333:
20:
257:
357:
119:
prison in Paris for almost two years. The trial led to debates among scholars and writers, and 55 pamphlets were published both for and against de Viau. His sentence was changed to permanent banishment and de Viau spent the remaining months of his life in
171:, 1623), in which he expressed his literary tastes. He was not a supporter of "the metaphoric excess and lofty erudition" of his contemporaries. But he also thought "sterile" the constraints proposed by would-be reformers such as
397:
452:
100:
lifestyle, de Viau was banished from France in 1619 and traveled in
England, though he returned to the court in 1620. In 1622 a collection of licentious poems,
417:
462:
277:
198:). Two of his poems are melancholy pleas to the king on the subject of his incarceration or exile, and this tone of sadness is also present in his ode
382:
402:
115:
While de Viau was in hiding, the sentence was carried out in effigy, but the poet was eventually caught in flight toward
England and put in the
392:
272:
387:
297:
89:. (Vanini was accused of heresy and of practising magic, and after having his tongue cut out, was strangled and his corpse burned in
432:
412:
73:
from 1615–16 in the service of the Comte de
Candale. After the war, he was pardoned and became a brilliant young poet in the
104:, was published under his name, although many of the poems were written by others. However, de Viau was denounced by the
427:
457:
437:
342:
407:
422:
179:
172:
125:
121:
86:
108:
in 1623 on moral charges, for his bisexuality. He was imprisoned and sentenced to appear barefoot before
377:
372:
447:
109:
66:
442:
157:
293:
287:
337:
194:), which paints a fantastic scene of thunder, serpents and fire (much like a painting by
175:. This disregard for constraints probably added to his reputation as a non-conformist.
82:
58:
19:
366:
268:
263:
195:
202:
which mixes classical motifs with an elegy about the poet in the midst of a forest.
116:
206:
74:
137:
97:
38:
351:
178:
De Viau's poetic style refused the logical and classicist constraints of
90:
78:
62:
281:. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 786.
183:
149:
141:
105:
70:
50:
31:
347:
319:
262:
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
18:
54:
34:
145:
289:
Rococo
Fiction in France, 1600-1715: Seditious Frivolity
30:(1590 – 25 September 1626) was a French
224:
222:
307:
Dictionnaire des lettres françaises: Le XVIIe siècle.
205:Théophile de Viau was "rediscovered" by the French
186:images of the late Renaissance, such as in his ode
309:Collection: La Pochothèque. Paris: Fayard, 1996.
182:and remained attached to the emotional and the
398:17th-century French dramatists and playwrights
156:(performed in 1621), the tragic love story of
320:Oeuvre poétique complete de Théophile de Viau
8:
314:Anthologie poétique française: XVIIe siècle.
228:
154:Les Amours tragiques de Pyrame et Thisbé
65:, Théophile de Viau participated in the
343:English translations of De Viau's poems
218:
96:Because of his heretical views and his
77:. Théophile came into contact with the
453:French LGBT dramatists and playwrights
7:
418:Bisexual dramatists and playwrights
334:Works by or about Théophile de Viau
463:17th-century French letter writers
14:
383:17th-century French male writers
355:
255:
160:which ends in a double suicide.
403:17th-century French LGBT people
165:Fragment d'une histoire comique
128:before dying in Paris in 1626.
152:. His works include one play,
1:
393:17th-century French novelists
188:Un corbeau devant moi croasse
112:in Paris to be burned alive.
81:ideas of Italian philosopher
316:Paris: Garnier Frères, 1966.
292:, Rowman & Littlefield,
124:under the protection of the
354:(public domain audiobooks)
479:
348:Works by Théophile de Viau
240:Stedman (2012), pp. 59–61.
388:17th-century French poets
286:Stedman, Allison (2012),
169:Fragment of a Comic Novel
433:French bisexual writers
278:Encyclopædia Britannica
87:immortality of the soul
85:, which questioned the
16:French poet (1590–1696)
305:Dandrey, Patrick, ed.
24:
413:Bisexual male writers
209:in the 19th century.
192:A crow before me caws
102:Le Parnasse satyrique
22:
312:Allem, Maurice, ed.
180:François de Malherbe
173:François de Malherbe
428:French bisexual men
126:Duke of Montmorency
67:Huguenot rebellions
158:Pyramus and Thisbe
25:
458:French LGBT poets
28:Théophile de Viau
23:Théophile de Viau
470:
438:French satirists
359:
358:
338:Internet Archive
302:
282:
261:
259:
258:
241:
238:
232:
226:
136:De Viau's wrote
61:and raised as a
478:
477:
473:
472:
471:
469:
468:
467:
408:Baroque writers
363:
362:
356:
330:
325:
300:
285:
271:, ed. (1911). "
267:
256:
254:
250:
245:
244:
239:
235:
227:
220:
215:
134:
47:
17:
12:
11:
5:
476:
474:
466:
465:
460:
455:
450:
445:
440:
435:
430:
425:
423:Bisexual poets
420:
415:
410:
405:
400:
395:
390:
385:
380:
375:
365:
364:
361:
360:
345:
340:
329:
328:External links
326:
324:
323:
317:
310:
303:
299:978-1611484366
298:
283:
269:Chisholm, Hugh
251:
249:
246:
243:
242:
233:
217:
216:
214:
211:
133:
130:
83:Lucilio Vanini
59:Lot-et-Garonne
46:
43:
15:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
475:
464:
461:
459:
456:
454:
451:
449:
446:
444:
441:
439:
436:
434:
431:
429:
426:
424:
421:
419:
416:
414:
411:
409:
406:
404:
401:
399:
396:
394:
391:
389:
386:
384:
381:
379:
376:
374:
371:
370:
368:
353:
349:
346:
344:
341:
339:
335:
332:
331:
327:
321:
318:
315:
311:
308:
304:
301:
295:
291:
290:
284:
280:
279:
274:
270:
265:
264:public domain
253:
252:
247:
237:
234:
230:
229:Chisholm 1911
225:
223:
219:
212:
210:
208:
203:
201:
197:
196:Salvator Rosa
193:
189:
185:
181:
176:
174:
170:
166:
161:
159:
155:
151:
147:
143:
139:
131:
129:
127:
123:
118:
113:
111:
107:
103:
99:
94:
92:
88:
84:
80:
76:
72:
68:
64:
60:
56:
52:
44:
42:
40:
36:
33:
29:
21:
313:
306:
288:
276:
236:
204:
199:
191:
187:
177:
168:
164:
162:
153:
135:
117:Conciergerie
114:
101:
95:
48:
27:
26:
378:1626 deaths
373:1590 births
200:On Solitide
75:royal court
448:Sonneteers
367:Categories
213:References
167:(English:
110:Notre-Dame
93:in 1619.)
443:Huguenots
273:Théophile
207:Romantics
163:He wrote
138:satirical
122:Chantilly
98:libertine
79:epicurean
39:dramatist
352:LibriVox
132:Writings
91:Toulouse
63:Huguenot
49:Born at
336:at the
266::
248:Sources
184:baroque
150:elegies
142:sonnets
140:poems,
106:Jesuits
71:Guyenne
57:in the
53:, near
51:Clairac
32:Baroque
296:
260:
294:ISBN
148:and
146:odes
55:Agen
45:Life
37:and
35:poet
350:at
275:".
69:in
369::
221:^
144:,
41:.
322:.
231:.
190:(
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.