Louis Bouilhet
Louis Bouilhet | |
|---|---|
Louis Bouilhet by Étienne Carjat, in 1864 | |
| Born | 27 May 1821 Cany-Barville, France |
| Died | 16 July 1869 (aged 48) Rouen, France |
| Occupations | Playwright, poet |
Louis Hyacinthe Bouilhet (27 May 1821 – 18 July 1869) was a French poet and dramatist.
Life
Early life
Bouilhet was born in Cany, Seine Inférieure to Jean-Nicolas Bouilhet and Opportune-Clarisse Hourcastremé[1]. Bouilhet also had two younger sisters, Marie-Sidonie[2] and Claire-Amelie-Esther[2]. Bouilhets father was director of field hospitals[1] and had been injured during the Battle of Beresina[3] and after leaving the army he became a manager of an estate.
Both of Bouilhet´s parents had literary leanings. His father wrote poetry, songs and a memoir of his army life; his mother wrote poetry.[1] Bouilhet´s mother had received a good education from her father, Pierre Hourcastremé, who was a writer of mathematics, political essays and ballads.[1]
Bouilhet´s fathers health had been weakened from his time in the military and he died in 1832[1] while Bouilhet was still a child. Bouilhet´s mother supported the family as the director of a girls boarding school that her father founded.
Education
Through efforts of his grandfather, Bouilhet was enrolled in a boarding school[1] at Ingouville[3] and later continued his education at the College of Rouen. After completing his bachelor's degree, Bouilhet decided to pursue medicine[1], and became an intern at the hospital in Rouen. As a young man, Bouilhet was described as an " Apollonian beauty with a somewhat shy look, with long blond hair, and always holding bound notebooks under his arm."[3]
In 1845, Bouilhet decided to give up the medical profession and pursue writing. He relocated to Paris.
Career
Bouilhet was a schoolmate of Gustave Flaubert, to whom he dedicated his first work, Melaenis, conte romain (1851), a narrative poem in five cantos dealing with Roman manners under the emperor Commodus. His volume of poems Fossiles attracted considerable attention for its attempt to make science a subject for poetry. These poems were also included in his Festons et astragales (1859).[4]
Bouilhet is also said to have suggested the plot outline for Flaurbert's Madame Bovary, basing it on one of Flaubert´s fathers medical students,[1] Eugene Delamare, whose wife Delphine took many lovers, fell into debt, and committed suicide in 1848.
As a dramatist he was successful with his first play, Madame de Monlarcy (1856), which ran for 28 nights at the Odéon; Hélène Peyron (1858) and L'Oncle Million (1860) were also favorably received. Of his other plays, only Conjuration d'Amboise (1866) met with any real success.[4]
Personal life
Bouilhet never married but carried on an affair with a married woman, Edma Roger des Genettes,[1] who held literary salons and was known as "Sylphide" for her narrow waist. Bouilhet dedicate the poem "To my lovely reader" to her after she read his work Melaenis aloud.
Death
Bouilhet died on 18 July 1869, at Rouen. Flaubert published his posthumous poems with a notice by the author in 1872.[4]
Bouilhet was Flaubert's mentor and guide; Flaubert never wrote anything without his advice. A few months after Bouilhet's death in 1869, Flaubert wrote about his old friend, "When I lost my poor Bouilhet, I lost my midwife, the man who saw more clearly into my mind than I did myself." According to Starkie, Maxime Du Camp, who knew Bouilhet and Flaubert well, said of the two authors, "It was Bouilhet who was the master, in the matter of literature at least, and that it was Flaubert who obeyed." Throughout their lives, Flaubert referred to Bouilhet as "Monseigneur."[1]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Brown, Frederick (October 2007). Flaubert: A Biography. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-02537-0.
- ^ a b Flaubert, Gustave (2005). Vie et travaux du R. P. Cruchard: et autres inédits (in French). Presses universitaires de Rouen et du Havre. ISBN 978-2-87775-879-6.
- ^ a b c "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Œuvres complètes de Gustave Flaubert, Tome 6, by Gustave Flaubert". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 18 March 2026.
- ^ a b c Chisholm 1911.
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bouilhet, Louis Hyacinthe". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 317.
- Maxime Du Camp, Souvenirs littéraires (1882)
- H. de la Ville de Mirmont, Le Poète Louis Bouilhet (1888)
- Enid Starkie, "Flaubert: The Making of the Master" (1967)
- Enid Starkie, "Flaubert the Master" (1971)