Online Encyclopedia

THEOPHILE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 786 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THEOPHILE  , the name by which Theophile de Viau (or Viaud),

French poet (1591–1626), is more commonly called . He was born in 1591, at Clairac, near
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Agen, and spent his early years at Bousseres de Mazeres, his
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father's
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property . He was educated at the
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Protestant college of
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Saumur, and he went to Paris in his twentieth
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year . In 1612 he met Balzac, with whom he made an expedition to the
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Netherlands, which ended in a serious
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quarrel . On his return he seems to have been for two years a
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regular playwright to the actors at the Hotel de Bourgogne . In 1615 he attached himself to the
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ill-fated Henry, duke of Montmorency (1595–1632), under whose
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protection he produced with success the tragedy of Pyrame et Thisbe, acted probably about 1617 and printed in 1623, although placed later by some critics . This piece, written in the extravagant
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Spanish-
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Italian manner, which was fashionable in the
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interval between the Pleiade model and the innovations of Corneille, was ridiculed by Boileau (Preface to his (Duvres, 1701) . Theophile was the acknowledged leader of a set of Parisian libertines, whose excesses seem to have been chiefly dictated by a general hatred of restraint . He himself was not only a Huguenot, but a
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free-thinker, and had made unsparing use of his sharp wit in epigrams on the Church and on the government . In 1619 he was accused of blasphemous and indecent writings, and was banished from Paris . He took
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refuge in the south of France, where he found protection with many friends . He was allowed to return in the next year, and effected a partial reconciliation with one of his most powerful enemies, the due de
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Luynes .

He served in that year in the

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campaign against the
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Huguenots, but in the autumn was again in exile, this time in England . He was re-called in 1621, and began to be instructed in the
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Roman Catholic religion, though his abjuration of Protestantism was deferred until the end of 1622 . There is nothing to show that this conversion was purely
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political; in any case it did little to mollify his enemies . In 1622 he had contributed four pieces to the Nouveau Parnasse Satirique, a
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miscellany of verse by many hands . In the next year a new edition appeared, with the addition of some licentious verse, and the inscription par le sour Theophile on the title-page . Contemporary opinion justified Theophile's denial of this ascription, but the Jesuit father, Francois Garasse, published a tract against him entitled La
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Doctrine curieuse (1623) . Theophile was again prosecuted . This time he fled from Paris, to the court of Montmorency, and was condemned in his absence (19th of August 1623) to
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death . On his
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flight to the border he was arrested, and imprisoned in the Conciergerie in Paris . He defended himself in an Apologie au roi (1625), and was liberated in September, his sentence beingcommuted to banishment for
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life . Under Montmorency's protection he was able to hide in Paris for some time, and he subsequently accompanied his friend and
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patron to the south . He died in Paris on the 25th of September 1626 .

The

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great
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interest aroused by the
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prosecution and defence of Theophile is shown by the number of
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pamphlets on the subject,
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forty-two of which, written between the
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dates 1622 and 1626, are preserved in the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris .
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Les tEuvres du Sieur Theophile were printed in Paris in 1621, and other collections followed during his lifetime . Six years after his death Georges de
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Scudery edited his
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work with a Tombeau (copy of obituary verses), and a challenge in the preface to any one who might be offended by the editors eulogy of the poet . A tragedy entitled Pasiphae, published in 1631, is probably not Theophile's, and is not included in his
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works, the standard
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modern edition of which is that of Alleaume in the Bibliotheque Elzevirienne (2 vols . 1856) . Besides Pyrame et Thisbe, his works include a paraphrase,
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half verse, half
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prose, of the
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Phaedo . There are numerous French and Latin letters, his Apologie, a promising fragment of comic prose narrative, and a large collection of occasional_ verses, odes, elegies, stanzas, &c . In addition to Alleaume's edition, a delightful article in Theophile Gautier's Grotesques should be consulted respecting him . A full account of the extensive literature dealing with Theophile is given by Dr K . Schirmacher in a study on Theophile de Viau (
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Leipzig and Paris, 1897) . In the Page disgracie of Tristan 1'Hermite, the page makes the acquaintance of a dramatic author, and his description may be accepted as a contemporary portrait of Theophile's vigorous personality .

End of Article: THEOPHILE
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