Alphonse Marie Louis de Prat de Lamartine, chevalier de Pratz (French: [alfɔ̃s maʁi lwi dəpʁa də lamaʁtin]; 21 October 1790 – 28 February 1869), was a French writer, poet and politician who was instrumental in the foundation of the Second Republic and the continuation of the Tricolore as the flag of France.
Lamartine was born in Mâcon, Burgundy, on 21 October 1790. His family were members of the French provincial nobility, and he spent his youth at the family estate. Lamartine is famous for his partly autobiographical poem, "Le lac" ("The Lake"), which describes in retrospect the fervent love shared by a couple from the point of view of the bereaved man. Lamartine was masterly in his use of French poetic forms. Raised a devout Catholic, Lamartine became a pantheist, writing Jocelyn and La Chute d'un ange. He wrote Histoire des Girondins in 1847 in praise of the Girondists.
Lamartine made his entrance into the field of poetry by a masterpiece, Les Méditations Poétiques (1820), and awoke to find himself famous. He was made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour in 1825. He worked for the French embassy in Italy from 1825 to 1828. In 1829, he was elected a member of the Académie française. He was elected a deputy in 1833. In 1835 he published the "Voyage en Orient", a brilliant and bold account of the journey he had just made, in royal luxury, to the countries of the Orient, and in the course of which he had lost his only daughter, Thenceforth he confined himself to prose.
The Lamartine is a 19th-century shipwreck lying in the waters of the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary, off Gloucester, Massachusetts. She was a schooner built in 1848 in Camden, Maine. She was hauling quarried granite from Stonington, Maine to New York City when she went down in a storm on May 17, 1893. One crewmember drowned; the others were rescued by a fishing vessel that saw the ship sinking. The wreck was located in 2004 by a survey team, documented over the next two years.
The wreck was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012.
Lamartine may refer to:
Accross the river thames
On a sunday morning
The smell of the air
A tiny noise
Dark blades of grass
Trees and big clouds
Factory smokes
And plastic balloons
Moving around the meridian line
And hearing from here
Some silly jokes
Familys strolls
Children circles
Couples kissing
And grand'ma's sitting
Today there's a frontier
A big white line
Today season's changing
What's comming next
Everything is in it's write place
Today someone is missing
This a point blank
A little later
On a sunday night
Sitting on a train
Under the sea
Lights are flashing
Speed and fat boys
Computer's screens
Smoking second classe
No troubles here
A safety place
Drinking coffee
In a plastic cup
Wrinting postcards
Nothing in mind
All is quiet
Under control
Tonight there's a frontier
A big white line
Wright on the middle
Of the channel
Tonight I'm back in France
What's comming next
Tonight someone's missing