guó zuòzhělièbiǎo
luò 杜洛 doswéi yōng Francois Villon · bèi lāi Joachim du Bellay
gāo nǎi Pierre Corneillewéi duō · guǒ Victor Hugoxià 'ěr · lāi 'ěr Charles Baudelaire
fāng · měi Stephane Mallarmewèi 'ěr lún Paul-Marie Veriaineluò léi 'ā méng Comte de Lautréamont
lán Arthur Rimbaud 'ěr méng Remy de Gourmontbǎo 'ěr - ràng · lāi Paul-Jean Toulet
lǎng · Francis Jammes 'ěr Léon-Paul Fargue luò dài 'ěr Paul Claudel
bǎo 'ěr · léi Paul Valeryxià 'ěr · pèi Charles Peguy pèi wéi 'āi 'ěr Jules Supervielle
luò dōng André Bretonài Paul Eluardā nài 'ěr Guillaume Apollinaire
· lāi wéi 'ěr Jacques Prévertā gòng Louis Aragonbǎo 'ěr · 'ěr Paul Fort
hēng · xiū Henri Michauxāi léi José Maria de Herediaā 'ěr tuō Antonin Artaud
wéi Pierre Reverdybài Saint-John Perse duō Sully Prudhomme
nèi · xià 'ěr René Char fán · 'ěr Yvan Goll kǎi Alain Bosquet
Yves Bonnefoy nèi · sài Rene Groussetā lán · pèi léi fěi Alain Peyrefitte
xiē 'ěr · wèi - wēi 'ěr Michelle David - Willbái jìn Joachim Bouvet lín · nài Katrina resistant
ruò · léi shí José Frèches xiē 'ěr - shī nài Michelle - Schneider · Nicolas Sarkozy
ā · níng Anaïs Ninràng · duō · bào Jean-Dominique Bauby xiē 'ěr - ān tuō · Michel-Antoine Burnier
xiē 'ěr · kǒng Michel Contatāi lāi · Hélène Grimaud · Tarita Teriipaia
ràng · fěi To Philip · zhā 'ěr 尼玛扎玛尔 luò wéi shì Clovis I
luò tài 'ěr shì Clothaire Ier 'ěr sān shì Childeric III píng Pepin III
chá Charlemagne shì Louis the Piouschá 'èr shì Charles II (le Chauve)
'èr shì Louis II sān shì Louis III luò màn 'èr shì Carloman II
léi 'āi Henri de Régnier
guó lán sān gòng guó  (1864niánshíèryuè28rì1936niánwǔyuè23rì)
Henri-François-Joseph de Régnier
hēng · · léi 'āi


亨利·德·雷尼埃(1864-1936)法国后期象征主义诗人。1884年写了第一首诗《平静》。在风格上,他起初受巴那斯派影响,出版了诗集《翌日》(1885)。因喜爱魏尔伦、马拉美的作品,不久即转向象征主义;写出《古传奇诗集》(18B7—1890),《乡村迎神赛会》(1697)。晚年所作更加注重传统格律,内容则以讴歌自然为主。1912年,当选为法兰西学院院士。


Henri-François-Joseph de Régnier (28 December 1864 – 23 May 1936) was a French symbolist poet, considered one of the most important of France during the early 20th century.
Life and works
He was born in Honfleur (Calvados) on 28 December 1864, and educated in Paris for law. In 1885 he began to contribute to the Parisian reviews, and his verses were published by most of the French and Belgian periodicals favorable to the symbolist writers. Having begun as a Parnassian, he retained the classical tradition, though he adopted some of the innovations of Jean Moréas and Gustave Kahn. His vaguely suggestive style shows the influence of Stéphane Mallarmé, of whom he was an assiduous disciple.

His first volume of poems, Lendemains, appeared in 1885, and among numerous later volumes are Poèmes anciens et romanesques (1890), Les Jeux rustiques et divins (1890), Les Médailles d'argile (1900), La Cité des eaux (1903). He is also the author of a series of realistic novels and tales, among which are La Canne de jaspe (2nd ed., 1897), La Double maîtresse (5th ed., 1900), Les Vacances d’un jeune homme sage (1903), and Les Amants singuliers (1905). Régnier married Marie de Heredia, daughter of the poet José María de Heredia, and herself a novelist and poet under the pen name of Gérard d'Houville.

He was a contributor to Le Visage de l'Italie, a 1929 book about Italy prefaced by Benito Mussolini.

La Canne de jaspe and Histoires Incertaines (1919) were translated in 2012 by Brian Stableford under the title A Surfeit of Mirrors ISBN 978-1-61227-076-0

Henri de Régnier died in 1936 at age 71 and was interred in the Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.

Other media
An edition of Maurice Ravel's waltz Valses nobles et sentimentales was published with a quotation from de Régnier "…le plaisir délicieux et toujours nouveau d'une occupation inutile"
In the introductory cutscene to the 2012 video game Dragon's Dogma, by Capcom, the quotation "le plaisir délicieux... d'une occupation inutile" (subtitled trans. "The delightful and ever-novel pleasure of a useless occupation.") is given and attributed to de Régnier himself.
References
Le Visage de l'Italie, publié sous la direction littéraire de Gabriel Faure. Préface de Benito Mussolini. - Paul Bourget, Henri de Régnier, Henry Bordeaux, Georges Goyau, Pierre de Nolhac, de l'Académie française; Gérard d'Houville et Marcelle Vioux, Marcel Boulenger, Gabriel Faure, Paul Guiton, Ernest Lémonon, Eugène Marsan, Maurice Mignon, Ed. Schneider, J.-L. Vaudoyer. OCLC 459498990.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henri de Régnier.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Régnier, Henri François Joseph de". Encyclopædia Britannica. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 47.
External links
Works by Henri de Régnier at Project Gutenberg
Works by or about Henri de Régnier at Internet Archive
    

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