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Jean Antoine de Baïf (February 19, 1532 -
September 19, 1589) was a French poet and member of the Pléiade.
Life
He was born in Venice, the
natural son of the scholar Lazare de Baïf, who was at that time
French ambassador at Venice. Thanks, perhaps, to the surroundings
of his childhood, he grew up an enthusiast for the fine
arts, and surpassed in zeal all the leaders of the Renaissance in France.
His father spared no pains to secure the best possible education
for his son. The boy was taught Latin by Charles Estienne, and Greek by Ange
Vergèce, the Cretan scholar and
calligraphist who
designed Greek types for Francis I.
When he was eleven years old he was put under the care of the
famous Jean Daurat.
Ronsard,
who was eight years his senior, now began to share his studies.
Claude Binet tells how young Baïf, bred on Latin and Greek,
smoothed out the tiresome beginnings of the Greek language for
Ronsard, who in return initiated his companion into the mysteries
of French versification.
Baïf possessed an extraordinary facility, and the mass of his
work has injured his reputation. Besides a number of volumes of
short poems of an amorous or congratulatory kind, he translated or
paraphrased various pieces from Bion, Moschus, Theocritus, Anacreon, Catullus and Martial. He resided in Paris, and enjoyed the continued
favor of the court. In 1570, in conjunction with the composer Joachim Thibault de
Courville, with royal blessing and financial backing, he
founded the Académie de musique et de poésie, with
the idea of establishing a closer union between music and poetry;
his house became famous for the concerts which he gave,
entertainments which Charles IX and Henry
III frequently attended. Composers such as Claude Le
Jeune, who was to become the most influential musician in
France in the late 16th century, and Jacques Mauduit, who carried the
Academie's ideas into the 17th century, soon joined the group,
which remained secretive as to its intents and techniques.
Works
Baïf elaborated a system for regulating French versification by
quantity, a system which came to be known as vers mesurés,
or vers mesurés à l'antique. In the general idea of
regulating versification by quantity, he was not a pioneer. Jacques
de la Taille had written in 1562 the Maniére de faire des vers
en français comme en grec et en Latin (printed 1573), and
other poets had made experiments in the same direction; however, in
his specific attempt to recapture the ancient Greek and Latin
ethical effect of poetry on its hearers, and in applying the
metrical innovations to music, he created something entirely
new.
Baïf's innovations also included a line of 15 syllables known as
the vers Baïfin. He also meditated reforms in French
spelling.
His theories are exemplified in Etrenes de poezie Franzoeze
an vers mezures (1574). His works were published in 4 volumes,
entitled Œuvres en rime (1573), consisting of Amours,
Jeux, Passetemps, et Poemes, containing, among much that is
now hardly readable, some pieces of infinite grace and delicacy.
His sonnet on the Roman de la
Rose was said to contain the whole argument of that
celebrated work, and Colletet says it was on everybody's
lips.
He also wrote a celebrated sonnet in praise of the St.
Bartholomew's Day Massacre. Baïf was the author of two
comedies, L'Eunuque, 1565 (published 1573), a free
translation of Terence's
Eunuchus, and
Le Brave (1567), an imitation of the Miles
Gloriosus, in which the characters of Plautus are turned into Frenchmen, the action
taking place at Orléans. Baïf published a collection of Latin
verse in 1577, and in 1576 a popular volume of Mimes,
enseignemens et proverbes.
References