- Marin le Roy de Gomberville
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Short story writersPortals France · Literature Marin le Roy, sieur du Parc et de Gomberville (1600 – June 14, 1674) was a French poet and novelist.
He was born at Paris, and at fourteen he produced a volume of poetry. At twenty he wrote a Discours sur l'histoire and at twenty-two a pastoral, La Charité, which is really a novel. The characters, though disguised as shepherds and shepherdesses, represent real people for whose identification the author himself provides a key.
This was followed by a more ambitious work, Polexandre (5 vols. 1632–1637). The hero wanders through the world in search of the island home of the princess Alcidiane. It contains much history and geography; the travels of Polexandre extending to such unexpected places as Benin, the Canary Islands, Mexico and the Antilles, and incidentally we learn all that was then known of Mexican history.
Cythérée (4 vols.) appeared in 1630–1642, and in 1651 the Jeune Alcidiane, intended to undo any harm the earlier novels may have done, for Gomberville became a Jansenist and spent the last twenty-five years of his life in pious retirement. He was one of the earliest and most energetic members of the Académie Française.
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
Académie Française Seat 21 Marin le Roy de Gomberville (1634) · Pierre Daniel Huet (1674) · Jean Boivin le Cadet (1721) · Paul-Hippolyte de Beauvilliers, Duc de Saint-Aignan (1726) · Charles-Pierre Colardeau (1776) · Jean-François de La Harpe (1776) · Pierre-Louis Lacretelle l'Aîné (1803) · François-Xavier-Joseph Droz (1824) · Charles de Montalembert (1851) · Henri d'Orléans, Duc d'Aumale (1871) · Eugène Guillaume (1898) · Étienne Lamy (1905) · André Chevrillon (1920) · Marcel Achard (1959) · Félicien Marceau (1975)
Categories:- 1600 births
- 1674 deaths
- People from Paris
- Members of the Académie française
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