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Bible Encyclopedias
Moreau
1911 Encyclopedia Britannica
(1810-1838), French lyric poet, was born in Paris on the 9th of April 18Mo. In his early youth his parents, who were poor, migrated to Provins, where the mother went into service and the father took the post of usher in a public school. He went to Paris before 1830, and lived a Bohemian life. He was habitually houseless, and exposed himself to the dangers of a cholera hospital' in the great epidemic of 1832 simply to obtain shelter and food. Then he revisited Provins and published a kind of satirical serial called Diogene. Some years of this life entirely ruined his health, and it was only just before his death that he succeeded in getting his collected poems published, selling the copyright for f4 sterling and 80 copies of the book. This volume, Myosotis, was received not unfavourably, but the author's death on the 10th of December 1838, in a refuge of the destitute, created an interest in it which was proportionately excessive. Moreau's work has a strong note of imitation, especially in his earlier songs, distinguished from those of his model, Beranger, chiefly by their elegiac note. Some of his poems, such as the elegy La Voulzie (1837) and the charming romance La Ferr y niere (1833), have great sweetness and show incontestable poetic power. Moreau wrote some charming prose stories: Le Gui de chene, La Souris blanche, &c.
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Chisholm, Hugh, General Editor. Entry for 'Moreau'. 1911 Encyclopedia Britanica. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​bri/​m/moreau.html. 1910.