Gourmont was born at
Bazoches-au-Houlme,
Orne, into a
publishing family from
Cotentin. He was the son of
Count Auguste-Marie de Gourmont and his countess, born Mathilde de Montfort. In 1866 he moved to a manor close to
Villedieu near
La Manche. He studied
law at
Caen, and was awarded a bachelor's degree in law in 1879; upon his graduation he moved to Paris. In 1881, Gourmont was employed by the
Bibliothèque nationale. He began to write for general circulation periodicals such as
Le Monde and
Le Contemporain. He took an interest in ancient literature, following the footsteps of
Gustave Kahn. During this period, he also met
Berthe Courrière, model for, and heir of, the sculptor
Auguste Clésinger, with whom he formed a lifelong attachment, he and Berthe living together for the rest of their lives. Gourmont also began a literary alliance with
Joris-Karl Huysmans, to whom he dedicated his prose work
Le Latin mystique (Mystical Latin). In 1889 Gourmont became one of the founders of the
Mercure de France, which became a rallying point of the Symbolist movement. Between 1893 and 1894 he was the co-editor, along with
Alfred Jarry, of ''
L'Ymagier, a magazine dedicated to symbolist wood carvings. In 1891 he published a polemic called Le Joujou Patriotisme'' (Patriotism, a toy) in which he argued that France and Germany shared an aesthetic culture and urged a rapprochement between the two countries, contrary to the wishes of nationalists in the French government. This political essay led to his losing his job at the Bibliothèque Nationale, despite
Octave Mirbeau's chronicles. and
Havelock Ellis. During this same period, Gourmont was stricken with
lupus vulgaris. Disfigured by this illness, he largely retired from public view appearing only at the offices of the
Mercure de France. In 1910, Gourmont met
Natalie Clifford Barney, to whom he dedicated his ''Lettres à l'Amazone'' (Letters to the Amazon). Gourmont's health continued to decline and he began to suffer from
locomotor ataxia and be increasingly unable to walk. He was deeply depressed by the outbreak of
World War I and died in
Paris of
cerebral congestion in 1915. Berthe Courrière was his sole heir, inheriting a substantial body of unpublished work which she sent to his brother Jean de Gourmont, and dying within the year. Gourmont and Courrière are buried Chopin's tomb in
Père-Lachaise Cemetery. ==Works==