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GABRIEL JEAN BAPTISTE ERNEST WILFRID ...

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 380 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GABRIEL
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JEAN
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BAPTISTE ERNEST WILFRID LEGOUVE (1807–1903)
  , French dramatist, son of the poet Gabriel Legouve (1764–1812), who wrote a pastoral La Mort d'Abel (1793) and a tragedy of Epicharis et Neron, was born in Paris on the 5th of
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February 1807 . His
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mother died in 181o, and almost immediately afterwards his
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father was removed to a lunatic asylum . The child, however, inherited a considerable fortune, and was carefully educated .
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Jean Nicolas Bouilly (1763–1842) was his tutor, and early instilled into the young Legouve a passion for literature, to which the example of his father and of his grandfather, J . B . Legouve (1729–1783), predisposed him . As early as 1829 he carried away a prize of the French Academy for a poem on the
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discovery of printing; and in 1832 he published a curious little
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volume of verses, entitled
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Les Morts Bizarres . In those early days Legouve brought out a succession of novels, of which Edith de Falsen enjoyed a considerable success . In 1847 he began the
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work by which he is best remembered, his contributions to the development and
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education of the
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female mind, by lecturing at the College of France on the moral
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history of
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women: these discourses were collected into a volume in 1848, and enjoyed a
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great success . Legouve wrote considerably for the stage, and in 1849 he collaborated with A . E . Scribe in Adrienne Lecouvreur .

In 1855 he brought out his tragedy of Medee, the success of which had much to do with his

election to the French Academy . He succeeded to the fauteuil of J . A . Ancelot, and was received by Flourens, who dwelt on the plays of Legouve as his
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principal claim to consideration . As time passed on, however, he became less prominent as a playwright, and more so as a lecturer and propagandist on woman's rights and the advanced education of children, in both of which directions he was a
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pioneer in French society . His La Femme en France an IIXt" siecle (1864), reissued, much enlarged, in 1878; his Messieurs les enfants (1868), his Conferences Parisiennes (1872), his Nos frlles et nos fibs (1877), and his Une Education de jeune idle (1884) were
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works of wide-reaching influence in the moral order . In 1886–1887 he published, in two volumes, his Soixante ans de souvenirs, an excellent specimen of autobiography . He was raised in 1887 to the highest grade of the Legion of Honour, and held for many years the
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post of inspector-general of female education in the
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national
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schools . Legouve was always an advocate of
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physical training . He was long accounted one of the best shots in France, and although, from a conscientious objection, he never fought a duel, he made the
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art of
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fencing his lifelong
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hobby . After the
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death of
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Desire Nisard in 1888, Legouve became the " father " of the French Academy . He died on the 14th of March 1903 .

End of Article: GABRIEL JEAN BAPTISTE ERNEST WILFRID LEGOUVE (1807–1903)
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