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BONAVENTURE DES PRIERS (c. 1500 — 1544)

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Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 102 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BONAVENTURE

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DES PRIERS (c. 1500 — 1544)  , French author, was born of a noble
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family at Arnay-le-duc in
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Burgundy at the end of the 15th century . The circumstances of his
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education are uncertain, but he became a good classical scholar, andwas attached to various noble houses in the capacity of tutor . In 1533 or 1534
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Des Periers visited Lyons, then the most en-lightened
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town of France, and a
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refuge for many liberal scholars who might elsewhere have had to suffer for their opinions . He gave some assistance to Robert Olivetan and Lefevre d'Etaples in the preparation of the vernacular version of the Old Testament, and to Etienne Dolet in the Commentarii linguae latinae . In 1536 he put himself under the
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protection of
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Marguerite d'Angouleme, queen of Navarre, who made him her valet-dechambre . He acted as the queen's secretary, and transcribed the Heptameron for her . It is probable that his duties extended beyond those of a mere copyist, and some writers have gone so far as to say that the Heptameron was his
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work . The
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free discussions permitted at Marguerite's court encouraged a licence of thought as displeasing to the Calvinists as to the Catholics . This free inquiry became scepticism in Bonaventure's Cymbalum Mundi . . . (1537), and the queen of Navarre thought it prudent to disavow the author, though she continued to help him privately until 1541 . The
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book consisted of four dialogues in imitation of Lucian .

Its allegorical

form did not conceal its real meaning, and, when it was printed by Morin, probably early in 1538, the
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Sorbonne secured the suppression of the edition before it was offered for sale . The dedication provides a key to the author's intention: Thomas du Clenier (or Clenier) d son anti
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Pierre Tryocan was recognized by 19th-century editors to be an anagram for Thomas l'Incredule d son ami Pierre Croyant . The book was reprinted in Paris in the same
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year . It made many bitter enemies for the author .
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Henri Estienne called it detestable, and Etienne Pasquier said it deserved to be thrown into the fire with its author if he were still living . Des Periers prudently
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left Paris, and after 'some wanderings settled at Lyons, where he lived in poverty, until in 1544 he put an end to his existence by falling on his sword . In 1544 his collected
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works were printed at Lyons . The
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volume, Recueil des ceuuvres de
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feu Bonaventure des Periers, included his poems, which are of small merit," the Traite des quatre vertus cardinales Orbs Seneque, and a
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translation of the Lysis of
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Plato . In 1558 appeared at Lyons the collection of stories and fables entitled the Nouvelles recreations et joyeux devis . It is on this work that the claim put forward for Des Periers as one of the early masters of French
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prose rests . Some of the tales are attributed to the editors, Nicholas Denisot and Jacques Pelletier, but their share is certainly limited to the later ones . The book leaves something to be desired on the score of morality, but the stories never lack point and are
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models of
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simple,
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direct narration in the vigorous and picturesque French of the 16th century .

H s Muvres francaises were published by

Louis Lacour (Paris, 2 vols., 1856) . See also the preface to the Cymbalum Mundi . . (ed . F . Franck, 1894) ; A . Cheneviere, Bonaventure Desperiers, sa
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vie, ses poesies (1885) ; and P . Toldo, Contributo allo studio delta novella francese del 'CV. e X VI. secolo (Rome, 1895) .

End of Article: BONAVENTURE DES PRIERS (c. 1500 — 1544)
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