Michel Le Clerc

Michel Le Clerc (1622, Albi – 8 December 1691) was a French lawyer and dramatist.

Biography

After studying under the Jesuits, he established himself in Paris, where he became a lawyer to the parliament of Paris. Like his co-student Claude Boyer, he wrote tragedies and "pièces des circonstance"; he produced his Virginie romaine in 1645, the same year as Boyer produced his Porcie romaine. He was elected to the Académie française in 1662. His Iphigénie (written with Jacques de Coras) was put on in 1674, the same year as the Iphigénie by Jean Racine.

Le Clerc is best known for his translation of Jerusalem Delivered by Torquato Tasso, but his work was attacked by Nicolas Boileau and suffered from a generally unfavourable reputation. Jean Chapelain wrote of him "He wrote reasonably in French prose and not without wit. In prose, he is well above the mediocre, whether in original creation, or in translation".

Works

  • La Virginie romaine, tragédie (1645)
  • La Hiérusalem délivrée, poëme héroïque traduit en vers français (1667)
  • Iphigénie en Aulide, tragédie (1674)
  • Orontée, tragédie en musique ornée d'entrées de ballet, de machines et de changemens de théâtre représentée dans le chasteau de Chantilly devant Monseigneur le Dauphin par l'Académie royale de musique (1688)
gollark: Also a few random open source projects I guess.
gollark: It's a shame, too. We really need more diversity in browser engines, not less.
gollark: It is *now*.
gollark: Optane can't be manufactured stacked or something, so I think it's going to stay forever as a faster and more robust but much more expensive alternative to NAND flash.
gollark: Seems pretty evil, I guess.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.