Letters to Dead Authors eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 127 pages of information about Letters to Dead Authors.

Letters to Dead Authors eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 127 pages of information about Letters to Dead Authors.

It was not in human nature to resist the evidence of the bishops especially, and when every minor poet believes in himself on the testimony of his own conceit, you may be acquitted of vanity if you listened to the plaudits of your friends.  Nay, you ventured to pronounce judgment on contemporaries whom Posterity has preferred to your perfections.  ‘Molie’re,’ said you, ’understands the nature of comedy, and presents it in a natural style.  The plot of his best pieces is borrowed, but not without judgment; his morale is fair, and he has only to avoid scurrility.’

Excellent, unconscious, popular Chapelain!

Of yourself you observed, in a Report on contemporary literature, that your ’courage and sincerity never allowed you to tolerate work not absolutely good.’  And yet you regarded ‘La Pucelle’ with some complacency.

On the ‘Pucelle’ you were occupied during a generation of mortal men.  I marvel not at the length of your labours, as you received a yearly pension till the Epic was finished, but your Muse was no Alcmena, and no Hercules was the result of that prolonged night of creations.  First you gravely wrote out (it was the task of five years) all the compositions in prose.  Ah, why did you not leave it in that commonplace but appropriate medium?  What says the Pre’cieuse about you in Boileau’s satire?

  In Chapelain, for all his foes have said,
  She finds but one defect, he can’t be read;
  Yet thinks the world might taste his maiden’s woes,
  If only he would turn his verse to prose!

The verse had been prose, and prose, perhaps, it should have remained.  Yet for this precious ‘Pucelle,’ in the age when ‘Paradise Lost’ was sold for five pounds, you are believed to have received about four thousand.  Horace was wrong, mediocre poets may exist (now and then), and he was a wise man who first spoke of aurea mediocritas.  At length the great work was achieved, a work thrice blessed in its theme, that divine Maiden to whom France owes all, and whom you and Voltaire have recompensed so strangely.  In folio, in italics, with a score of portraits and engravings, and culs de lampe, the great work was given to the world, and had a success.  Six editions in eighteen months are figures which fill the poetic heart with envy and admiration.  And then, alas! the bubble burst.  A great lady, Madame de Longveille, hearing the ‘Pucelle’ read aloud, murmured that it was ‘perfect indeed, but perfectly wearisome.’  Then the satires began, and the satirists never left you till your poetic reputation was a rag, till the mildest Abbe’ at Me’nage’s had his cheap sneer for Chapelain.

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Letters to Dead Authors from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.