Jean de La Ville de Mirmont was born in
Bourdeaux into the
Huguenot family of Henri and Sophie Malan. He was one of six siblings. His father Henri was a professor of literature known for his translation of
Cicero as well as an
alderman for Bordeaux. At the age of 22, Jean moved to
Paris, where he renewed his childhood friendship with
François Mauriac (the latter was to recall the former frequently, most notably in
La Rencontre avec Barrès, 1945). Jean held a government post at the prefectory of the
Seine where he was responsible for assisting the elderly. According to Ian Higgins, "Although unfit for
active service, Jean de La Ville de Mirmont volunteered immediately when the war broke out, but it was only after being repeatedly turned down that he finally managed to enlist." In 1914, he was called to the front with the rank of
sergeant of the 57th Infantry Regiment. According to Ian Higgins, "It has been suggested that here at last was the great adventure he had been longing for. Certainly, the prelude to the war 'interested' him, and he was keen to witness and, if possible, take part in a war which was probably going to 'set the whole of
Europe on fire.' His
Lettres de guerre develop movingly from initial enthusiasm for the defense of Civilization and a conviction that the enemy was the entire
German people, through a growing irritation with
chauvinistic brainwashing and the flagrancy of what would now be called the 'disinformation' peddled through the French press (so much more heavily censored than the British, he said), to an eventual admiration, at the front, for the heroism and humanity often shown by the enemy." La Ville de Mirmont was mentioned in dispatches on November 4, 1914. On November 28, however, he was
buried alive by a
landmine explosion at
Verneuil, near
Chemin des Dames. La Ville de Mirmont was still alive when his comrades dug him out, but the explosion had broken his spine and he died soon afterwards. One account alleges that he died after saying,
Maman. Other accounts, allege, however, that there were no last words." Jean de La Ville de Mirmont's body was re-exhumed by his family in 1920. It rests in the family tomb H.42 at the
Protestant Cemetery at
rue Judaïque in
Bordeaux. == Works ==