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Delphine de Girardin

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Name
  
Delphine Girardin

Role
  
Author

Parents
  
Sophie Gay


Delphine de Girardin httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
June 29, 1855, Paris, France

Spouse
  
Emile de Girardin (m. 1831)

Books
  
The Cross of Berny; Or, Irene's Lovers

Le Bonheur d'être belle - Delphine de Girardin - Thalie Envolée (HD)


Delphine de Girardin (24 January 1804 – 29 June 1855), pen name Vicomte Delaunay, was a French author.

Contents

Delphine de Girardin httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Delphine de Girardin: Business is other people's money....


Life

She was born at Aachen, and christened Delphine Gay. Her mother, the well-known Madame Sophie Gay, brought her up in the midst of a brilliant literary society. Her cousin was the writer Hortense Allart. Gay published two volumes of miscellanea, Essais poetiques (1824) and Nouveaux Essais poétiques (1825). A visit to Italy in 1827, during which she was enthusiastically welcomed by the literati of Rome and even crowned in the capitol, produced various poems, of which the most ambitious was Napoline (1833).

Delphine's marriage in 1831 to Émile de Girardin opened up a new literary career. The contemporary sketches which she contributed from 1836 to 1839 to the La Presse, under the nom de plume of Charles de Launay, were collected under the title of Lettres parisiennes (1843), and obtained a brilliant success. Contes d'une vieille fille a ses neveux (1832), La Canne de Monsieur de Balzac (1836) and Il ne faut pas jouer avec la douleur (1853) are among the best-known of her romances; and her dramatic pieces in prose and verse include L'École des journalistes (1840), Judith (1843), Cléopâtre (1847), Lady Tartufe (1853), and the one-act comedies, C'est la faute du mari (1851), La Joie fait peur (1854), Le Chapeau d'un horloger (1854) and Une Femme qui deteste son mari, which did not appear till after the author's death, which occurred in Paris.

Madame Girardin exercised considerable personal influence in contemporary literary society, and in her drawing-room were often to be found Théophile Gautier, Honoré de Balzac, Alfred de Musset and Victor Hugo. Her collected works were published in six volumes (1860-1861).

References

Delphine de Girardin Wikipedia