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Nicolas Boileau-DesprEaux[nEkOlA´ bwAlO´-dAprAO´] Pronunciation Key, 16361711, French literary critic and poet. He was the spokesman of classicism, drawing his principles from his contemporaries, among them his friends Racine, MoliEre, and La Fontaine. His critical precepts are embodied in L'Art poEtique (1674), a verse treatise; Le Lutrin (1683), a mock epic; 12 Satires (1st collected ed. 1716) and 12 EpItres (1st collected ed. 1701), after Horace; and Les HEros de roman (1688), a dialogue in literary criticism. Revered in the 18th cent. as a literary lawgiver, he was later detested by the romantics. Boileau's poetic reputation rests on his satires, especially Le Lutrin, on the clerical world; Satires III and VI, on life in Paris; and Satire X, on women. He was a zealous polemicist, notably in quarrels with Desmarets de Saint-Sorlin and Perrault.
See edition of Les HEros de roman by T. F. Crane (1902); study by G. Pocock (1980).
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