MAXIME DU CAMP
\mˈaksa͡ɪm dˈuː kˈamp], \mˈaksaɪm dˈuː kˈamp], \m_ˈa_k_s_aɪ_m d_ˈuː k_ˈa_m_p]\
Sort: Oldest first
-
A French writer of history and travels; born at Paris, Feb. 8, 1822; died at Baden-Baden, Feb. 8, 1894. "Egypt, Nubia, Palestine, and Syria" (1852) explains itself. He wrote the history of the Paris Commune: "The Convulsions of Paris" (4 vols., 1878-79), and other historical sketches. His greatest work is "Paris: Its Organs, its Functions, and its Life" (6 vols., 1869-75). He wrote some lyric poems: "Modern Chants" (1855); "Convictions" (1858); and several novels, among them: "Memoirs of a Suicide" (1853); "The Six Adventures" (1857); "The Man with the Gold Bracelet" (1862).
By Charles Dudley Warner
Word of the day
Snake's-head
- Guinea-hen flower; -- so called in England because its spotted petals resemble the scales of a snake's head.