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Guillaume Amfrye de Chaulieu

 
French Literature Companion: Guillaume Amfrye Chaulieu

Chaulieu, Guillaume Amfrye, abbé de (1639-1720). French poet. Although an ecclesiastic, he spent his time in worldly, free-thinking circles, particularly at the Temple and Sceaux [see Maine, duchesse du]. His verse, like that of his bosom friend La Fare, is presented as that of a worldly amateur; it is harmonious and subtle, and includes many poems addressed to friends and patrons, verse epistles, and letters mixing prose and verse. He named Chapelle as his poetic master, but his ‘muse libertine’ also harks back to the badinage of Marot and his successors. His epicurean enjoyment of the privileged pleasures of love, the table, and the countryside is tempered by a melancholy resignation to decline and death.

[Peter France]

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Guillaume Amfrye de Chaulieu (1639 - June 27, 1720), French poet and wit, was born at Fontenay, Normandy.

His father, maître des comptes of Rouen, sent him to study at the Collège de Navarre. Guillaume early showed the wit that was to distinguish him, and gained the favor of the duke of Vendôme, who procured for him the abbey of Aumale and other benefices. Louis Joseph, duc de Vendôme, and his brother Philippe, grand prior of the Knights of Malta in France, at that time had a joint establishment at the Temple, where they gathered round them a very gay and reckless circle.

Chaulieu became the constant companion and adviser of the two princes. He made an expedition to Poland in the suite of the marquis de Béthune, hoping to make a career for himself in the court of John Sobieski; he saw one of the Polish king's campaigns in Ukraine, but returned to Paris without securing any advancement. Saint-Simon says that the abbé helped his patron the grand prior to rob the duke of Vendôme, and that the king sent orders that the princes should take the management of their affairs from him. This account has been questioned by Sainte-Beuve, who regards Saint-Simon as a prejudiced witness.

In his later years Chaulieu spent much time at the little court of the duchesse du Maine at Sceaux. There he became the trusted and devoted friend of Mlle Delaunay, with whom he carried on an interesting correspondence. Among his poems the best known are Fontenay and La Retraite.

His works were edited with those of his friend the marquis de la Fare in 1714, 1750 and 1774. See also CA Sainte-Beuve, Causeries du lundi, vol. i.; and Lettres inédites (1850), with a notice by Raymond, marquis de Bérenger.


This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.


 
 

 

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French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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