| The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07. |
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| Barthélemy, Auguste Marseille |
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( güst´ märs ´y bärt lm ´) (KEY) , 17961867, French poet. With his friend Joseph Méry he wrote several brilliant and popular political satires, including La Villéliade (1827), Napoléon en Égypte (1828), and Le Fils de lhomme (1829), a poem on Napoleon II, for which Barthélemy was briefly imprisoned. A political chameleon, he celebrated the Revolution of 1830 in LInsurrection, only to attack the July Monarchy in his short-lived (183132) journal Némésis. |
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| | | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2007 Columbia University Press. |
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