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Jean-François de La Harpe

Jean-François de La Harpe (20 November 1739 – 11 February 1803) was a French playwright, writer and literary critic.

Jean François de la Harpe
Born
Jean François la Harpe

20 November 1739
Died11 February 1803(1803-02-11) (aged 63)
Occupation(s)Playwright
Literary critic

Life edit

La Harpe was born in Paris of poor parents. His father, who signed himself Delharpe, was a descendant of a noble family originally of Vaud. Left an orphan at the age of nine, La Harpe was taken care of for six months by the Sisters of Charity, and his education was provided for by a scholarship at the Collège d'Harcourt, now known as the Lycée Saint-Louis. When nineteen he was imprisoned for some months on the charge of having written a satire against his protectors at the college. He was imprisoned at For-l'Évêque.[1] La Harpe always denied his guilt, but this culminating misfortune of an early life spent entirely in the position of a dependent possibly had something to do with the bitterness he evinced in later life.[2]

In 1763, his tragedy of Warwick was played before the court. This, his first play, was perhaps the best he ever wrote. The many authors whom he afterwards offended were always able to observe that the critic's own plays did not reach the standard of excellence he set up. Timoleon (1764) and Pharamond (1765) were box-office and critical failures. Mélanie was a better play, but was never represented. The success of Warwick led to a correspondence with Voltaire, who conceived a high opinion of La Harpe, even allowing him to correct his verses.[2]

In 1764, La Harpe married the daughter of a coffee house keeper. This marriage, which proved very unhappy and was dissolved, did not improve his position. They were very poor, and for some time were guests of Voltaire at Ferney. When, after Voltaire's death, La Harpe in his praise of the philosopher ventured on some reasonable, but rather ill-timed, criticism of individual works, he was accused of treachery to one who had been his constant friend.[2]

In 1768, he returned from Ferney to Paris, where he began to write for the Mercure de France. He was a born fighter and had little mercy on the authors whose work he handled. But he was himself violently attacked, and suffered under many epigrams, especially those of Lebrun-Pindare. No more striking proof of the general hostility can be given than his reception in 1776 at the Académie française, which Sainte-Beuve calls his "execution". Marmontel, who received him, used the occasion to eulogize La Harpe's predecessor, Charles-Pierre Colardeau, especially for his pacific, modest and indulgent disposition. The speech was punctuated by the applause of the audience, who chose to regard it as a series of sarcasms on the new member.[2]

Eventually La Harpe was compelled to resign from the Mercure, which he had edited from 1770. On the stage he produced Les Barmecides (1778), Philoctete, Jeanne de Naples (1781), Les Brames (1783), Coriolan (1784), Virginie (1786). In 1786, he began delivering a course of literature at the newly established Lycée. In these lectures, published as the Cours de littérature ancienne et moderne, La Harpe is considered to have been at his best, finding a standpoint more or less independent of contemporary polemics. He is said to have been inexact in dealing with the ancients and that he had only a superficial knowledge of the Middle Ages, but he was excellent in his analysis of seventeenth-century writers. Sainte-Beuve found La Harpe to be the best critic of the French school of tragedy.[2]

La Harpe was a disciple of the "philosophes", supporting their extreme party through the excesses of 1792 and 1793. In 1793, he returned to edit the Mercure de France, which blindly adhered to the revolutionary leaders. Nonetheless, in April 1794, La Harpe was seized as a "suspect". In prison he underwent a spiritual crisis which he described in convincing language, emerging an ardent Catholic and a political reactionary. When he resumed his chair at the Lycée, he attacked his former friends in politics and literature. He was sufficiently imprudent to begin the publication of his 1774-1791 Correspondance littéraire in 1801 with the grand-duke (and later emperor) Paul of Russia. In these letters he surpassed the brutalities of the Mercure.[2]

He contracted a second marriage, which was dissolved after a few weeks by his wife. He died on 11 February 1803 in Paris, leaving in his will an incongruous exhortation to his fellow countrymen to maintain peace and concord. Among his posthumous works was a Prophétie de Cazotte, which Sainte-Beuve pronounced his best work. It is a somber description of a dinner-party of notables long before the Revolution, in which Jacques Cazotte is made to prophesy the frightful fates awaiting the various individuals of the company.[2]

Among his works not already mentioned are: Commentaire sur Racine (1795–1796), published in 1807; Commentaire sur le théâtre de Voltaire of earlier date (published posthumously in 1814); and an epic poem La Religion (1814). His Cours de littérature has been often reprinted; a notice by Pierre Daunou prefixes the 1825–1826 edition.[2]

Works edit

La Harpe wrote numerous plays, of which almost all are completely forgotten. Only Warwick and Philoctetes, imitated from Sophocles, had some success.

A particular mention must be made of Mélanie, ou les Vœux forcés, that the author had printed in 1770 but which was not played before 7 December 1791 at the Théâtre français. It remains, according to Jacques Truchet, "the most curious of his plays and the most representative of the spirit of the times." The topic - forced wishes - could suit anticlericalism that La Harpe showed when he composed this piece but much less censorship of the time, which is why it was played after the French Revolution. Although presented as a play in three acts and verse, Melanie approached the drama that would experience the fortune that we know at the end of the eighteenth.

This comparison is all the more pungent than La Harpe had always professed the greatest contempt for drama, which he violently attacked in his comedy Molière à la nouvelle salle, written in defense of the Comédie-Française against competitor theaters.

Moreover, his Correspondance littéraire addressed to Grand duke Paul I of Russia is full of theatrical anecdotes about the actors and plays of his time.

  • 1763: Le Comte de Warwick (Théâtre-Français, 7 November 1763)
  • 1764: Timoléon (Théâtre-Français, 1 August)
  • 1765: Pharamond
  • 1770: Mélanie, ou les Vœux forcés
  • 1774: Olinde et Sophronie
  • 1775: Menzicoff, ou les Exilés (Fontainebleau, November)
  • 1778: Les Barmécides (Théâtre-Français, 11 July. it was performed eleven times only[3] Voltaire reportedly told the author: "My friend, it is not worth anything, never will tragedy happen that way".[4]
  • 1779: Les Muses rivales, ou l’Apothéose de Voltaire (comédie en 1 acte et en vers libres, créée au Théâtre-Français 1 February 1779)
  • 1781: Jeanne de Naples, 12 December)
  • 1782: Molière à la nouvelle salle, ou les Audiences de Thalie, 12 April, comedy in 1 act and in verse
  • 1783: Philoctète, 16 June
  • 1784: Coriolan, 2 March
  • 1786: Virginie, 11 July

Critics edit

La Harpe's main work is his Lycée ou Cours de littérature (1799), which brings in 18 volumes of lessons he had given for twelve years in high school. It is a monument of literary criticism. Even if some parts are low - that on ancient philosophers in particular - everything that is said about the drama of Corneille to Voltaire, is beautifully thought out and reasoned, even if the thinking and reasoning is that of a purist and often picky. The passages on contemporary authors, in which La Harpe attacks vigorously the philosophical party, are often very funny.

  • 1795–1796: Commentaire sur Racine, published in 1807
  • 1796: De la Guerre déclarée par nos nouveaux tyrans à la raison, à la morale, aux lettres et aux arts
  • 1797: Réfutation du livre de l’Esprit (d’Helvétius)
  • 1797: Du Fanatisme dans la langue révolutionnaire, ou de la Persécution suscitée par les barbares du XVIIIe contre la religion chrétienne et ses ministres
  • 1798–1804: Lycée, ou, Cours de littérature ancienne et moderne. Tome premier; Tome second; Tome troisième; Tome quatrième; Tome cinquieme; Tome sixieme; Tome septième; Tome neuvième; Tome dixième; Tome onzieme; `Tome douzième; Tome treizième; Tome quatorzième; Tome quinzième; Tome seizième, 18 vol.

Varia edit

  • L’Alétophile ou l’ami de la Vérité (1758)
  • Héroïdes nouvelles, précédées d’un essai sur l’héroïde en général (1759)
  • Le Philosophe des Alpes. Ode qui a concouru pour le Prix de l'Académie Françoise en 1762 (1762)
  • La Délivrance de Salerne et la fondation du royaume des Deux-Siciles (1765)
  • Mélanges littéraires ou épîtres et pièces philosophiques (1765)
  • Le Poëte (epistle, crowned by the Académie française)
  • Éloge de Charles V (crowned by the Académie française)
  • Des Malheurs de la guerre et des avantages de la paix (1767) (speech, crowned by the Académie française)
  • Eloge de Henri IV, Roi de France (1769)
  • Éloge de François de Salignac de La Motte-Fénelon, archevèque-duc de Cambray, précepteur des enfans de France (1771) (crowned by the Académie française)
  • Éloge de Racine (1772)
  • La navigation (1773)
  • Éloge de La Fontaine (1774)
  • Eloge de Nicolas de Catinat, Maréchal de France (1775)
  • Conseils à un jeune poète (1775)
  • Éloge de Voltaire (1780)
  • Tangu et Filine, poème érotique (1780)
  • Abrégé de l’histoire générale des voyages, 32 parts (1780) (see: https://archive.org/search?query=%27%27Abr%C3%A9g%C3%A9+de+l%E2%80%99histoire+g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rale+des+voyages)
  • Réponse d’un solitaire de La Trappe à la lettre de l’abbé de Rancé (1780)
  • Le Salut public, ou la Vérité dite à la Convention (1794)
  • Acte de garantie pour la liberté individuelle, la sûreté du domicile, et la liberté de la presse (1794)
  • Oui ou Non (1795)
  • La liberté de la Presse, défendue par La Harpe, contre Chénier (1795)
  • De l'Etat des Lettres en Europe, depuis la fin du siècle qui a suivi celui d'Auguste, jusqu'au règne de Louis XIV (1797)
  • Le Pseautier en français, traduction nouvelle, avec des notes... précédée d’un discours sur l’esprit des Livres saints et le style des prophètes (1797)
  • Correspondance littéraire adressée a son altesse impériale mgr. le grand-duc, aujoud'hui empereur de Russie, et a m. le comte André Schowalow, chambellan de l'impératrice Catherine II. Tome premier; Tome second; Tome troisième; Tome quatrième, (1801-1807)
  • Le Camaldule (1802)
  • Le Triomphe de la religion, ou le Roi martyr (1814)
  • Commentaire sur le théâtre de Voltaire (1814)
  • Prédiction de Cazotte, faite en 1788 (1817)
  • Les Ruines, ou Voyage en France

References edit

  1. ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Jean-François La Harpe" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "La Harpe, Jean François de". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 79–80. Citations:
    • Sainte-Beuve, Causeries du lundi, vol. v
  3. ^ Louis Mayeul Chaudon, Antoine François Delandine (1810). "Harpe (Jean François de la)". Dictionnaire universel historique critique et bibliographique. Vol. VIII. Paris: Mame. pp. 254–255.
  4. ^ Denis Diderot (1830). "April 1774". Correspondance littéraire, philosophique et critique de Grimm et de Diderot. Vol. VIII. p. 316, note (1).

Bibliography edit

  • Émile Faguet, Histoire de la poésie française, volume IX, Paris, 1935
  • Gabriel Peignot, Recherches historiques, bibliographiques et littéraires sur La Harpe, 1820
  • Christopher Todd, Voltaire’s disciple : Jean-François de La Harpe, London, 1972
  • Jacques Truchet, Théâtre du XVIIIe, Paris, Gallimard, bibl. de la Pléiade, 1974, vol. II, (p. 1488—1492)
  • Chateaubriand, Mémoires d'Outre-Tombe, Tome 2, livre 14.
  • Gabrielli, Domenico (2002), Dictionnaire historique du cimetière du Père-Lachaise XVIIIe XIXe (in French), Paris: éd. de l'Amateur, p. 334, ISBN 2859173463, OCLC 49647223

External links edit

jean, françois, harpe, november, 1739, february, 1803, french, playwright, writer, literary, critic, jean, françois, harpebornjean, françois, harpe20, november, 1739paris, kingdom, francedied11, february, 1803, 1803, aged, paris, franceoccupation, playwrightli. Jean Francois de La Harpe 20 November 1739 11 February 1803 was a French playwright writer and literary critic Jean Francois de la HarpeBornJean Francois la Harpe20 November 1739Paris Kingdom of FranceDied11 February 1803 1803 02 11 aged 63 Paris FranceOccupation s PlaywrightLiterary critic Contents 1 Life 1 1 Works 1 2 Critics 1 3 Varia 2 References 3 Bibliography 4 External linksLife editLa Harpe was born in Paris of poor parents His father who signed himself Delharpe was a descendant of a noble family originally of Vaud Left an orphan at the age of nine La Harpe was taken care of for six months by the Sisters of Charity and his education was provided for by a scholarship at the College d Harcourt now known as the Lycee Saint Louis When nineteen he was imprisoned for some months on the charge of having written a satire against his protectors at the college He was imprisoned at For l Eveque 1 La Harpe always denied his guilt but this culminating misfortune of an early life spent entirely in the position of a dependent possibly had something to do with the bitterness he evinced in later life 2 In 1763 his tragedy of Warwick was played before the court This his first play was perhaps the best he ever wrote The many authors whom he afterwards offended were always able to observe that the critic s own plays did not reach the standard of excellence he set up Timoleon 1764 and Pharamond 1765 were box office and critical failures Melanie was a better play but was never represented The success of Warwick led to a correspondence with Voltaire who conceived a high opinion of La Harpe even allowing him to correct his verses 2 In 1764 La Harpe married the daughter of a coffee house keeper This marriage which proved very unhappy and was dissolved did not improve his position They were very poor and for some time were guests of Voltaire at Ferney When after Voltaire s death La Harpe in his praise of the philosopher ventured on some reasonable but rather ill timed criticism of individual works he was accused of treachery to one who had been his constant friend 2 In 1768 he returned from Ferney to Paris where he began to write for the Mercure de France He was a born fighter and had little mercy on the authors whose work he handled But he was himself violently attacked and suffered under many epigrams especially those of Lebrun Pindare No more striking proof of the general hostility can be given than his reception in 1776 at the Academie francaise which Sainte Beuve calls his execution Marmontel who received him used the occasion to eulogize La Harpe s predecessor Charles Pierre Colardeau especially for his pacific modest and indulgent disposition The speech was punctuated by the applause of the audience who chose to regard it as a series of sarcasms on the new member 2 Eventually La Harpe was compelled to resign from the Mercure which he had edited from 1770 On the stage he produced Les Barmecides 1778 Philoctete Jeanne de Naples 1781 Les Brames 1783 Coriolan 1784 Virginie 1786 In 1786 he began delivering a course of literature at the newly established Lycee In these lectures published as the Cours de litterature ancienne et moderne La Harpe is considered to have been at his best finding a standpoint more or less independent of contemporary polemics He is said to have been inexact in dealing with the ancients and that he had only a superficial knowledge of the Middle Ages but he was excellent in his analysis of seventeenth century writers Sainte Beuve found La Harpe to be the best critic of the French school of tragedy 2 La Harpe was a disciple of the philosophes supporting their extreme party through the excesses of 1792 and 1793 In 1793 he returned to edit the Mercure de France which blindly adhered to the revolutionary leaders Nonetheless in April 1794 La Harpe was seized as a suspect In prison he underwent a spiritual crisis which he described in convincing language emerging an ardent Catholic and a political reactionary When he resumed his chair at the Lycee he attacked his former friends in politics and literature He was sufficiently imprudent to begin the publication of his 1774 1791 Correspondance litteraire in 1801 with the grand duke and later emperor Paul of Russia In these letters he surpassed the brutalities of the Mercure 2 He contracted a second marriage which was dissolved after a few weeks by his wife He died on 11 February 1803 in Paris leaving in his will an incongruous exhortation to his fellow countrymen to maintain peace and concord Among his posthumous works was a Prophetie de Cazotte which Sainte Beuve pronounced his best work It is a somber description of a dinner party of notables long before the Revolution in which Jacques Cazotte is made to prophesy the frightful fates awaiting the various individuals of the company 2 Among his works not already mentioned are Commentaire sur Racine 1795 1796 published in 1807 Commentaire sur le theatre de Voltaire of earlier date published posthumously in 1814 and an epic poem La Religion 1814 His Cours de litterature has been often reprinted a notice by Pierre Daunou prefixes the 1825 1826 edition 2 Works edit La Harpe wrote numerous plays of which almost all are completely forgotten Only Warwick and Philoctetes imitated from Sophocles had some success A particular mention must be made of Melanie ou les Vœux forces that the author had printed in 1770 but which was not played before 7 December 1791 at the Theatre francais It remains according to Jacques Truchet the most curious of his plays and the most representative of the spirit of the times The topic forced wishes could suit anticlericalism that La Harpe showed when he composed this piece but much less censorship of the time which is why it was played after the French Revolution Although presented as a play in three acts and verse Melanie approached the drama that would experience the fortune that we know at the end of the eighteenth This comparison is all the more pungent than La Harpe had always professed the greatest contempt for drama which he violently attacked in his comedy Moliere a la nouvelle salle written in defense of the Comedie Francaise against competitor theaters Moreover his Correspondance litteraire addressed to Grand duke Paul I of Russia is full of theatrical anecdotes about the actors and plays of his time 1763 Le Comte de Warwick Theatre Francais 7 November 1763 1764 Timoleon Theatre Francais 1 August 1765 Pharamond 1770 Melanie ou les Vœux forces 1774 Olinde et Sophronie 1775 Menzicoff ou les Exiles Fontainebleau November 1778 Les Barmecides Theatre Francais 11 July it was performed eleven times only 3 Voltaire reportedly told the author My friend it is not worth anything never will tragedy happen that way 4 1779 Les Muses rivales ou l Apotheose de Voltaire comedie en 1 acte et en vers libres creee au Theatre Francais 1 February 1779 1781 Jeanne de Naples 12 December 1782 Moliere a la nouvelle salle ou les Audiences de Thalie 12 April comedy in 1 act and in verse 1783 Philoctete 16 June 1784 Coriolan 2 March 1786 Virginie 11 July Critics edit La Harpe s main work is his Lycee ou Cours de litterature 1799 which brings in 18 volumes of lessons he had given for twelve years in high school It is a monument of literary criticism Even if some parts are low that on ancient philosophers in particular everything that is said about the drama of Corneille to Voltaire is beautifully thought out and reasoned even if the thinking and reasoning is that of a purist and often picky The passages on contemporary authors in which La Harpe attacks vigorously the philosophical party are often very funny 1795 1796 Commentaire sur Racine published in 1807 1796 De la Guerre declaree par nos nouveaux tyrans a la raison a la morale aux lettres et aux arts 1797 Refutation du livre de l Esprit d Helvetius 1797 Du Fanatisme dans la langue revolutionnaire ou de la Persecution suscitee par les barbares du XVIIIe contre la religion chretienne et ses ministres 1798 1804 Lycee ou Cours de litterature ancienne et moderne Tome premier Tome second Tome troisieme Tome quatrieme Tome cinquieme Tome sixieme Tome septieme Tome neuvieme Tome dixieme Tome onzieme Tome douzieme Tome treizieme Tome quatorzieme Tome quinzieme Tome seizieme 18 vol Varia edit L Aletophile ou l ami de la Verite 1758 Heroides nouvelles precedees d un essai sur l heroide en general 1759 Le Philosophe des Alpes Ode qui a concouru pour le Prix de l Academie Francoise en 1762 1762 La Delivrance de Salerne et la fondation du royaume des Deux Siciles 1765 Melanges litteraires ou epitres et pieces philosophiques 1765 Le Poete epistle crowned by the Academie francaise Eloge de Charles V crowned by the Academie francaise Des Malheurs de la guerre et des avantages de la paix 1767 speech crowned by the Academie francaise Eloge de Henri IV Roi de France 1769 Eloge de Francois de Salignac de La Motte Fenelon archeveque duc de Cambray precepteur des enfans de France 1771 crowned by the Academie francaise Eloge de Racine 1772 La navigation 1773 Eloge de La Fontaine 1774 Eloge de Nicolas de Catinat Marechal de France 1775 Conseils a un jeune poete 1775 Eloge de Voltaire 1780 Tangu et Filine poeme erotique 1780 Abrege de l histoire generale des voyages 32 parts 1780 see https archive org search query 27 27Abr C3 A9g C3 A9 de l E2 80 99histoire g C3 A9n C3 A9rale des voyages Reponse d un solitaire de La Trappe a la lettre de l abbe de Rance 1780 Le Salut public ou la Verite dite a la Convention 1794 Acte de garantie pour la liberte individuelle la surete du domicile et la liberte de la presse 1794 Oui ou Non 1795 La liberte de la Presse defendue par La Harpe contre Chenier 1795 De l Etat des Lettres en Europe depuis la fin du siecle qui a suivi celui d Auguste jusqu au regne de Louis XIV 1797 Le Pseautier en francais traduction nouvelle avec des notes precedee d un discours sur l esprit des Livres saints et le style des prophetes 1797 Correspondance litteraire adressee a son altesse imperiale mgr le grand duc aujoud hui empereur de Russie et a m le comte Andre Schowalow chambellan de l imperatrice Catherine II Tome premier Tome second Tome troisieme Tome quatrieme 1801 1807 Le Camaldule 1802 Le Triomphe de la religion ou le Roi martyr 1814 Commentaire sur le theatre de Voltaire 1814 Prediction de Cazotte faite en 1788 1817 Les Ruines ou Voyage en FranceReferences edit Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Jean Francois La Harpe Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company a b c d e f g h nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 La Harpe Jean Francois de Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 79 80 Citations Sainte Beuve Causeries du lundi vol v Louis Mayeul Chaudon Antoine Francois Delandine 1810 Harpe Jean Francois de la Dictionnaire universel historique critique et bibliographique Vol VIII Paris Mame pp 254 255 Denis Diderot 1830 April 1774 Correspondance litteraire philosophique et critique de Grimm et de Diderot Vol VIII p 316 note 1 Bibliography editEmile Faguet Histoire de la poesie francaise volume IX Paris 1935 Gabriel Peignot Recherches historiques bibliographiques et litteraires sur La Harpe 1820 Christopher Todd Voltaire s disciple Jean Francois de La Harpe London 1972 Jacques Truchet Theatre du XVIIIe Paris Gallimard bibl de la Pleiade 1974 vol II p 1488 1492 Chateaubriand Memoires d Outre Tombe Tome 2 livre 14 Gabrielli Domenico 2002 Dictionnaire historique du cimetiere du Pere Lachaise XVIIIe XIXe in French Paris ed de l Amateur p 334 ISBN 2859173463 OCLC 49647223External links editWorks by Jean Francois de La Harpe at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Jean Francois de La Harpe at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jean Francois de La Harpe amp oldid 1219109654, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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