1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Pouvillon, Émile

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22247931911 Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 22 — Pouvillon, Émile

POUVILLON, ÉMILE (1840–1906), French novelist, was born at Montauban (Tarn et Garonne). He published in 1878 a collection of stories entitled Nouvelles réalistes. Making himself the chronicler of his native province of Quercy, he painted its scenery and its life with great clearness of outline and without exaggeration. His books include Césette (1881), the story of a peasant girl; L’Innocent (1884); Jean-de-Jeanne (1886); Le Cheval bleu (1888); Le Vœu d’etre chaste (1900); Chante-pleure (1890); Les Antibel (1892); Petites âmes (1893); Mademoiselle Clémence (1896); Pays et paysages (1895); Petites gens (1905); Bernadette de Lourdes (1894), a mystery; and Le Roi de Rome (1898), a play. He died at Chambéry.