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MATHURIN REGNIER (1573–1613) , French satirist, wasSee also: born at See also: Chartres on the 21st of See also: December 1573
.
His See also: father, Jacques Regnier, was a bourgeois of See also: good means and position; his See also: mother, See also: Simone See also: Desportes, was the See also: sister of the poet Desportes
.
Desportes, who was richly beneficed and in See also: great favour at See also: court, seems to have been regarded as Mathurin Regnier's natural See also: protector and See also: patron; and the boy himself, with a view to his following in his See also: uncle's steps, was tonsured at eight years old
.
Little is known of his youth, and it is chiefly conjecture which fixes the date of his visit to See also: Italy in a humble position in the suite of the See also: cardinal, See also: Francois de Joyeuse, in 1587
.
The cardinal was accredited to the papal court in that See also: year as " protector " of the royal interests
.
Regnier found his duties irksome, and when, after many years of See also: constant travel in the cardinal's service, he returned definitely to See also: France about 1605, he took See also: advantage of the hospitality of Desportes
.
He early began the practice of satirical writing, and the enmity which existed between his uncle and the poet See also: Malherbe gave him occasion to attack the latter
.
In 1606 Desportes died, leaving nothing to Regnier, who, though disappointed of the succession to Desportes's abbacies, obtained a pension of 2000 livres, chargeable upon one of them
.
He was also made in 1609 See also: canon of Chartres through his friendship with the lax See also: bishop, Philippe Hurault, at whose abbey of Royaumont he spent much See also: time in the later years of his See also: life
.
But the See also: death of See also: Henry IV. deprived him of his last hope of great preferments
.
His later life had been one of dissipation, and he died at
See also: Rouen at his hotel, the Ecu d'See also: Orleans, on the 22nd of
See also: October 1613
.
About the time of his death numerous collections of licentious and satirical poems were published, while others remained in See also: manuscript
.
Gathered from these there has been a floatingmass of licentious epigrams, &c., attributed to Regnier, little of which is certainly authentic, so that it is very rare to find twoSee also: editions of Regnier which exactly agree in contents
.
His undoubted See also: work falls into three classes: See also: regular satires in alexandrine couplets, serious poems in various metres, and satirical or jocular epigrams and See also: light pieces, which often, if not always, exhibit considerable licence of language
.
The real greatness of Regnier consists in the vigour and See also: polish of his satires, contrasted and heightened as that vigour is with the exquisite feeling and melancholy See also: music of some of his minor poems
.
In these Regnier is a See also: disciple of See also: Ronsard (whom he defended brilliantly against Malherbe), without the occasional pedantry, the affectation or the undue fluency of the Pleiade; but in the satires he seems to have had no master except the ancients, for some of them were written before the publication of the satires of See also: Vauquelin de la Fresnaye, and the Tragiques of D'Aubigne did not appear until 1616
.
He has sometimes followed Horace closely, but always in an entirely See also: original spirit
.
His vocabulary is varied and picturesque, and is not marred by the maladroit classicism of some of the Ronsardists
.
His verse is extraordinarily forcible and See also: nervous, but his chief distinction as a satirist is the way in which he avoids the commonplaces of satire
.
His keen and accurate knowledge of human nature and even his purely See also: literary qualities extorted the admiration of Boileau
.
Regnier displayed remarkable in-dependence and acuteness in literary See also: criticism, and the famous passage (Satire ix., A Monsieur See also: Rapin) in which he satirizes Malherbe contains the best denunciation of the merely" correct " theory of See also: poetry that has ever been written
.
Lastly, Regnier had a most unusual descriptive faculty, and the vividness of what he called his narrative satires was not approached in France for at least two centuries after his death
.
All his merits are displayed in the masterpiece entitled Macette ou l'Hypocrisie deconcertee, which does not suffer even on comparison with Tartuffe; but hardly any one of the sixteen satires which he has See also: left falls below a very high See also: standard
.
See also: Les Premieres Mimes ou satyres de Regnier (See also: Paris, 1608) included the Discours au roi and ten satires
.
There was another in 1609, and others in 1612 and 1613 . The author had also contributed to two collections--Les Muses gaillardes in 1609 and LeSee also: Temple d'Apollon in 1611
.
In 1616 appeared Les Satyres et autres oeuvres folastres du sieur Regnier, with many additions and some poems by other hands
.
Two famous editions by See also: Elzevir (See also: Leiden, 1642 and 1652) are highly prized
.
The chief editions of the 18th century are that of See also: Claude Brossette (printed by Lyon & Woodman, See also: London, 1729), which supplies the standard commentary on Regnier, and that of Lenglet Dufresnoy (printed by J
.
See also: Tonson, London, 1733)
.
The editions of Prosper Poitevin (Paris, 186o), of Ed. de See also: Barthelemy (Paris, 1862), and of E
.
See also: Courbet (Paris, 1875), may be specially mentioned
.
The last, printed after the originals in See also: italic type, and well edited, is perhaps the best
.
See also Vianey's Mathurin Regnier (1896); M
.
H
.
Cherrier, Bibliographie de Mathurin Regnier (1884)
.
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