Edmond Roche (poet)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edmond Louis Joseph Arthur Roche (20 February 1828 in Calais – 24 December 1861 in Paris) was a 19th-century French poet, playwright, librettist and violinist.

A student of Habeneck at the Paris conservatory where he learned to play the violin (1842), he became first violinist of the orchestra of the Théâtre de la Porte-Saint-Martin before leaving this position to become a customs employee.[1]

A friend of Richard Wagner, he gave the first translation in French of Tannhäuser.[2]

His poésies were published in 1863 by Michel Lévy posthumously at the expense of his friends, with a preface by Victorien Sardou with engravings by Camille Corot and others.

  • 1853: Mozart, étude poétique
  • 1856: Les Algues, études marines
  • 1859: Stradivarius
  • 1859: Les Récréations enfantines
  • 1860: L'Italie de nos jours
  • 1861: Les Virtuoses contemporains
  • 1863: La dernière fourberie de Scapin (À propos in one act in verse), (posthumous)

Bibliography

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI