Count Geoffrey Potocki de Montalk

Count Geoffrey Potocki De Montalk

Count Geoffrey Wladislas Vaile Potocki de Montalk (10 June 1903–14 April 1997) was a poet, polemicist, pagan and pretender to the Polish throne. Born in New Zealand, he was the eldest son of Auckland architect Robert Wladislas de Montalk, grandson of Paris-born Professor Count Joseph Wladislas Edmond Potocki de Montalk, and great-grandson of Polish-born Count Jozef Franciszek Jan Potocki, the Insurgent, of Białystok.

In 1926, de Montalk left his wife and small daughter in New Zealand to be a poet by "...follow(ing) the golden road to Samarkand". He travelled to England but moved in 1949 to Draguignan in the south of France where he obtained land and a ramshackle stone cottage - the Villa Vigoni - deep in the Provençal countryside. He did not return to New Zealand until 1983. Between 1984 and 1993, he followed the sun by spending summers in either New Zealand and France. He died at Brignoles in France in 1997 and was buried at Draguignan.

Read more about Count Geoffrey Potocki De Montalk:  Literary Career, Legacy

Famous quotes containing the words count and/or geoffrey:

    Do not count on much from the future, nor trouble your mind about the past.
    Chinese proverb.

    Galway is a blackguard place,
    To Cork I give my curse,
    Tralee is bad enough,
    But Limerick is worse.
    Which is worst I cannot tell,
    They’re everyone so filthy,
    But of the towns which I have seen
    Worst luck to Clonakilty.
    —Anonymous. “Clonakilty,” from Geoffrey Grigson’s Faber Book of Epigrams and Epitaphs, Faber & Faber (1977)