February 13, 2013

SÉBASTIEN-ROCH NICOLAS CHAMFORT (1740-74)

Playwright and miscellaneous writer, famous for his wit, whose maxims became popular bywords during the French Revolution.

An illegitimate child raised by a grocer´s wife, Chamfort was educated as a free scholar and then supported by a worldly Parisian society that appreciated his conversational genius.

His comedies La Jeune Indienne (produced 1764) and Le Marchand de Smyrne (produced 1770) established his reputation. Eloge de Molière (1769) won him entry into the Académie Française, but he later attacked academies with his Discours sur les Académies (1791).

Disillusioned with the society that sponsered him, he turned antiroyalist and wrote the revolutionary Pensées, maximes et anecdotes (1795); Chamfort collaborated with Mirabeau on the newspaper Mercure de France and became secretary to the radical Jacobin Club.

Many of his caustic sayings, such as "War to the chateaux, peace to the cottages", became famous.

Later, shocked by the excesses of the Regin of Terror, Chamfort joined the Moderates and was denounced in the Committee of General Safety. Threatened with prison, he attempted suicide, eventually dying of the wounds. "Be my brother or I´ll kill you" is one of his later sayings, summing up the Terror´s concept of the Revolutionary principle of fraternity.

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