Life, Letters, And Epicurean Philosophy Of Ninon De L Enclos, The Celebrated Beauty Of The Seventeenth Century
161 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

Life, Letters, And Epicurean Philosophy Of Ninon De L'Enclos, The Celebrated Beauty Of The Seventeenth Century , livre ebook

-

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
161 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. We are republishing these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 08 janvier 2021
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781528763141
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

MEDIAEVAL CLASSIC
LIFE, LETTERS
AND
EPICUREAN PHILOSOPHY
OF
NINON DE L ENCLOS
The Celebrated Beauty of the Seventeenth Century

ROBINSON-OVERTON
EDITION AND TRANSLATION
CONTENTS
LIFE OF NINON DE L ENCLOS
C HAPTER I
Ninon de l Enclos as a Standard
C HAPTER II
Considered as a Parallel
C HAPTER III
Youth of Ninon de l Enclos
C HAPTER IV
The Morals of the Period
C HAPTER V
Ninon and Count de Coligny
C HAPTER VI
The Birds of the Tournelles
C HAPTER VII
Effect of Her Mother s Death
C HAPTER VIII
Her Increasing Popularity
C HAPTER IX
Ninon s Friendships
C HAPTER X
Some of Ninon s Lovers
C HAPTER XI
Ninon s Lovers (Continued)
C HAPTER XII
The Villarceaux Affair
C HAPTER XIII
The Marquis de S vign
C HAPTER XIV
A Family Tragedy
C HAPTER XV
Ninon s Bohemian Environments
C HAPTER XVI
A Remarkable Old Age

LETTERS TO THE MARQUIS DE S VIGN
I NTRODUCTION TO L ETTERS
I-A Hazardous Undertaking
II-Why Love Is Dangerous
III-Why Love Grows Cold
IV-The Spice of Love
V-Love and Temper
VI-Certain Maxims Concerning Love
VII-Women Expect a Quid Pro Quo from Men
VIII-The Necessity for Love and Its Primitive Cause
IX-Love Is a Natural Inclination
X-The Sensation of Love Forms a Large Part of a Woman s Nature
XI-The Distinction Between Love and Friendship
XII-A Man in Love Is an Amusing Spectacle
XIII-Vanity Is a Fertile Soil for Love
XIV-Worth and Merit Are Not Considered in Love
XV-The Hidden Motives of Love
XVI-How to Be Victorious in Love
XVII-Women Understand the Difference Between Real Love and Flirtation
XVIII-When a Woman Is Loved She Need Not Be Told of It
XIX-Why a Lover s Vows Are Untrustworthy
XX-The Half-way House to Love
XXI-The Comedy of Contrariness
XXII-Vanity and Self-Esteem Obstacles to Love
XXIII-Two Irreconcilable Passions in Woman
XXIV-An Abuse of Credulity Is Intolerable
XXV-Why Virtue Is So Often Overcome
XXVI-Love Demands Freedom of Action
XXVII-The Heart Needs Constant Employment
XXVIII-Mere Beauty Is Often of Trifling Importance
XXIX-The Misfortune of Too Sudden an Avowal
XXX-When Resistance is Only a Pretence
XXXI-The Opinion and Advice of Monsieur de la Sabli re
XXXII-The Advantages of a Knowledge of the Heart
XXXIII-A Heart Once Wounded No Longer Plays with Love
XXXIV-Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder
XXXV-The Heart Should Be Played Upon Like the Keys of a Piano
XXXVI-Mistaken Impressions Common to All Women
XXXVII-The Allurements of Stage Women
XXXVIII-Varieties of Resistance Are Essential
XXXIX-The True Value of Compliments Among Women
XL-Oratory and Fine Phrases Do Not Breed Love
XLI-Discretion Is Sometimes the Better Part of Valor
XLII-Surface Indications in Women Are Not Always Guides
XLIII-Women Demand Respect
XLIV-Why Love Grows Weak-Marshal de Saint-Evremond s Opinion
XLV-What Favors Men Consider Faults
XLVI-Why Inconstancy Is Not Injustice
XLVII-Cause of Quarrels Among Rivals
XLVIII-Friendship Must Be Firm
XLIX-Constancy Is a Virtue Among Narrow Minded
L-Some Women Are Very Cunning.
LI-The Parts Men and Women Play
LII-Love Is a Traitor with Sharp Claws
LIII-Old Age Not a Preventive Against Attack
LIV-A Shrewd But Not an Unusual Scheme
LV-A Happy Ending

CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN LORD SAINT-EVREMOND AND NINON DE L ENCLOS
I-Lovers and Gamblers Have Something in Common
II-It Is Sweet to Remember Those We Have Loved
III-Wrinkles Are a Mark of Wisdom
IV-Near Hopes Are Worth as Much as Those Far Off
V-On the Death of De Charleval
VI-The Weariness of Monotony
VII-After the Death of La Duchesse de Mazarin
VIII-Love Banishes Old Age
IX-Stomachs Demand More Attention Than Minds
X-Why Does Love Diminish After Marriage?
XI-Few People Resist Age
XII-Age Has Some Consolations
XIII-Some Good Taste Still Exists in France
XIV-Superiority of the Pleasures of the Stomach
XV-Let the Heart Speak Its Own Language
XVI-The Memory of Youth
XVII-I Should Have Hanged Myself
XVIII-Life Is Joyous When It Is Without Sorrow
Letter to the Modern Leontium
NINON DE L ENCLOS

LIFE AND LETTERS
INTRODUCTION
The inner life of the most remarkable woman that ever lived is here presented to American readers for the first time. Ninon, or Mademoiselle de l Enclos, as she was known, was the most beautiful woman of the seventeenth century. For seventy years she held undisputed sway over the hearts of the most distinguished men of France; queens, princes, noblemen, renowned warriors, statesmen, writers, and scientists bowing before her shrine and doing her homage, even Louis XIV., when she was eighty-five years of age, declaring that she was the marvel of his reign.
How she preserved her extraordinary beauty to so great an age, and attracted to her side the greatest and most brilliant men of the century, is told in her biography, which has been entirely re-written, and new facts and incidents added that do not appear in the French compilations.
Her celebrated Letters to the Marquis de S vign , newly translated, and appearing for the first time in the United States, constitute the most remarkable pathology of the female heart, its motives, objects, and secret aspirations, ever penned. With unsparing hand she unmasks the human heart and unveils the most carefully hidden mysteries of femininity, and every one who reads these letters will see herself depicted as in a mirror.
At an early age she perceived the inequalities between the sexes, and refused to submit to the injustice of an unfair distribution of human qualities. After due deliberation, she suddenly announced to her friends: I notice that the most frivolous things are charged up to the account of women, and that men have reserved to themselves the right to all the essential qualities; from this moment I will be a man. From that time-she was twenty years of age-until her death, seventy years later, she maintained the character assumed by her, exercised all the rights and privileges claimed by the male sex, and created for herself, as the distinguished Abb de Chateauneauf says, a place in the ranks of illustrious men, while preserving all the grace of her own sex.
LIFE OF NINON DE L ENCLOS
CHAPTER I
Ninon de l Enclos as a Standard
TO write the biography of so remarkable a woman as Ninon de l Enclos is to incur the animadversions of those who stand upon the dogma, that whoso violates one of the Ten Commandments is guilty of violating them all, particularly when one of the ten is conventionally selected as the essential precept and the most important to be observed. It is purely a matter of predilection or fancy, perhaps training and environment may have something to do with it, though judgment is wanting, but many will have it so, and hence, they arrive at the opinion that the end of the controversy has been reached.
Fortunately for the common sense of mankind, there are others who repudiate this rigid rule and excuse for human conduct; who refuse to accept as a pattern of morality, the Sabbath breaker, tyrant, oppressor of the poor, the grasping money maker, or charity monger, even though his personal chastity may entitle him to canonization. These insist that although Ninon de l Enclos may have persistently transgressed one of the precepts of the Decalogue, she is entitled to great consideration because of her faithful observance of the others, not only in their letter but in their spirit, and that her life contains much that is serviceable to humanity, in many more ways than if she had studiously preserved her personal purity to the sacrifice of other qualities, which are of as equal importance as virtues, and as essential to be observed.
Another difficulty in the way of establishing her as a model of any kind, on account of her deliberate violations of the sixth precept of the Decalogue, is the fact that she was not of noble birth, held no official position in the government of France, either during the regency or under the reign of Louis XIII, but was a private person, retiring in her habits, faithful in her liaisons and friendships, delicate and refined in her manners and conversations, and eagerly sought for her wisdom, philosophy, and intellectual ability.
Had she been a Semiramis, a Messalina, an Agrippina, a Catherine II, or even a Lady Hamilton, the glamor of her exalted political position might have covered up a multitude of gross, vulgar practices, cruelties, barbarities, oppressions, crimes, and acts of misgovernment, and have concealed her spiritual deformity beneath the grandeur of her splendid public vices and irregularities. The mantle of royalty and nobility, like dipsomania, excuses a multitude of sins, hypocrisy, and injustice, and inclines the world to overlook, disregard, or even condone, what in them is considered small vices, eccentricities of genius, but which in a private person are magnified into mountains of viciousness, and call forth an army of well meaning but inconsistent people to reform them by brute force.
It is time to interpose an impasse to the further spread of this misapprehension of the nature and consequences of human acts, and to demonstrate the possibility, in humble walks of life, of virtues worth cultivating, and to erec

  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents