Antoine de Rivarol

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Antoine de Rivarol (June 26, 1753, Bagnols, Languedoc, FranceApril 11, 1801 Berlin), was a French writer and epigrammatist.

It appears that Rivarol's father, an innkeeper, was a cultivated man. The son assumed the title of comte de Rivarol, asserting a connection with a noble Italian family, but his enemies said his name was really Riverot and that he was not of a noble family. After various vicissitudes, he went to Paris in 1777 and won some academic prizes. In 1784, his treatise Sur l'universalité de la langue française and his translation of Dante's Inferno were favourably noted. The year before the French Revolution broke out, he and a certain Champcenetz published a lampoon, titled Petit Almanach de nos grands hommes pour 1788, that ridiculed without pity a number of writers of proven or future talent, along with a great many nobodies.

When the press proved crucial for the fate of the French Revolution, Rivarol took up the cudgels on the Royalist side, writing in the Journal politique of Antoine Sabatier de Castres and the Actes des Apotres of Jean Gabriel Peltier. He left France in 1792, first settling in Brussels, then moving successively to London, Hamburg, and Berlin.

Rivarol's rivals in France -in sharp conversational sayings- included Alexis Piron and Nicolas Chamfort. Many of Rivarol's "maximes" were ill-natured and hold only for their place and time. However, their brilliance is incontrovertible.

The complete works of Antoine de Rivarol, in 5 volumes, were published in 1805. Selections from these works were published in 1858 by Sainte-Beuve in 1858, and by M. de Lescure in 1862 (2nd ed., 1880).

His brother, Claude François (1762-1848), was also an author. His works include Isman, ou le fatalisme (1795), a novel; Le Véridique (1827), comedy; Essai sur les causes de la révolution française (1827).

[edit] See also

[edit] Books about Rivarol

  • De Lescure, M., 1882. Rivarol et la société française pendant la révolution et l'émigration .
  • Le Breton, 1895. Rivarol, sa vie, ses idées.