- Anne Dacier
Anne Le Fèvre Dacier, (1654 –
17 August 1720 ), better known during her lifetime as Madame Dacier, was a Frenchscholar andtranslator of theclassics .She was born at
Saumur and was raised there. Her father,Tanneguy Le Fèvre , died in 1672 and she moved toParis , carrying with her part of an edition ofCallimachus , which she afterwards published. This was so well received that she was engaged as one of the editors of the "Delphin" series of classical authors, in which she editedPublius Annius Florus ,Dictys Cretensis ,Sextus Aurelius Victor andEutropius . Through her father she met her husbandAndré Dacier , who was his pupil.In 1681 appeared her prose version of Anacreon and
Sappho , and in the next few years, she published prose versions ofTerence and some of the plays ofPlautus andAristophanes . In 1684 she and her husband retired toCastres , with the object of devoting themselves totheological studies. In 1685 the Daciers were rewarded with a pension byLouis XIV of France for their conversion toRoman Catholicism .In 1699 appeared the prose translation of the "
Iliad " (followed nine years later by a similar translation of the"Odyssey "), which earned her the esteem in which she is held inFrench literature . This version, which madeHomer known for the first time to many French men of letters (includingAntoine Houdar de la Motte ) gave rise to a famous literary controversy. In 1714, La Motte published a poetical version of the "Iliad", abridged and altered to suit his own taste, together with a "Discours sur Homère", stating the reasons why Homer failed to satisfy his critical taste. Mme. Dacier replied in the same year in her work, "Des causes de la corruption du goût".La Motte carried on the discussion with light gaiety and "badinage", and had the happiness of seeing his views supported by the abbé
Jean Terrasson , who in 1715 produced two volumes entitled "Dissertation critique sur L'Iliade", in which he maintained thatscience andphilosophy , and especially the science and philosophy ofRené Descartes , had so developed the human mind that the poets of the eighteenth century were immeasurably superior to those ofancient Greece .In the same year,
Claude Buffier published "Homère en arbitrage", in which he concluded that both parties were really agreed on the essential point that Homer was one of the greatest geniuses the world had seen, and that, as a whole, no other poem could be preferred to his; and, soon after (on5 April 1716 ) in the house ofJean-Baptiste de Valincourt , Mme. Dacier and La Motte met at supper, and drank to the health ofHomer . Nothing of importance marks the rest of Mme. Dacier's life. She died at theLouvre in 1720, aged 66.ources
* C.A. Sainte-Beuve, "Causeries du lundi", vol. ix
* J. F. Bodin, "Recherches historiques sur la ville de Saumur" (1818-1814)
* Hippolyte Rigault, "Histoire de la querelle des anciens et des modernes" (1856)Links
*
Émile Egger , "L'Hellénisme en France", ii. (1869),
* "Mémoires de Saint-Simon", iii.
* [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9028489/ Anne Dacier]
* [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/ 1911 encyclopaedia/Andre Dacier]
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