Joseph Albert Alexandre Glatigny
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Joseph Albert Alexandre Glatigny (May 21, 1839 - April 16, 1873), French poet, was born at Lillebonne (Seine Inférieure).
His father, who was a carpenter and afterwards a gendarme, removed in 1844 to Bernay, where Albert received an elementary education. Soon after leaving school he was apprenticed to a printer at Pont Audemer, where he produced a three-act play at the local theatre. He then joined a travelling company of actors to whom he acted as prompter.
Inspired primarily by the study of Théodore de Banville, he published his Vignes folles in 1857; his best collection of lyrics, Les Fleches d'or, appeared in 1864; and a third volume, Gilles et pasquins, in 1872. After Glatigny settled in Paris he improvised at cafe concerts and wrote several one-act plays.
On an expedition to Corsica with a travelling company he was on one occasion arrested and put in irons for a week through being mistaken by the police for a notorious criminal. His marriage with Emma Dennie brought him great happiness, but the hardships of his life weakened his health and he died at Sèvres on the 16th of April 1873.
See Catulle Mendès, Legende du Parnasse contemporain (1884), and Glatigny, drame funambulesque (1906).
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.