Alexandre Beljame

Alexandre Beljame (November 26, 1842  September 19, 1906) was a French writer.

Life

He was born at Villiers-le-Bel, Val-d'Oise. He spent part of his childhood in England and was a frequent visitor in London. His lectures on English literature at the Sorbonne, where a chair was created expressly for him, did much to promote the study of English in France. In 1905–1906 he was Clark lecturer on English literature at Trinity College, Cambridge. He died at Domont (Val-d'Oise) on September 19, 1906.[1]

His best known book was a masterly study of the conditions of literary life in England in the 18th century illustrated by the lives of Dryden, Addison and Pope. This book, Le Public et les hommes de lettres en Angleterre au XVIII' siècle (1881), was crowned by the French Academy on the appearance of the second edition in 1897. He was a good Shakespearian scholar, and his editions of Macbeth, Othello and Julius Caesar also received an academic prize in 1902.[1]

gollark: I tried playing a 10Hz sine wave just now and I can't hear it.
gollark: The position of the pen clearly can't be being directly mapped to voltage on a speaker or something, because the frequency would be waaaaay too low to hear.
gollark: What property of the waveforms it's generating varies as you change X/Y?
gollark: I'm aware it's converting it into waveforms somehow. That's just very vague.
gollark: What do you mean "right channel"? Frequency on the right channel or what?

References

Attribution:

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Beljame, Alexandre". Encyclopædia Britannica. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 683.
  • Jean-Pierre Mouchon, "Alexandre Beljame" in "Dictionnaire bio-bibliographique des anglicistes et assimilés" (Marseilles, France, Terra Beata, 2010).
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