Josephin Soulary
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
French literature |
---|
By category |
French literary history |
Medieval |
French writers |
Chronological list |
France portal |
Literature portal |
Josephin (Joseph Marie) Soulary (February 23, 1815 - March 28, 1891), French poet, son of a Lyon merchant of Genoese origin (Solari).
He entered a line regiment when he was sixteen, serving for five years. He was chef de bureau in the prefecture of the Rhône from 1845 to 1867, and in 1868 he became librarian to the Palais des arts in his native town. He died at Lyon on the 28th of March 1891.
His works include:
- A travers champs (1837)
- Les Cinq cordes du luth (1838)
- Les Ephémères (two series, 1846 and 1857)
- Sonnets humoristiques (1862)
- Les Figulines (1862)
- Pendant l'invasion (1871)
- Les Rimes ironiques (1877)
- Jeux divins (1882), and two comedies
His Œuvres poetiques were collected in three volumes (1872-1883). His Sonnets humoristiques attracted great attention, and charmed their readers by the mixture of gaiety and tragedy. His mastery over the technical difficulties of his art, especially in the sonnet, won him the title of the "Benvenuto of rhyme."
See also Paul Marieton, Soulary et la Pléiade lyonnaise (1884).
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.