Eustache Deschamps (1346 — 1406 or 1407 (Deschamps 1994, 1, 4)), was a French poet, byname Morel, in French "Nightshade" (Editors of the Encyclopædia
Britannica 1998).
Deschamps was born in Vertus. He received lessons in versification from Guillaume
de Machaut and
later studied law at Orleans
University. He then
traveled through Europe as a diplomatic messenger for Charles
V, being sent on
missions to Bohemia, Hungary and Moravia. In 1372 he was made huissier
d’armes to Charles. He received many other important offices, was bailli of Valois, and afterwards of Senlis, squire to the Dauphin, and governor of Fismes (Chisholm 1911).
In 1380, Charles died, and
Deschamps's estate was pillaged by the English, after which he often used the
name "Brulé des Champs" (Deschamps 1994, 1). In his childhood he had been
an eye-witness of the English invasion of 1358, he had been present at the siege
of Reims in 1360 and seen the march on Chartres, and he
had witnessed the signing of the Treaty
of Brétigny (Chisholm 1911). In consequence he hated the English
and continuously abused them in his many poems.
Deschamps wrote as many as 1,175 ballades, and he is sometimes credited with
inventing the form. All but one of his poems are short, and they are mostly
satirical, attacking the English, whom he regards as the plunderers of his
country, and against the wealthy oppressors of the poor. His satires were also
directed at corrupt officials and clergy but his sharp wit may have cost him
his job as Bailli of Senlis.
He was the author of a treatise on
French verse entitled L’Art de dictier et de fere chansons, balades,
virelais et rondeaulx, completed on 25 November 1392 (Kendrick 1983, 7). Besides giving rules for the
composition of the kinds of verse mentioned in the title he enunciates some
theories on poetry. He divides music into music proper and poetry. Music proper
he calls artificial on the ground that everyone could by dint of study become a
musician; poetry he calls natural because he says it is not an art that can be
acquired but a gift. He stresses the harmony of verse, because, as was the
fashion of his day, he practically took it for granted that all poetry was to
be sung (Chisholm 1911).
His one long poetic work, Le Miroir de Mariage, is a 12,103-line satirical poem on
the subject of women. This work influenced Geoffrey Chaucer who used themes from the poem in
his own work. Chaucer seems to be one of the few Englishmen Deschamps liked, as
he composed a ballade in his honour (no. 285, probably written sometime after
1380) praising Chaucer as a great philosopher, translator, ethicist, and poet (Kendrick 1983, 3-4).
References
· Boudet, Jean-Patrice, and Hélène Millet (eds.). 1997.
Eustache Deschamps et son temps. Textes et Documents
d'Histoire Médiévale 1. Paris: Publications de
· Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). 1911. "Deschamps, Eustache". Encyclopædia Britannica,
eleventh edition, 8:90-91. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
· Deschamps,
Eustache. 1878-1903 Oeuvres complètes de Eustache Deschamps, edited by Gaston
Raynaud and Henri Auguste Edouard, le marquis de Queux de Sainte-Hilaire. 11 vols. Paris: Firmin-Didot. Reprinted, New York:
Johnson Reprint, 1966.* Deschamps,
Eustache. 1994. Eustache Deschamps' L'Art de dictier, edited and translated by
Deborah M. Sinnreich-Levi. East Lansing, MI: Colleagues
Press.
· Deschamps, Eustache. 2003. Selected Poetry of
Eustache Deschamps, edited and translated by I.S. Laurie, Deborah M.
Sinnreich-Levi, David Curzon, and Jeffrey Fiskin. New York:
Routledge.
· Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica. 1998. "Eustache Deschamps". Encyclopædia Britannica,
online edition (20 July; accessed 7 September 2017).
· Hoepffner, Ernst. 1904. Eustache Deschamps: Leben
und Werke. Diss. Strassburg. Strassburg: Karl J. Trübner. Reprinted,
Geneva: Slatkine, 1974.
· Huot, Sylvia. 1999. [Untitled review of Boudet and
Millet 1997]. Speculum 74, no. 3 (July): 699-700.
· Kendrick, Laura. 1983. "Rhetoric and the Rise
of Public Poetry: The Career of Eustache Deschamps". Studies in
Philology 80, no. 1 (Winter): 1-13.
· Sinnreich-Levi,
Deborah (ed.). 1998. Eustache
Deschamps, French Courtier-Poet: His Work and His World, with introductions by
Stephen Nichols and Glending Olson. New York: AMS Press, 1998.
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