- Hôtel de Rambouillet
The Hôtel de Rambouillet was the
Paris residence of Madame de Rambouillet, who ran a renowned literary salon there from about1607 until her death in1665 . Formerly the Hôtel de Pisani, it was situated close to theLouvre , on the site of thePalais Royal .Members of her salon, received in the intimacy of her "Chambre Bleue", admitted to the "ruelle" [
Antoine Baudeau de Somaize published a "Grand Dictionnaire des Précieuses, ou La Clef de la Lanque des Ruelles" (1660-1661).] —the space between her daybed and the wall of the alcove— represented the flower of contemporary French literature, fashion, and wit, includingMadame de Sévigné , Madame de La Fayette, Mademoiselle de Scudéry, the Duchesse de Longueville, the Duchesse de Montpensier,Jean Louis Guez de Balzac ,Bossuet ,Jean Chapelain , Corneille,François de Malherbe , Racan, Richelieu, La Rochefoucauld,Paul Scarron ,Claude Favre de Vaugelas , andVincent Voiture . They adopted for themselves the term "précieux", which became a term of abuse when satirized byMolière in "Les Précieuses ridicules " (1659). The blue stockings worn by ladies of this circle provided for three hundred years a slightly dismissive metonymic term in English and in French ("bas-bleus") for intellectual women.The quality looked for in this self-defining circle was "honnêteté", a quality looked for in vain at the contemporary court, crass, ostentatious, corrupt and corrupting. ["Honnêteté" is discussed at some more length by Jacques Revel, "The uses of civility" in Roger Chartier, editor, "A History of Private life: Passions of the Renaissance", Arthur Goldhammer, translator, (Belknap Press, Harvard University), p 192ff.] "Honnêteté" was a mode of restraint and
decorum , so practiced that it had become easy and as if natural, shared by aristocrats and fastidious members of the high bourgeoisie, but which could not readily be taught or learned. In contrast with the court, "the hôtel de Rambouillet received anelite that chose its own members, or, more precisely, whose members recognized one another's right to belong.... The ordinary rules of civility did not govern daily interchange. Members of the group wrote and above all talked to one another. Conversation was a sacred art, the forum in which the group developed its taste. "L'Astrée" was staged as well as read; other reading included the novels of La Calprenède and Mlle de Scudéry, which held up a mirror of this microsociety" [Revel, p 194.]The "précieux" refinements of the French language would find some codification in the "
Dictionnaire de l'Académie française " eventually published by theAcadémie française , which found its start in the Hôtel Rambouillet. Words like "celadon " to describe a certain range of pale glaucous blue-green glazes of Chinese porcelain come straight from the Hôtel de Rambouillet.Notes
Further reading
* Leon H. Vincent, "Hôtel de Rambouillet and the précieuses", Boston : Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1900.
ee also
* "
Précieuses "
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