Cover of L'Ecole Des Femmes

L'Ecole Des Femmes

by Unknown Author

4.0
(2 ratings)
1985French & European PubnsISBN 9780685111536

About this book

Chrysalde. Vous venez, dites-vous, pour lui donner la main ? Arnolphe. Oui, je veux terminer la chose dans demain. Chrysalde. Nous sommes ici seuls ; et l'on peut, ce me semble, sans craindre d'etre ouis, y discourir ensemble : voulez-vous qu'en ami je vous ouvre mon coeur ? Votre dessein pour vous me fait trembler de peur ; et de quelque facon que vous tourniez l'affaire, prendre femme est a vous un coup bien temeraire. Arnolphe. Il est vrai, notre ami. Peut-etre que chez vous vous trouvez des sujets de craindre pour chez nous ; et votre front, je crois, veut que du mariage les cornes soient partout l'infaillible apanage. Chrysalde. Ce sont coups du hasard, dont on n'est point garant, et bien sot, ce me semble, est le soin qu'on en prend. Mais quand je crains pour vous, c'est cette raillerie dont cent pauvres maris ont souffert la furie ; car enfin vous savez qu'il n'est grands ni petits que de votre critique on ait vus garantis ; car vos plus grands plaisirs sont, partout ou vous etes, de faire cent eclats des intrigues secretes...

Publication Details

Publisher
French & European Pubns
Published
1985
ISBN
9780685111536

About Unknown Author

Molière (Jean-Baptiste Poquelin) was born in Paris on January 15, 1622. His father was one of eight valets de chambre tapissiers who tended the king's furniture and upholstery, so the young Poquelin received every advantage a boy could wish for. He was educated at the finest schools (the College de Clermont in Paris.) He had access to the king's court. But even as a child, Molière found it infinitely more pleasant to poke fun at the aristocracy than to associate with them. As a young boy, he learned that he could cause quite a stir by mimicking his mother's priest. His mother, a deeply religious woman, might have broken the young satirist of this habit had she not died before he was yet twelve-years-old. His father soon remarried, but in less than three years, this wife also passed away. At the age of fifteen, Jean-Baptiste was left alone with his father and was most likely apprenticed to his trade. The boy never showed much of an interest for the business of upholstering. Fortunately, his father's shop was located near two important theatrical sites: the Pont-Neuf and the Hôtel de Bourgogne. At the Pont-Neuf, comedians performed plays and farces in the street in order to sell patent medicines to the crowds. Although not traditional theatre in the strictest sense, the antics of these comic medicine-men brought a smile to Jean-Baptiste's face on many an afternoon. At the Hôtel de Bourgogne--which the boy attended with his grandfather--the King's Players performed more traditional romantic tragedies and broad farces. Apparently, these two theatrical venues had quite an impact on the young Poquelin, for in 1643, at the age of twenty-one, he decided to dedicate his life to the theatre. Jean-Baptiste had fallen in love with a beautiful red-headed actress named Madeleine Béjart. Along with Madeleine, her brother Joseph and sister Genevieve, and about a dozen other young well-to-do hopefuls, Jean-Baptiste founded a dramatic troupe called The Illustrious Theater. It w

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