OLYMPE AUDOUARD
\əlˈɪmp ˈɔːdwɑːɹəd], \əlˈɪmp ˈɔːdwɑːɹəd], \ə_l_ˈɪ_m_p ˈɔː_d_w_ɑː_ɹ_ə_d]\
Sort: Oldest first
-
A French writer (1830-90); married to a notary in Marseilles, but soon after divorced, she traveled in Egypt, Turkey, and Russia; and having conducted various journals in Paris since 1860, made a successful lecture tour through America in 1868-69. After her return she became interested in spiritism. She was an ardent advocate of woman's rights. Among her novels and books of travel may be mentioned: "How Men Love" (1861); "The Mysteries of the Seraglio and of the Turkish Harems" (1863); "The Mysteries of Egypt Unveiled" (1865); "War to Man" (1866); "Across America" (1869-71); "Parisian Silhouettes" (1882).
By Charles Dudley Warner
Word of the day
Snake's-head
- Guinea-hen flower; -- so called in England because its spotted petals resemble the scales of a snake's head.
Nearby Words
- olsnitium
- olus
- olusatrum
- olves, mount of
- olympas
- Olympe Audouard
- olympia
- olympiad
- olympian
- olympian brow
- olympian games