Octave Pirmez
Octave Pirmez (1832 – May 1883) was a Belgian author born in Châtelineau.
Life
Octave belonged to a well-known Belgian family. His cousin, Edouard Pirmez, was distinguished for his works on literary and political subjects. He lived an uneventful life at his family's château at Acoz, in Gerpinnes in Hainaut, where he died.[1]
Works
Pirmez was an ardent admirer of the French Romanticists. His works include:
- Les Feuillees: pensées et maximes (1862)
- Victor Hugo (1863)
- Jours de solitude (1869)
- Rémo: Souvenir d'un frère (1880); Édition posthume. 1900.
- Heures de philosophie (1881); Édition posthume. Perrin & Cie. 1900.
- (posthumous) Lettres à José (1884).
These books form a history of his emotional life, and reveal an extreme melancholy.[1]
References
- See Vie et correspondance d'Octave Pirmez (1888), by Adolphe Siret and José de Coppin.
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Pirmez, Octave". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 642.
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