Henriade

Henriade

"La Henriade" is an epic poem written by the French Enlightenment writer and philosopher Voltaire. According to Voltaire himself, the poem concerns and was written in honour of the life of Henry IV of France, and is a celebration of his life. ["The Henriade", p. IV] The ostensible subject is the siege of Paris in 1589 by Henry III in consort with Henry of Navarre, soon to be Henry IV, but its themes are the twin evils of religious fanaticism and civil discord. It also concerns the political state of France. Voltaire aimed to be the French Virgil, outdoing the master by preserving Aristotelian unity of place— a property of classical tragedy rather than epic— by keeping the human action confined between Paris and Ivry. It was first printed (under the title "La Ligue") in 1723, and reprinted dozens of times within Voltaire's lifetime.

Reception

"Henriade" is one of two epic poems by Voltaire, the other being "La Pucelle d'Orléans", which took Joan of Arc as its subject. Voltaire wrote other poems during his life, but none were nearly as lengthy or detailed as these two. While "Henriade" was viewed as a great poem, and one of Voltaire's best, many did not believe it to be his masterpiece, or the best he was capable of; many claimed it lacked originality or novel inspiration, and that it was nothing truly extraordinary. Some remarked that this low standard of quality came of Voltaire's non-comprehension of what he was writing, and his lack of enthusiasm in the poem's writing. [cite book|title=La Pucelle d'Orléans|last=Blair|first=Hugh|year=1823|publisher=J. Metcalf, Printer] [Morley, p.153]

Structure

The poem, in ten "chants" or cantos, comprises two major parts; the first is strictly from an historical point of view, and its material is only factual. The second part is looser in its factual integrity, and draws more strongly from Voltaire's imagination. These "fictions", as Voltaire calls them, mostly relate to Henry IV, and "draw from the regions of the marvelous",cite book|title=The Henriade; with the Battle of Fontenoy: Dissertations on Man, Law of Nature, Destruction of Lisbon, Temple of Taste, And Temple of Friendship, From the French of M. De Voltaire; With Notes From All the Commentators|last=Voltaire|year=1859|publisher=Derby & Jackson] and include "the prediction of Henry's conversion, of the protection given to him by Saint Louis, his apparition, the fire from Heaven destroying those magical performances which were then so common, etc." Voltaire also stated that various other sections of the poem were purely allegorical: "for example, the voyage of Discord to Rome, Politics and Fanaticism personified, the temple of Love, the Passions and Vices, etc."

The poem was written in a reformed styling of the twelve-syllable Alexandrine couplet. He made this stylised hexameter for dramatic effect. Some commentators remarked that this particular rhythm of verse was unsuited to the content and theme of the poem. [cite book|title=The New International Encyclopædia|publisher=Dodd, Mead and Company|year=1903] According to the poem's editor O.R. Taylor, the poem "rarely touches the sensibility of the modern reader" ["touche rarement la sensibilité du lecteur moderne" (Taylor's introduction, 1965, vol. I p. 9.)] and readers hoping for sublime fire will be disappointed, though Voltaire's verse is always idiomatic and never pedestrian. Voltaire's English "Essay upon the Civil Wars in France. Extracted from Curious Manuscripts" (1727) expresses his Enlightened opinions on these themes in a prose form that is more approachable to modern taste.

O.R. Taylor's critical edition of "La Henriade" [Voltaire, "La Henriade". Édition critique avec introduction et des notes par O.R.Taylor", (Geneva: Institut et Musée Voltaire), 2 vols, introduction and text. 1965.] devotes a full volume to an introduction, accounting for the germination of the idea and its publication history, the contextual theory of the epic and sources both literary and in recent history and contemporary events, and the nineteenth-century decline in the poem's popularity. Taylor reprints eighteenth-century prefaces to the poem, which always carried critical apparatus in the form of Voltaire's own notes.

Notes

References

*cite book|title=The Gentleman's Magazine|year=1809
*cite book|title=Voltaire|last=Morley|first=J. |publisher=Ayer Publishing|year=1973|isbn=0833742930
*cite book|title=Cosmopolis: The Hidden Agenda of Modernity|last=Toulman|first=Stephen|publisher=University of Chicago Press|year=1992|isbn=0226808386


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