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12mo (132 x 75 mm) 16 nn.ll., 432 pp. 18th century polished calf, triple gilt filet on covers, flat spine gilt, gilt inner decorative border, red edges.
1 in stock
Cioranescu, I, 8593 ; Tchémerzine-Scheler, I, 147; Brunet, I, 531.
First edition.
Charles Coypeau d’Assoucy (1605-1677), poet and burlesque composer, was mocked by Chapelle and Bachaumont for his homosexuality.
D’Assoucy responded to the insult by writing in his Aventures that Chapelle was his lover (“il me cedoit fort librement la moitié de son lit. C’est pourquoy, après avoir eu de si longue preuve de la qualité de mes désirs et m’avoir bien daigné honorer plusieurs fois de sa couche”).
He is also said to have been Cyrano de Bergerac’s lover (Jean-Luc Hennig, Dassoucy et les garçons, Paris, Fayard, 2011). D’Assoucy was arrested in Montpellier in 1655 because of his reputation.
He was very close to Molière. The latter is said to have written the first verse of a song found on pages 99 to 101 of this work (Tchémerzine-Scheler): “Loin de moi, loin de moi tristesse, Sanglots larmes soupirs, Je revoie la princesse Qui fait tous mes désirs, O célestes plaisirs, Doux transports d’allégresse! Viens mort quand tu voudras, Me donner le trépas J’ai revu ma Princesse. Finissez finissez les larmes, Sanglots, plaintes & pleurs, J’ai revu tous ses charmes, Finissez mes douleurs, O célestes douceurs ! Plus d’ennuis, plus d’alarmes, Viens mort quand tu voudras, Me donner le trépas, J’ai revu tous ses charmes”.
A charming copy, though short of margins.
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