Olivier, Juste Daniel
OLIVIER, JUSTE DANIEL (1807-1876), Swiss poet, was born near Nyon in the canton of Vaud; he was brought up as a peasant, but studied at the college of Nyon, and later at the academy of Lausanne. Though originaUy intended for the ministry, his poetic genius (foreshadowed by the prizes he obtained in 1823 and 182S for poems on Marcos Bolzaris and Julia Alpinula respectively) inclined him towards literary studies. He was named professor of literature at Neuchatel (1830), but before taking up the duties of his post made a visit to Paris, where he completed his education and became associated with Ste Beuve, especially from 1837 onwards. He professed history at Lausanne from 1S33 to 1846, when he lost his chair in consequence of the religious troubles. He then went to Paris, where he remained till 1870, earning his bread by various means, but being nearly forgotten in his native land, to which he remained tenderly attached. From 1845 till 1860 (when the magazine was merged in the Biblioth'eque wiivcrsellc) Olivier and his wife wrote in the Revue Suisse the Paris letter, which had been started by Ste Beuve in 1843, when Olivier became the owner of the periodical. After the war of 1870 he settled down in Switzerland, spending his summers at his beloved Gryon, and died at Geneva on the 7th of January 1876. Besides some novels, a semi-poetical work on the Canton of Vaud (2 vols., 1837-1841), and a volume of historical essays entitled Etudes d'histoire nationale (1842), he published several volumes of poems, Deux Voix (1835), Chansons lointaines (1847) and its continuation Chansons du soir (1867), and Senliers dc monlagnc (Gryon, 1875). His younger brother, Urbain (1810-1888), was well known from 1856 onwards as the author of numerous popular tales of rural life in the Canton of Vaud, especially of the region near Nyon.
Life by Rambert (1877), republished in his &rivains de la Suisse romande (1889), and also prefixed to his edition of Olivier's CEuvres choisies (Lausanne, 1879). (W. A. B. C.)
Note - this article incorporates content from Encyclopaedia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, (1910-1911)