu (French for "The Beautiful Blue Danube") and
Liga Conservatoare ("The Conservative League"). He registered more success in 1906, when his
Thalassa was published, as
Le Calvaire de feu, by
Edward Sansot's Paris-based publishing house. This followed intense self-promotion within the French literary environment, as well as advertisements in the French press. Part of this involved Macedonski sending his book to be reviewed by
Émile Faguet,
Jean Mounet-Sully,
Joséphin Péladan,
Pierre Quillard and
Jean Richepin, who replied with what Vianu deems "the politeness of circumstance." The volume was nonetheless favorably reviewed by the prestigious magazines
Mercure de France and
Gil Blas. Also in 1906,
La Revue Musicale published his interview with Combarieu, through which the latter aimed to verify supposed connections between literary inspiration and musical sensitivity. By 1907, he was concentrating on experiments in physics, and eventually publicized his claim to have discovered that light does not travel through
vacuum. He sent a paper on astronomy subjects to be reviewed by the
Société Astronomique de France, of which he subsequently became a member. Between 1910 and 1912, Macedonski was again in Paris. Seeking to withdraw himself from Romania's public life due to what he perceived as injustice, he had by then completed work on the French-language
tragicomedy Le Fou? ("The Madman?"), which was only published after his death. He was actively seeking to establish his reputation in
French theater, reading his new play to a circle which included
Louis de Gonzague Frick and
Florian-Parmentier, while, at home, newspapers reported rumors that his work was going to be staged by
Sarah Bernhardt's company. His efforts were largely fruitless, and, accompanied by his son Alexis, the poet left France, spent some time in Italy, and eventually returned to Romania. Passing through the
German Empire, he learned of Ion Luca Caragiale's sudden death, and wrote
Adevărul daily an
open letter, which showed that he had come to revise his stance, notably comparing the deceased author's style and legacy to those of
Mark Twain. During Macedonski's absence, his style and work had come to be reviewed more positively, in particular by the young authors
I. Dragoslav,
Horia Furtună,
Ion Pillat,
Anastasie Mândru,
Al. T. Stamatiad, as well as by post-
Junimist critic
Mihail Dragomirescu, who offered Macedonski a good reception in his
Convorbiri Critice magazine. Tudor Vianu, who cites contemporary statements by Dragoslav, concludes that, upon arrival, Macedonski was enthusiastically received by a public who had missed him. Around that time, Macedonski also collaborated with the
Iași-based moderate Symbolist magazine
Versuri și Proză. Polemics surrounding his case nevertheless continued: in late 1912, as part of a National Theater adaptation of
Alphonse Daudet's
Sapho, actor
Cazimir Belcot borrowed from Macedonski's appearance and mannerisms to portray a failure.
Return and World War I years Macedonski and his protégés had become regular frequenters of Bucharest cafés. Having a table permanently reserved for him at Imperial Hotel's
Kübler Coffeehouse, he was later a presence in two other such establishments: High-Life and
Terasa Oteteleșanu. He is said to have spent part of his time at Kübler loudly mocking the traditionalist poets who gathered at an opposite table. Meanwhile, the poet's literary club, set up at his house in
Dorobanți quarter, had come to resemble a
mystical circle, over which he held magisterial command. Vianu, who visited the poet together with Pillat, compares this atmosphere with those created by other "mystics and magi of poetry" (citing as examples
Joséphin Péladan,
Louis-Nicolas Ménard,
Stéphane Mallarmé and
Stefan George). Macedonski himself was seated on a throne designed by Alexis, and adopted a dominant pose. The apparent secrecy and the
initiation rites performed on new members were purportedly inspired by
Rosicrucianism and the
Freemasonry. By then, Macedonski was rewarding his followers' poems with false
gemstones. The poet founded
Revista Critică ("The Critical Review"), which again closed after a short while, and issued the poetry volume
Flori sacre ("Sacred Flowers"). Grouping his
Forța Morală poems and older pieces, it was dedicated to his new generation of followers, whom Macedonski's preface referred to as "the new Romania." He continued to hope that
Le Fou? was going to be staged in France, especially after he received some encouragement in the form of articles in
Mercure de France and
Journal des Débats, but was confronted with the general public's indifference. which sought to revive overall interest in his work. At a
French Red Cross conference in September, Macedonski paid his final public homage to France, which had just become entangled in
World War I. It was also in 1914 that Macedonski commissioned for print his very first
rondels and completed work on a tragedy play about
Renaissance poet
Dante Aligheri—known as
La Mort de Dante in its French original, and
Moartea lui Dante in the secondary Romanian version (both meaning "Dante's Death"). The aging poet was by then building connections with the
local art scene: together with artist
Alexandru Severin, he created (and probably presided over)
Cenaclul idealist ("The
Idealist Club"), which included Symbolist artists and was placed under the honorary patronage of King Carol. 1916 was also the year when Romania abandoned her neutrality and, under a National Liberal government, rallied with the
Entente Powers. During the neutrality period, Macedonski had shed his lifelong Francophilia to join the
Germanophiles, who wanted to see Romanian participation on the
Central Powers' side. In 1915, he issued the journal
Cuvântul Meu ("My Word"). Entirely written by him, it published ten consecutive issues before going bankrupt, and notably lashed out against France for being "
bourgeois" and "lawyer-filled", demanding from Romania not to get involved in the conflict. Commentators and researchers of his work have declared themselves puzzled by this change in allegiance. Macedonski further alienated public opinion during the
Romanian Campaign, when the Central Powers armies entered southern Romania and
occupied Bucharest. Alexis was drafted and became a war artist, but Macedonski Sr, who received formal protection from the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Bucharest, chose to stay behind while the authorities and many ordinary citizens relocated to
Iași, where resistance was still being organized. His stance was interpreted as
collaborationism by his critics. However, Macedonski reportedly faced extreme poverty throughout the occupation. Having by then begun to attend the circle of
Alexandru Bogdan-Pitești, his promoter and fellow Germanophile, he was once rewarded by the latter with a turkey filled with gold coins.
Late polemics, illness and death Literatorul resumed print in June 1918, once Romania capitulated to the Central Powers under the
Treaty of Bucharest. A controversial incident occurred soon afterwards, when, going against the counsel of his friend and collaborator Stamatiad, Macedonski signed a
Literatorul article where the German military administrator
August von Mackensen, who was about to lead his troops out of Romania, was presented in a positive light. In a manner deemed "excessive" by historian
Lucian Boia, the Romanian writer was paying homage not just to Mackensen, but also, indirectly, to
German Emperor Wilhelm II and the
Reichsheer. Soon after reading the piece,
Romanian Academy member and fellow Symbolist promoter
Ovid Densusianu withdrew his own nomination of Macedonski for an academy seat. During summer, Macedonski also joined the group of public figures who saluted the senior Conservative Germanophile
Petre P. Carp (deeming Carp "the veteran of character, honesty and Romanianism"), and, in September, joined
Ioan Slavici and
Gala Galaction as a contributor to the occupation magazine
Rumänien in Wort und Bild, where he prophesied an
anti-French "political renaissance" of Romania. Alexandru Macedonski faced problems after the Romanian government resumed its control over Bucharest, and during the early years of
Greater Romania. What followed the Mackensen article, Vianu claims, was Macedonski's
bellum contra omnes ("war against all"). Macedonski also envisaged running in the
1918 election for a seat in the new
Parliament (which was supposed to vote a document to replace the
1866 Constitution as the organic law), but never registered his candidature. According to Vianu, he had intended to create a
joke political party, the "intellectual group", whose other member was an unnamed coffeehouse acquaintance of his.
Literatorul was revived for a final time in 1919. By that stage, Vianu recalls, Macedonski also had problems coming to terms with his age. His last anthumous work was the pamphlet
Zaherlina (named after the Romanian version of "
Zacherlin"; also known as
Zacherlina or
Zacherlina în continuare, "Zacherlin Contd."), completed in 1919 and published the following year. It notably attacked Densusianu, who had become Macedonski's personal enemy. The writer died on 24 November, at three o'clock in the afternoon. Having come to develop an addiction to floral fragrances, he was inhaling a rose petal extract during his last hours. He was buried in Bucharest's
Bellu. ==Work==