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]


