Charles Cotin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles Cotin or Abbé Cotin (born 1604 in Paris; died December 1681 in Paris) was a French abbé, philosopher and poet. He was made a member of the French academy on January 7, 1655.
Cotin was a scholar of Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and Syriac, an advisor to Louis XIV, and renowned in his time for his sermons, poetry, and erudition. He frequented the Paris literary salons, particularly that of the Hôtel de Rambouillet as a friend of Mlle de Gournay, and his translation of the Song of Songs is more notable for its flavor of fashionable salons than of sacred poetry.
Cotin is remembered for his violent squabbles with Nicolas Boileau and Molière, who gave him a stinging satiric immortality as the character Trissotin in Les Femmes savantes.
[edit] Works
- La Jérusalem désolée, ou Méditation sur les leçons de Ténèbres (1634)
- Recueil des énigmes de ce temps (1646)
- Théoclée, ou la Vraye philosophie des principes du monde (1646)
- Nouveau Recueil de divers rondeaux (1650)
- Traité de l'âme immortelle (1655)
- Œuvres meslées, contenant : énigmes, odes, sonnets et épigrammes (1659)
- La pastorale sacrée, ou Paraphrase du Cantique des Cantiques selon la lettre (1660)
- Oraison funèbre pour messire Abel Servien, ministre d'État et surintendant des finances (1659)
- La Ménagerie : à Son Altesse Royale Mademoiselle, a satire against Gilles Ménage, (1660)
- Réflexions sur la conduite du roi (1663)
- Œuvres galantes en prose et en vers de monsieur Cotin (1663)
- Odes royales sur les mariages des princesses de Nemours (1665)
- La Critique désintéressée sur les satyres du temps (1666)
- Poësies chrestiennes de l'abbé Cotin (1668)
[edit] External links
Preceded by Germain Habert de Cérizy |
Seat 12 Académie française 1655-1681 |
Succeeded by Louis de Courcillon de Dangeau |