Read Paris in the Twentieth Century Online
Authors: Jules Verne
[53]
Champfleury (Jules-Fran
ç
ois-FeIix Husson):
French critic and novelist, a polemicist for the realist
school in art and literature, a friend of Verne's publisher Hetzel.
[54]
Jean Mace:
French journalist and educator.
[55]
Joseph M
é
ry:
French poet, novelist, and playwright.
[56]
P. J. Stahl:
The nom de plume of Hetzel himself, who obviously
published him "scrupulously."
[57]
Ars
é
ne Houssaye:
French critic, journalist, and novelist.
[58]
Paul Bins, Comte de Saint-Victor:
French literary critic known for his complex style.
[59]
turpe:
vile.
[60]
Pulchre:
Beautiful.
[61]
The Great Eastern:
Legendary steamship 110 meters long, for many years the
largest in the world; laid the telegraphic cable joining Europe and America in
1866.
[62]
The battle of the Amalekites:
episode from the Old Testament, Exodus 17:12.
[63]
An Auvergnat into the bargain:
In French popular theater of the nineteenth century,
Auvergnats were pilloried for rustic crudeness and naive rapacity.
[64]
Roland's mare:
Adorned with all the virtues, and lacking only...
existence.
[65]
Fran
ç
ois Ponsard:
French dramatic author, friend of Verne's publisher
Hetzel.
[66]
É
mile Augier:
Popular French dramatic author; wrote
Gabrielle.
[67]
Th
é
odore Barr
i
é
re:
Prolific vaudevillist, author of
Calino.
[68]
Fran
ç
ois-Paul Meurice:
French litterateur and playwright, friend of Victor Hugo.
[69]
Auguste Vacquerie:
French litterateur and playwright, in Hugo's circle.
[70]
Gustave Flourens:
A brilliant academic, appointed to the chair of natural
history at the College de France at the age of twenty-five, killed during the
Commune, 1871.
[71]
Benoît
Fourneyron:
French engineer and politician, inventor of the hydraulic
turbine.
[72]
Koechlin:
Family of French industrialists.
[73]
Electric light:
Regular utilization of electric light began in 1885.
[74]
Hungarian method:
Satire on Liszt, whose legendary virtuosity defied
understanding.
[75]
The Grecostasis:
In the Roman Forum, the place where foreign deputations
were made to wait for the Roman Senate.
[76]
François-Antoine Habeneck:
French composer and orchestra conductor; introduced
Beethoven's symphonic music into France.
[77]
Ernest Reyer:
French opera composer.
[78]
Jacques-Antoine Manuel:
French politician; a symbol of liberal opposition to the
first Restoration.
[79]
Maximilien-S
é
bastien Foy:
French General, who like Manuel became an emblem of
liberal opposition under the first Restoration.
[80]
James Pradier:
Swiss sculptor.
[81]
Marc-Antoine D
é
saugiers:
French vaudevillist.
[82]
Gaspard Monge:
French geometrician, founder of the École Polytechnique.
[83]
Antoine Etex:
French sculptor and architect.
[84]
François-Vincent Raspail:
French biologist and republican politician.
[85]
Louis-François Clairville:
Popular French vaudevillist.
[86]
Adolphe-Philippe Dennery:
French man of the theater; adapted Verne's
Around the World in Eighty Days
for the stage.
[87]
Jean-François-Casimir
Delavigne:
French
dramatist.
[88]
É
mile Souvestre:
French novelist and playwright.
[89]
Eustache B
é
rat:
French songwriter.
[90]
É
douard Plouvier:
French playwright.