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Albert Giraud

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Template:Short description Template:One source Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox person Albert Giraud (Template:IPA; 23 June 1860 – 26 December 1929) was a Belgian poet who wrote in French.

Biography

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Giraud was born Emile Albert Kayenbergh in Leuven, Belgium. He studied law at the University of Leuven. He left university without a degree and took up journalism and poetry. In 1885, Giraud became a member of La Jeune Belgique, a Belgian nationalist literary movement that met at the Café Sésino in Brussels.<ref>Albert Giraud's Pierrot Lunaire, translated and with an introduction by Gregory C. Richter.</ref> Giraud became chief librarian at the Belgian Ministry of the Interior.

He was a Symbolist poet. His published works include Pierrot lunaire: Rondels bergamasques (1884), a poem cycle based on the commedia dell'arte figure of Pierrot, and La Guirlande des Dieux (1910). The composer Arnold Schönberg set a German-language version (translated by Otto Erich Hartleben) of selections from his Pierrot Lunaire to innovative atonal music. In a different, late romantic style, some of Hartleben's translations found their way into the vocal works of Joseph Marx.

File:Leuven Sint-Donatuspark IV.jpg
Dedicated sculpture in Leuven Sint Donatuspark

Works

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Notes

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References

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