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  • ...yron]], at that time the meteoric star of European literature.<ref>Robb,G. Victor Hugo. Picador. 1997. Pt 1.</ref> The first deviation from classicism came with ...are' par Victor Hugo.jpg|right|180px|''Le Phare'' (lighthouse). Drawing by Victor Hugo}}
    9 KB (1,368 words) - 04:31, 5 September 2017
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 18:30, 23 December 2007
  • 191 bytes (25 words) - 14:26, 27 December 2013
  • 1 KB (126 words) - 15:42, 5 January 2014
  • 200 bytes (24 words) - 16:05, 27 December 2013

Page text matches

  • {{r|Victor Hugo}}
    525 bytes (68 words) - 15:24, 13 March 2015
  • {{rpl|Victor Hugo||:}}
    655 bytes (89 words) - 10:36, 29 October 2014
  • {{r|Victor Hugo}}
    515 bytes (68 words) - 11:47, 11 January 2010
  • ...the purpose given it by the Revolution, in order to receive the body of [[Victor Hugo]] in 1885.
    611 bytes (98 words) - 16:37, 27 August 2013
  • [[Victor Hugo]] devoted a whole book of his great novel ''Les Misérables'' to the battle
    1 KB (217 words) - 13:57, 21 June 2015
  • {{r|Victor Hugo}}
    1 KB (161 words) - 07:01, 3 May 2021
  • ...e time has come" (quotation that never was: it appears in a translation of Victor Hugo but not the original). And there's also the idea whose time ''hasn't'' come
    1 KB (154 words) - 07:47, 26 July 2015
  • {{r|Victor Hugo}}
    1 KB (221 words) - 20:04, 7 October 2009
  • {{r|Victor Hugo}}
    751 bytes (89 words) - 13:56, 16 February 2008
  • ...yron]], at that time the meteoric star of European literature.<ref>Robb,G. Victor Hugo. Picador. 1997. Pt 1.</ref> The first deviation from classicism came with ...are' par Victor Hugo.jpg|right|180px|''Le Phare'' (lighthouse). Drawing by Victor Hugo}}
    9 KB (1,368 words) - 04:31, 5 September 2017
  • ...misers who live long but become dried-up and withdrawn. His contemporary [[Victor Hugo]] exiled himself to [[Guernsey]] in disgust at French politics, but lived o ...ion of Boulevard Raspail and Boulevard [[Montparnasse]]. 'Henceforth' said Victor Hugo at his funeral 'men's eyes will be turned towards the faces not of those wh
    11 KB (1,708 words) - 19:29, 7 October 2009
  • ...uence on [[Alexandre Dumas|Dumas]], [[Prosper Mérimée|Mérimée]] and even [[Victor Hugo|Hugo]]. The romantic vein which he popularised is even claimed as a source
    11 KB (1,790 words) - 08:42, 23 May 2016
  • ...stern Front]]'', [[Horace Walpole]]'s ''[[The Castle of Otranto]]'', and [[Victor Hugo]]'s ''[[Les Misérables]]'', among others.
    10 KB (1,539 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...romwell's image was glorified by Romantic artists and poets. French author Victor Hugo's 1827 play ''Cromwell'' was representative of the French romantic movement
    36 KB (5,768 words) - 08:53, 2 March 2024
  • [[Victor Hugo]], an internationally renowned author and mastermind behind the epic ''Les
    42 KB (6,598 words) - 04:31, 21 March 2024
  • ...the Nineteenth Century'' George Allen and Unwin, 1934,p 85; and Robb, G. ''Victor Hugo'' Picador, 1997, ch 7.</ref> Particularly influential were the German trans
    35 KB (5,325 words) - 09:40, 5 August 2023
  • ...rd Shaw|Shaw]], [[August Strindberg|Strindberg]], [[Gerhart Hauptmann]], [[Victor Hugo]], [[Victorien Sardou]], and [[Leonid Andreyev]]. Frequently the works of t
    35 KB (5,737 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
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