Henri Cazalis was a French physician who was a symbolist poet and man of letters and wrote under the pseudonyms of Jean Caselli and Jean Lahor.
His works include:
Chants populaires de l'Italie
Vita tristis. Rêveries fantasques. Romances sans musique dans le mode mineur
Melancholia
Le Livre du néant
Henry Regnault, sa vie et son œuvre
L'Illusion
Cantique des cantiques
Les Quatrains d'Al-Gazali
William Morris.
The author of the Livre du néant had a predilection for gloomy subjects and especially for pictures of death. His oriental habits of thought earned for him the title of the Hindou du Parnasse contemporain.
Some of his poems have been set to music by Camille Saint-Saëns, Henri Duparc, Charles Bordes, Ernest Chausson, Reynaldo Hahn, Edouard Trémisot, Dagmar de Corval Rybner, and Paul Paray.
He also maintained a correspondence of interest with the poet Stéphane Mallarmé from 1862 to 1871.
See a notice by Paul Bourget in Anthologie des poétes fr. du XIXieme siècle; Jules Lemaître, Les Contemporains; Émile Faguet in the Revue bleue. George Santayana's Poetry and Religion has an essay on his concept of La gloire du néant.