Online Encyclopedia

JEAN DUCIS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 630 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JEAN
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DUCIS
  FRANcoIS (1733–1816), French dramatist and adapter of Shakespeare, was born at
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Versailles on the 22nd of August 1733 . His
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father, originally from Savoy, was a
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linen-draper at Versailles; and all through
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life he retained the
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simple tastes and straightforward independence fostered by his bourgeois
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education . In 1768 he produced his first tragedy, Amelise . The failure of this first attempt was fully compensated by the success of his
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Hamlet (1769), and Romeo et Juliette (177 2) . C dipe chez Admete, imitated partly from Euripides and partly from Sophocles, appeared in 1778, and secured him in the following
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year the chair in the Academy
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left vacant by the
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death of Voltaire . Equally successful was Le Roi Lear in 1783 .
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Macbeth in L783 did not take so well, and
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Jean sans peur in 1791 was almost a failure; but Othello in 1792, supported by the acting of Talma, obtained immense applause . Its vivid picturing of
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desert life secured for Abufas, ou la famille arabe (1795), an
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original drama, a flattering reception . On the failure of a similar piece, Phedor et Vladimir ou la famille de Siberie (18o1),
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Ducis ceased to write for the stage; and the rest of his life was spent in quiet retirement at Versailles . He had been named a member of the Council of the Ancients in 1798, but he never discharged the functions of the office; and when
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Napoleon offered him a
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post of honour under the
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empire, he refused . Amiable, religious and bucolic, he had little sympathy with the fierce, sceptical and tragic times in which his lot was cast . " Alas !

" he said in the midst of the Revolution, " tragedy is abroad in the streets ; if I step outside of my

door, I have
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blood to my very ankles . I have too often seen
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Atreus in clogs, to venture to bring an Atreus on the stage." Though actuated by honest admiration of the
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great
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English dramatist, Ducis is not Shakespearian . His ignorance of the English language left him at the mercy of the
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translations of
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Pierre Letourneur (1736–1788) and of Pierre de la Place (1707--1793); ; and even this modified Shakespeare had still to undergo a
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process of
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purification and correction before he could be presented to the fastidious criticism of French taste . That such was the case was not, however, the fault of Ducis; and he did good service in modifying the
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judgment of his
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fellow countrymen . He did not pretend to reproduce, but to excerpt and refashion; and consequently the French
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play sometimes differs from its English namesake in everything almost but the name . The plot is different, the characters are different, the motif different, and the scenic arrangement different . To Othello, for instance, he wrote two endings . In one of them Othello was enlightened intime and Desdemona escaped her tragic
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fate . Le Bang1set de l'amitie, a poem in four cantos (1771), Au roi de Sardaigne (1775), Discours de reception d l'academie francaise .(1779), Epttre d l'amitie (1786), and a Recueil de poesies (18o9),
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complete the list of Ducis's publications . An edition of his
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works in three volumes appeared in 1813; Euvres posthumes were edited by Campenon in 1826; and Hamlet, tEdipe chez Admete, Macbeth and Abufar are reprinted in vol. ii. of
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Didot's Chefs-d'ceuvre tragiques . See Onesime Leroy, Etude sur la personne et
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les ecrils de Ducis (1832), based on Ducis's own
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memoirs preserved in the library at Versailles; Sainte-Beuve, Causeries du lundi, t. vi., and Nouveaux lundis, t. iv.; Villemain, Tableau de la lilt. au X VIII, siecle .

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