EDOUARD JULES HENRI PAILLERON
\ˈɛdwɑːɹəd d͡ʒˈuːlz hˈɛnɹi pˈe͡ɪləɹən], \ˈɛdwɑːɹəd dʒˈuːlz hˈɛnɹi pˈeɪləɹən], \ˈɛ_d_w_ɑː_ɹ_ə_d dʒ_ˈuː_l_z h_ˈɛ_n_ɹ_i p_ˈeɪ_l_ə_ɹ_ə_n]\
Definitions of EDOUARD JULES HENRI PAILLERON
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A French dramatic writer; born at Paris, Sept. 17, 1834; died there April 20, 1899. Author of the comedy "The Parasite" (1860); "The Parasites", a volume of satiric poems; the comedies "Last Quarters", the last stage of a wedding tour (1863); "The Second Movement" (1865); "The World where One is Amused" (1868); "The World of Boredom" (1881); "The Mouse" (1887); "The Strolling Players". He wrote three volumes of poems; viz., "Loves and Hatreds" (1869), "Prayer for France" (1871), "The Doll" (1884); and "Academic Discourses" (1886).
By Charles Dudley Warner