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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: GRA-GUI |
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GRINGOIRE (or GRINGORE), PIERRE (c. 148o-1539) , French poet and dramatist, was born about the year 1480, probably at Caen. In his first work
diligence
marriage
of the kind existed all over France. In Paris there were the 1 Enfans sans Souci, the Basochiens, the Confrerie de la Passion and the Souverain Empire de Galilee; at Dijon there were the Mere Folle and her family; in Flanders the Societe des Arbaletriers played comedies; at Rouen the Cornards or Conards yielded to none in vigour and fearlessness of satire. On Shrove Tuesday 1512 Gringoire, who was the accredited defender of the policy of Louis XII., and had already written many political poems, represented the Jeu du Prince des Sots et Mere Sotte. It was at the moment when the French dispute with Julius II. was at its height. Mere Sotte was disguised as the Church, and disputed the question of the temporal power with the prince. The political meaning was even more thinly veiled in the second part of the entertainment, a morality named L'Homme obstine, the principal personage representing the pope. The performance concluded with a farce. Gringoire adopted for his device on the frontispiece of this trilogy, Tout par Raison, Raison par Tout, Par tout Raison. He has been called the Aristophane des Halles. In one respect at least he resembles Aristophanes. He is serious in his merriment; there is purpose behind his extravagances. The Church was further attacked in a poem printed about 1510, La Chasse dv cerf des cerfs (serf des serfs, i.e. servus servorum), under which title that of the pope is thinly veiled. About 1514 he wrote his mystery of the Vie de Monseigneur Saint-Louis par personnages in nine books for the confrerie of the masons and carpenters. He became in 1518 herald at the court of Lorraine, with the title of Vaudemont, and married Catherine Roger, a lady of gentle birth
His works were edited by C. d'Hericault and A. de Montaiglon for the Bibliotheque elzevirienne in 1858. This edition was incomplete, and was supplemented by a second volume in 1877 by Montaiglon and M. James de Rothschild. These volumes include the works already mentioned, except Le Chasteau de labour, and in addition, Les Folles Entreprises (1505), a collection of didactic and satirical poems, chiefly ballades and rondeaux, one section of which is devoted to the exposition of the tyranny of the nobles, and another to the vices of the clergy; L'Entreprise de Venise (c. 1509), a poem in seven-lined stanzas, giving a list
prose
original
Victor Hugo's Notre-Dame de Paris, nor is there more foundation in fact for the one-act prose
Theodore
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