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Victor and Hugo
We no longer use the particular terms of Lessing and Victor Hugo.
We see at once what Victor Hugo means when he calls Macbeth a northern scion of the house of Atreus.
The dream of achieving a synthesis between the Sophoclean and the Shakespearean genius inspired the ambitions of poets and composers from the time of Shelley and Victor Hugo to that of Bayreuth.
The author Victor Hugo was one of the first to research argot extensively.
Prior to burial in the Panthéon, the body of Victor Hugo was exposed under the Arc during the night of 22 May 1885.
** based on the novel of the same name by French author Victor Hugo.
Victor Hugo found the town so beautiful he once said: " take Versailles, add Antwerp, and you have Bordeaux ".
** La Fin de Satan by Victor Hugo ( written between 1855 and 1860, published in 1886 )
** La Légende des Siècles ( The Legend of the Centuries ) by Victor Hugo ( 1859 – 1877 )
* 1802 – Victor Hugo, French writer ( d. 1885 )
* Notre Dame, romantic Opera in two acts, text after Victor Hugo by Franz Schmidt and Leopold Wilk ; comp.
Based on a play by Victor Hugo ( Le roi s ' amuse ), the libretto had to undergo substantial revisions in order to satisfy the epoch's censorship, and the composer was on the verge of giving it all up a number of times.
In France, Charles Kemble initiated an enthusiasm for Shakespeare ; and leading members of the Romantic movement such as Victor Hugo and Alexandre Dumas saw his 1827 Paris performance of Hamlet, particularly admiring the madness of Harriet Smithson's Ophelia.
Famous visitors to Luxembourg in the 18th and 19th centuries included the German poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, the French writers Emile Zola and Victor Hugo, the composer Franz Liszt, and the English painter Joseph Mallord William Turner.
* 1885 – Victor Hugo, French author ( b. 1802 )
Here he studied under the theologian Hugo of Saint Victor, the most influential of all Victorine teachers.
* May 22 – Victor Hugo, French author ( b. 1802 )
* September 4 – Léopoldine Hugo, daughter of Victor Hugo ( b. 1824 )
* February 26 – Victor Hugo, French author ( d. 1885 )
* March 1 – Victor Hugo uses the phrase United States of Europe in a speech to the French National Assembly.
* January 14 – The Hunchback of Notre Dame is first published by Victor Hugo.
Ernani is an operatic dramma lirico in four acts by Giuseppe Verdi to an Italian libretto by Francesco Maria Piave, based on the play Hernani by Victor Hugo.
* Victor Hugo, poet, playwright, novelist, essayist, visual artist, statesman, human rights activist

Victor and published
French psychologist Alfred Binet, together with psychologists Victor Henri and Théodore Simon, after about 15 years of development, published the Binet-Simon test in 1905, which focused on verbal abilities.
Darwin corresponded closely with Julius Victor Carus, who published an improved translation in 1867.
Jean Marc Gaspard Itard, a young medical student, effectively adopted Victor into his home and published reports on his progress.
About the same time he published Passavantius,, a satire directed against Pierre Lizet, the former president of the Parliament of Paris, and principal originator of the " fiery chamber " ( chambre ardente ), who, at the time ( 1551 ) was abbot of St. Victor near Paris and publishing a number of polemical writings.
He also enjoyed a friendship with an English Roman Catholic priest, Father Victor White, who corresponded with Jung after he had published his controversial Answer to Job.
The Hunchback of Notre-Dame ( French: Notre-Dame de Paris, " Our Lady of Paris ") is a novel by Victor Hugo published in 1831.
Most of the books are published under the collective pseudonym of Victor Appleton.
The books were published under the house name of Victor Appleton.
In 1954, Harriet Adams created the Tom Swift, Jr., series, which was published under the name " Victor Appleton II ".
Twelve issues of the main French edition of journal Internationale Situationniste were published, each issue edited by a different individual or group, including: Guy Debord, Mohamed Dahoiu, Giuseppe Pinot-Gallizio, Maurice Wyckaert, Constant Nieuwenhuys, Asger Jorn, Helmut Sturm, Attila Kotanyi, Jørgen Nash, Uwe Lausen, Raoul Vaneigem, Michèle Bernstein, Jeppesen Victor Martin, Jan Stijbosch, Alexander Trocchi, Théo Frey, Mustapha Khayati, Donald Nicholson-Smith, René Riesel, and René Viénet.
* 1831: The Hunchback of Notre-Dame book published by Victor Hugo
For the Tom Swift Jr. series the books were outlined mostly by Harriet ( Stratemeyer ) Adams, head of the Stratemeyer Syndicate, attributed to the pseudonymous Victor Appleton II, and published in hardcover by Grosset & Dunlap.
In 1872 Victor Schlegel published the first part of his System der Raumlehre which used Grassmann's approach to derive ancient and modern results in plane geometry.
Three months later, he published a substantial historical novel, Cinq-Mars, based on the life of Henri Coiffier de Ruzé, Marquis of Cinq-Mars ; with the success of these two volumes, Vigny seemed to be the rising star of the burgeoning Romantic movement, though this role would soon be usurped by one of Vigny's best friends, Victor Hugo.
In the Teeth of the Evidence is a collection of short stories by Dorothy L. Sayers first published by Victor Gollancz in 1939.
From 1865 onwards he published a large number of books of fiction, which had wide popularity, his work being commonly compared with that of Victor Cherbuliez.
Caricature of Albert Victor published in Vanity Fair ( British magazine ) | Vanity Fair, 1888
His autobiography, What's Welsh for Zen ?, was published in 1999 by Bloomsbury, a collaboration with Victor Bockris, author of a controversial biography of Lou Reed.
Stephens is the subject of a biography Maya Explorer by Victor Wolfgang von Hagen, first published in 1947.
In 1834 these writings, together with the essay entitled Nouvelles considérations sur les rapports du physique et du moral de l ' homme, were published by Victor Cousin, who in 1841 added three volumes, under the title Œuvres philosophiques de Maine de Biran.
In 1983, economist Victor Canto, a disciple of Arthur Laffer, published The Foundations of Supply-Side Economics.
In 1946 an English hardcover edition, copyright Jan Förlag, was published by Victor Pettersons Bokindustriaktiebolag Stockholm, Sweden.

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