Antoine Houdar de la Motte
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Antoine Houdar de la Motte (January 18, 1672 - December 26, 1731), was a French author.
He was born and died in Paris. In 1693 his comedy, Les Originaux, was a complete failure, and so depressed the author that he contemplated joining the Trappists. Four years later he began writing operas and ballets, e.g. L'Europe galante (1697), and tragedies, one of which, Inés de Castro (1723), was an immense success at the Theâtre Français. He was a champion of the moderns in the revived controversy of the ancients and moderns. Madame Dacier had published (1699) a translation of the Iliad, and La Motte, who knew no Greek, made a translation (1714) in verse founded on her work.
He said of his own work: "I have taken the liberty to change what I thought disagreeable in it." He defended the moderns in the Discours sur Homère prefixed to his translation, and in his Réfiexions sur la critique (1716). Apart from the merits of the controversy, it was conducted on La Motte's side with a wit and politeness which compared very favourably with his opponents methods. He was elected to the Académie française in 1710, but soon afterwards wwent blind. La Motte carried on a correspondence with the duchesse du Maine, and was the friend of Fontenelle. He had the same freedom from prejudice and the same inquiring mind as the latter, and it is on the excellent prose in which his views are expressed that his reputation rests.
His Œuvres du theâtre (2 vols.) appeared in 1730, and his Œuvres (10 vols.) in 1754. See AH Rigault, Histoire de la querelle des anciens et des modernes (1859).
Reference
- This entry incorporates public domain text originally from the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Preceded by: Thomas Corneille | Seat 14 Académie française | Succeeded by: Michel-Celse-Roger de Bussy-Rabutin |