Petrus Borel
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Joseph-Pierre Borel d'Hauterive, known as Petrus Borel (26 June 1809 – 14 July 1859), was a French writer of the Romantic movement.[1]
Born at Lyon, the twelfth of fourteen children of an ironmonger, he studied architecture in Paris but abandoned it for literature. Nicknamed le Lycanthrope ("wolfman"), and the center of the circle of Bohemians in Paris,[1] he was noted for extravagant and eccentric writing, foreshadowing Surrealism. He was not commercially successful though, and eventually was found a minor civil service post by his friends, including Théophile Gautier. He's also considered as a poète maudit, like Aloysius Bertrand, or Alice de Chambrier.
Borel died at Mostaganem in Algeria.[1]
He was the subject of a biography by Enid Starkie, Petrus Borel: The Lycanthrope (1954).
Works
- Rhapsodies (1831)
- Champavert, contes immoraux (1833)
- Madame Putiphar (1839)
References
- 1 2 3 Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Borel, Petrus". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
External links
Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Borel, Petrus. |
- Works by or about Petrus Borel at Internet Archive
- Works by Petrus Borel at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Text of selected Borel poems (in French)
- Text of Andreas Vesalius the Anatomist