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斯特芳·馬拉美 Stephane Mallarme魏爾倫 Paul-Marie Veriaine洛特雷阿蒙 Comte de Lautréamont
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弗朗西斯·雅姆 Francis Jammes法爾格 Léon-Paul Fargue剋洛岱爾 Paul Claudel
保爾·瓦雷裏 Paul Valery夏爾·佩吉 Charles Peguy蘇佩維埃爾 Jules Supervielle
布洛東 André Breton艾呂雅 Paul Eluard阿波裏奈爾 Guillaume Apollinaire
雅剋·普萊維爾 Jacques Prévert阿拉貢 Louis Aragon保爾·福爾 Paul Fort
亨利·米修 Henri Michaux埃雷迪亞 José Maria de Heredia阿爾托 Antonin Artaud
勒韋迪 Pierre Reverdy拜斯 Saint-John Perse普呂多姆 Sully Prudhomme
勒內·夏爾 René Char伊凡·哥爾 Yvan Goll博斯凱 Alain Bosquet
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若澤·弗雷什 José Frèches米歇爾-施奈德 Michelle - Schneider尼古拉·薩科齊 Nicolas Sarkozy
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讓·菲利普 To Philip尼瑪·紮瑪爾 尼玛扎玛尔剋洛維一世 Clovis I
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尼古拉斯·尚福爾 Nicolas Chamfort
法國 法國大革命  (1741年四月6日1794年四月13日)
Sébastien-Roch Nicolas; Sébastien Nicolas de Chamfort

尚福爾,法國劇作傢、雜文傢,以風趣著稱,所寫格言在法國大革命期間成為民間流行的俗語。尚福爾為私生子,由一雜貨商之妻撫養成人,受到自由思想的教育,後因健談,口才出衆,得到一個巴黎世俗團體的資助。喜劇《印度女郎》(La Jeune Indienne, 1764年首演)、《士麥拿商人》(Le Marchand de Smyrne, 1770年首演)和《穆斯塔法和澤安吉爾》(Mustapha et Zeangir, 1776年首演)為其成名作。《莫裏哀贊》(Eloge de Moliere, 1769)一文發表後,被選入法蘭西學院。
尚福爾對資助他的那個團體的幻想破滅後,成為反保皇派,寫有革命的《格言、警句和軼事》(Pensees, Maximes et anecdotes; 1795)一書。曾與米拉波(Mirabeau)合辦《法蘭西信使報》(Mercure de France),並成為激進的雅各賓俱樂部的秘書。他的許多語句,如「讓城堡去打仗,給村捨以和平」,傳為名言。後因對大革命恐怖統治的過火行為感到震驚,加入溫和派,在公安委員會內遭到告發,感到有被監禁的威脅,遂起自殺之念,終因受傷拒醫而死。 
尼古拉斯·尚福爾Nicolas Chamfort)是十八世紀晚期法國最受歡迎的劇作傢之一。他的一些語句,例如“讓城堡去打仗,給村捨以和平”(War to the chateaux, peace  


Sébastien-Roch Nicolas, known in his adult life as Nicolas Chamfort and as Sébastien Nicolas de Chamfort (French: [ʃɑ̃fɔʁ]; 6 April 1741 – 13 April 1794), was a French writer, best known for his witty epigrams and aphorisms. He was secretary to Louis XVI's sister, and of the Jacobin club.

Biography

Chamfort was born Sébastien-Roch NicolasClermont-Ferrand, Puy-de-Dôme on 6 April 1741, according to a baptismal certificate from Saint-Genès parish in Clermont-Ferrand, to a grocer named Nicolas. On 22 June, a second birth certificate gives him the name "Sébastien Roch" from "unknown parents." A journey to Paris resulted in the boy obtaining a bursary at the Collège des Grassins. He worked hard, although one of his most contemptuous epigrams reads: "Ce que j'ai appris je ne le sais plus; le peu que je sais encore, je l'ai deviné" ("What I learned I no longer know; the little I still know, I guessed"). When the principal of the College promised Chamfort a benefice, he replied that he could not accept because he preferred honour to honours, "J'aime l'honneur et non les honneurs". About this time he assumed the name of Chamfort.

A younger Nicolas Chamfort

For some time he subsisted by teaching and hack writing. His good looks and ready wit brought him attention; but, though endowed with immense physical strength—Madame de Craon called him "Hercule sous la figure d'Adonis"—he lived so hard that he was glad to have the opportunity to do a cure at Spa when the Belgian minister in Paris, M. van Eyck, invited him to accompany him to Germany in 1761. On his return to Paris, Chamfort produced a successful comedy, La Jeune Indienne (1764), following it with a series of epistles in verse, essays and odes. However, his literary reputation was not established until 1769, when the Académie française awarded him a prize for his Eloge on Molière.

Until then, he lived from hand to mouth, mainly on the hospitality of people who gave him board and lodging in exchange for the pleasure of the conversation for which he was famous. Madame Helvétius entertained him at Sèvres for some years. In 1770, another comedy, Le Marchand de Smyrne, brought him further notice, and he seemed on the road to fame and fortune, when illness struck. A generous friend gave him a pension of 1200 livres, charged on the Mercure de France. Thus assisted, he was able to go to the baths of Contrexéville and to spend some time in the country, where he wrote an Eloge on La Fontaine which won the prize of the Academy of Marseilles in 1774.

In 1775, while taking the waters at Barges, he met the duchesse de Grammont, sister of Choiseul, through whose influence he was introduced at court. In 1776, his tragedy, Mustapha et Zeangir, was played at Fontainebleau before Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. Subsequently, the king gave him a further pension of 1200 livres and his cousin, the Prince de Condé, made him his secretary. Disliking the constraints of court life, he became increasingly discontented, and after a year he resigned his post in the prince's household and retired to Auteuil. There, comparing the authors of old with his contemporaries, he composed a famous mot that proclaims the superiority of the dead over the living as companions. He fell in love with and married a lady attached to the household of the duchesse du Maine; she was 48 years old, clever, amusing, and a woman of the world. They soon moved to Vaucouleurs, where she died within six months. Chamfort lived in Holland for a time with M. de Narbonne, then returned to Paris where he was elected in 1781 to the Académie française.

He was a member of the Masonic lodge Les Neuf Sœurs.

In 1784, through the influence of Calonne, he became secretary to the king's sister, Madame Élisabeth, and in 1786 he received a pension of 2000 livres from the royal treasury. He was thus once more attached to the court, and made friends there despite his satirical attitude. He quit the court for good after an unfortunate and mysterious love affair, and was taken into the house of M. de Vaudreuil. Here, in 1783, he met Honoré Mirabeau, with whom he remained steadfast friends, whom he assisted with money and influence, and at least one of whose speeches he wrote.

The outbreak of the French Revolution profoundly changed Chamfort's life. He threw himself into the republican movement, forgetting his old friends at court and devoting his small fortune to revolutionary propaganda. He became a street orator and was among the first to enter the Bastille when it was stormed. Until 3 August 1791 he was secretary of the Jacobin club. He worked for the Mercure de France, collaborated with Pierre-Louis Ginguené in the Feuille villageoise, and drew up for Talleyrand his Addresse au peuple français.

With the reign of Marat and Robespierre, he became critical of uncompromising Jacobinism, and with the fall of the Girondins his political life came to an end. But he could not restrain the tongue that had made him famous; he no more spared the Convention than he had spared the court. His notorious republicanism failed to excuse the sarcasms he lavished on the new order of things. Fingered by an assistant in the Bibliothèque Nationale, to a share in the direction of which he had been appointed[clarification needed] by Jean Marie Roland, he was taken to the prison des Madelonnettes. Soon after his release, he was threatened again with arrest, but he decided that death was preferable to a repetition of the moral and physical restraint to which he had been subjected.

Suicide

Memorial plaque at 10, rue Chabanais [fr]Paris 2ième

Unable to tolerate the prospect of being imprisoned once more, in September 1793 he locked himself into his office and shot himself in the face. The pistol malfunctioned and he did not die even though he shot off his nose and part of his jaw. He then repeatedly stabbed his neck with a paper cutter, but failed to cut an artery. He finally used the paper cutter to stab himself in the chest. He dictated to those who came to arrest him the well-known declaration Moi, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas de Chamfort, déclare avoir voulu mourir en homme libre plutôt que d'être reconduit en esclave dans une maison d'arrêt ("I, Sebastien-Roch Nicolas de Chamfort, hereby declare my wish to die a free man rather than to continue to live as a slave in a prison") which he signed in a firm hand and in his own blood. His butler found him unconscious in a pool of blood. From then until his death in Paris the following year, he suffered intensely and was attended to by a gendarme, whom he paid a crown a day.

To the Abbé Sieyès Chamfort had given fortune in the title of a pamphlet (Qu'est-ce que le Tiers-État ? Tout. Qu'a-t-il ? Rien), and Sieyès was likewise the person to whom he told his famous sarcastic bon mot Ah ! mon ami, je m'en vais enfin de ce monde, où il faut que le cœur se brise ou se bronze. Thus the maker of constitutions followed the dead wit to the grave.

Writings

The writings of Chamfort include comedies, political articles, literary criticisms, portraits, letters, and verses. His Maximes et Pensées, highly praised by John Stuart Mill, are, after those of La Rochefoucauld, among the most brilliant and suggestive sayings of the modern era. His aphorisms, less systematic and psychologically less important than those of La Rochefoucauld, are as significant in their violence and iconoclastic spirit of the period of storm and preparation that gave them birth as the Réflexions in their exquisite restraint and elaborate subtlety are characteristic of the tranquil elegance of their epoch. Moreover, they have the advantage of richness of colour, picturesqueness of phrase, passion, and audacity. Sainte-Beuve compares them to well-minted coins that retain their value, and to keen arrows that arrivent brusquement et sifflent encore. Although situated at the exact opposite of the political spectrum (see French Revolution) the maxims of Antoine de Rivarol are among those that easily compare in acidity and brilliance.

Works

  • Praise of Molière, crowned (1769)
  • The Fountain of Praise (1774)
  • The young Indian (1764); La Jeune Indienne: Comédie en Un Acte Et en Vers. Princeton University Press. 1945.
  • The Merchant of Smythe, comedy
  • Mustapha and Zéangir, traged.

Collected works

References

 
    

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