- Jean de Montigny
The Abbé Jean de Montigny (1636 –
September 28 ,1671 ) was a French philosophic writer and poet, elected to theAcadémie française , but who died in his prime.Biography
Born in
Brittany , Montigny was encouraged by the marquise deGuiche , a granddaughter ofPierre Séguier , chancellor ofFrance .Montigny delivered the funeral oration for
Anne of Austria and was confessor to Louis XIV's Queen Marie-Thérèse. He published some poetry ("Le palais des plaisirs") and a "Letter toErastus " in which he took up the defense of the unfortunate epic "La Pucelle" ofJean Chapelain .In January, 1670 Montigny was named to the Académie française, reading for his reception "Reflections upon languages", a piece that the abbé d'Olivet pronounced the best that the Académie had yet heard. He was appointed
bishop of Laon —a post that would have made him a duke andpeer of France —but en route to take up his episcopal duties he died of a stroke. At the time of his unexpected death, Mme de Sevigné wrote that he was a luminary of philosophy and attributed the stroke of which he died to overwork.The Abbé d'Olivet assessed his place in the contemporary literary world: "His prose is correct, elegant, sonorous ("nombreuse"): his versification flowing, noble, filled with images. A few more years, and what might he not have achieved? But, for a man of letters, to die at thirty-five is to die in the cradle."
External links
* [http://www.academie-francaise.fr/immortels/base/academiciens/fiche.asp?param=79 Académie française website]
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