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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: DRO-ECG |
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DUMAS, ALEXANDRE [ALEXANDRE DAVY DE LA PAILLE- TERIE] (1802-1870), French novelist and dramatist, was born at Villers-Cotterets (Aisne) on the 24th of July 1802. His father, the French general, Thomas Alexandre Dumas (17621806)also known as Alexandre Davy de la Pailleteriewas born in Saint Domingo, the natural son of Antoine Alexandre Davy, marquis de la Pailleterie, by a negress, Marie Cessette Dumas, who died in 1772. In 178o he accompanied the marquis to France, and there the father made a mesalliance which drove the son into enlisting in a dragoon regiment. Thomas Alexandre Dumas was still a private at the outbreak of the revolution, but he rose rapidly and became general of division in 1793. He was generalin- chief
The novelist, who was the offspring of this union, was not four years old when General Dumas died, leaving his family with no further resource than 30 acres of land. Mme Dumas tried to obtain help from Napoleon, but in vain, and lived with her parents in narrow circumstances. Alexandre received the rudiments of education from a priest, and entered the office of a local solicitor. His chief
Soon after his arrival in Paris Dumas had entered on a liaison with a dressmaker, Marie Catherine Labay, and their son, the famous Alexandre Dumas fils (see below), was born in 1824. Dumas acknowledged his son in 1831, and obtained the custody of him after a lawsuit with the mother. The first piece by Dumas and Leuven to see the footlights was La Chasse et l'amour (Ambigu-Comique, 22nd of Sept. 1825), and in this they had help from other writers. Dumas had a share in another vaudeville, La Noce et l'enterrement (Porte Saint-Martin, 21st of Nov. 1826). It was under the influence of the Shakespeare plays produced in Paris by Charles Kemble, Harriet Smithson (afterwards Mme Berlioz) and an English company that the romantic drama of Christine was written. The subject was. suggested by a bas-relief of the murder of Monaldeschi exhibited at the Salon of 1827. The piece was accepted by Baron Taylor and the members of the Comedie Fran9aise with the stipulation that it should be subject to revision by another dramatist because of its innovating tendencies. But the production of the piece was deferred. Meanwhile Dumas had met with the story of the ill-fated Saint-Megrin and the duchess of Guise in Anquetil's history, and had written, in prose, Henri III. et sa tour, which was immediately accepted by the Comedie Fran9aise and produced on the 11th of February 1829. It was the first great triumph of the romantic drama. The brilliant stagecraft of the piece and its admirable historical setting delighted an audience accustomed to the decadent classical tragedy, and brought him the friendship of Hugo' and Vigny. His literary efforts had met with marked disapproval from his official superiors, and he had been compelled to resign his clerk-ship before the production of Henri III. The duke of Orleans had, however, been present at the performance, and appointed him assistant-librarian at the Palais Royal. Christine was now recast as a romantic trilogy in verse in five acts with a prologue and epilogue, with the sub-title of Stockholm, Fontainebleau, Rome, and was successfully produced by Harel at the Odeon in March 1830. The revolution of 183o temporarily diverted Dumas from letters. The account of his exploits should be read in his Memoiies, where, though the incidents are true in the main, they lose nothing in the telling. During the fighting in Paris he attracted the attention of La Fayette, who sent him to Soissons to secure powder. With the help of some inhabitants he compelled the governor to hand over the magazine, and on his return to Paris was sent by La Fayette on a mission to raise a national guard in La Vendee. The advice he gave to Louis-Philippe on this subject was ill-received, and after giving offence by further indiscretions he finally alienated himself from the Orleans government by being implicated in the disturbances which attended the funeral of General Lamarque in June 1832, and he received a hint that his absence from France was desirable. A tour in Switzerland undertaken on this account furnished material for the first of a long series of amusing books of travel. Dumas remained, however, on friendly and even affectionate terms with the young duke of Orleans until his death in 1842. Meanwhile he had produced Napoleon Bonaparte (Odeon, loth of Jan. 1831), his unwillingness to make a hero of the man who had slighted his father having been overcome by Harel, who put him under lock and key until the piece was finished. His next play, Antony, had a real importance in the history of the romantic theatre. It was put in rehearsal by Mlle Mars, but so unsatisfactorily that Dumas transferred it to Bocage and Mme Dorval, who played it magnificently at the Porte Saint-Martin theatre on the 3rd of May 1831. The Byronic hero Antony was .a portrait of himself in his relations with Mme Melanie Waldor, the wife of an officer, and daughter of the journalist M. G. T. de Villenave, except of course in the extravagantly melodramatic denouement, when Antony, to save his mistress's honour, kills her and ex-claims, " Elie me resistait, je 1'ai assassinee." He produced more than twenty more plays alone or in collaboration before 1845, exclusive of dramatizations from his novels. Richard Darlington (Porte Saint-Martin, loth of Dec. 1831), the first idea of which was drawn
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' His friendship with Victor Hugo was interrupted in 18331834 by the articles contributed to the Journal des debats by a friend and protege of the poet, Granier de Cassagnac, who brought against Dumas charges of wholesale plagiarism from other dramatists. A lighter drama, Mademoiselle de Belle-Isle (Theatre Frangais, 2nd of April 1839), still remains in the repertory. In 1840 Dumas married Ida Ferrier, an actress whom he had imposed on the theatres that took his pieces. The amiable relations which had subsisted between them for eight years were disturbed by the marriage, which is said to have been under, taken in consequence of a strong hint from the duke of Orleans, and Mme Dumas lived in Italy separated from her husband. As a novelist Dumas began by writing short stories, but his happy collaboration with Auguste Maquet,2 which began in 1839, led to the admirable series of historical novels in which he proposed to reconstruct the whole course of French history. In 1844 he produced, with Maquet's help, that most famous of " cloak and sword " romances, Les Trois Mousquetaires (8 vols.), the material for which was discovered in the Memoiies de M. d'Artagnan (Cologne, 17011702) of Courtils de Sandras. The adventures of d'Artagnan and the three musketeers, the gigantic Porthos, the clever Aramis, and the melancholy Athos, who unite to defend the honour of Anne of Austria against Richelieu and the machinations of " Milady," are brought down to the murder of Buckingham in 1629. Their admirers were gratified by two sequels, Vingt ans apre,s (10 vols., 1845) and Dix ans plus tard, ou le vicomte de Bragelonne (26 pts., 18481850), which opens in 1660, showing us a mature d'Artagnan, a respectable captain of musketeers, and contains the magnificent account of the heroic death of Porthos. The three musketeers are as famous in England as in France. Thackeray could read about Athos from sunrise to sunset with the utmost contentment of mind, and R. L. Stevenson and Andrew Lang have paid tribute to the band in Memories and Portraits and Letters to Dead Authors. Before 1844 was out Dumas had completed a second great romance in 12 volumes, Le Comte de Monte-Cristo, in which he had help from Fiorentino as well as from Maquet. The idea of the intrigue was suggested by Peuchet's Police devoilee, and the stress laid on the earlier incidents, Dantes, Danglars and the Chateau d'If, is said to have been an afterthought. Almost as famous as these two romances is the set of Valois novels of which Henri IV. is the central figure, beginning with La Reine Margot (6 vols., 1845), which contains the history of the struggle between Catherine of Medicis and Henry of Navarre; the history of the reign of Henry III. is told in La Dame de Monsoreau (8 vols., 1846), generally known in English as Chicot the Jester, from its principal character; and in Les Quarante-cinq (10 vols., 18471848), in which Diane de Monsoreau avenges herself on the duke of Anjou for the death of her former lover, Bussy d'Amboise. Much has been written about the exact share which Dumas had in the novels which bear his name. The Dumas-Maquet series is undoubtedly the best, but Maquet alone never accomplished anything to approach them in value. The MSS. of the novels still exist in Dumas's handwriting, and the best of them bear the unmistakable stamp of his unrivalled skill as a narrator. The chief key to his enormous output is to be found in his untiring industry and amazing fertility of invention, not in the system of wholesale collaboration which was exposed with much exaggeration by Querard in his Supercheries litteraires and by " Eugene
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The latter part of Dumas's life is a record of excessive toil to meet prodigal expenditure and accumulated debts. His disasters began with the building of a house in the Renaissance style, with a Gothic pavilion and an " English " park, at Saint Germain- ' The details of this collaboration were brought to light in a suit brought against Dumas by Maquet with regard to his share in the profits. See the Gazette des tribunaux (January 21, 22, 28, and February 4, 1858). en-Laye. This place, called Monte-Cristo, was governed by a crowd of hangers-on of both sexes, who absorbed Dumas's large earnings and left him penniless. Dumas also founded the Theatre Historique chiefly for the performance of his own works. The enterprise was under the patronage of the duc deMontpensier, and was under the management of Hippolyte Hostein, who had been the secretary of the Comedie Francaise. The theatre was opened in February 1847 with a dramatic version of La Reine Margot. Meanwhile Dumas had been the guest of the duc de Montpensier at Madrid, and made a quasi-official tour to Algeria and Tunis in a government vessel, which caused much comment in the press. Dumas had never changed his republican opinions. He greeted the revolution of 1848 with delight, and was even a candidate for electoral honours in the department of the Yonne
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Dumas was never an actual candidate for academic honours, but he had more than once taken steps to investigate his chances of success. A statue of him was erected on the Place Malesherbes, Paris, in 1883, and the figure of d'Artagnan finds a place on the pedestal. Auguste Maquet was'Dumas's chief collaborator. Others were Paul Lacroix (the bibliophile "P. L. Jacob"), Paul Bocage, J. P. Mallefille and P. A. Fiorentino. The novels of Dumas may be conveniently arranged in a historical sequence. The Valois novels and the musqueteers series brought French history down to 1672. Contributions to later history are:La Dame de volupte (2 vols., 1864), being the memoirs of Mme de Luynes, and its sequel Les Deux Reines (2, vols., 1864); La Tulipe noire (3 vols., 185o), giving the history of the brothers de Witt; Le Chevalier d'Harmental (4 vols., 1853), and Une Fille du regent (4 vols., 1845), the story of two plots against the regent, the duke of Orleans; two books on Mme du Deffand, Memoires d'une aveugle (8 vols., 1856-1857) and Les Confessions de la marquise (8 vols., 1857), both of doubtful authorship; Olympe de Cleves (9 vols., 1852), the story of an actress and a young Jesuit novice in the reign of Louis XV., one of his most popular novels; five books on the beginning of the Revolution down to the execution of Marie Antoinette: the Memoires d'un medecin, including Joseph Balsamo (19 pts., 1846-1848), in which J. J. Rousseau, Mme du Barry and the dauphiness Marie Antoinette figure, with its sequels; Le Collier de la reine (9 vols.,1849-1850),inwhich Balsamo appears under the alias of Cagliostro; Ange Pitou (8 vols., 1852), known in English as " The Taking of the Bastille "; La Comtesse de Charny (1q vols., 1853-1855), describing the attempts to savethe monarchy and the flight to Varennes; and Le Chevalier de maison rouge (6 vols., 1846), which opens in 1793 with the hero's attempt to save the queen. Among the numerous novels dealing with the later revolutionary period are:Les Blancs et les bleus (3 vols., 1868) and Les Compagnons de Jehu (7 vols., 1857). Les Louves de Machecoul (lo vols., 1859) deals with the rising in 1832 in La Vendee. Other famous 'stories are:Les Freres corses (2 vols., 1845); La Femme an collier de velours (2 vols., 1851); Les Mohicans de Paris (19 VOLS., 1854-1855), detective stories with which may be classed the series of Crimes celebres (8 vols., 1839-1841), which are, however, of doubtful authorship; La San Felice (9 vols., 1864-1865), in which Lady Hamilton played a prominent part, with its sequels Emma Lyonna and Souvenirs d'une favorite. Of his numerous historical works other than fiction the most important is his Louis XI V et son siecle (4 vols., 1845). Mes Memoires (20 vols., 1852-1854; Eng. trans. of selections by A. F. Davidson, 2 vols., 1891) is an account of his father and of his own life down to 1832. There are collective editions of his plays (6 vols., 1834-1836, and 15 vols., 1863-1874), but of the 91 pieces for which he was wholly or partially responsible, 24 do not appear in these collections. The complete works of Dumas were issued by Michel Levy freres in 277 volumes (1860-1884). The more important novels have been frequently translated into English. There is a long list
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