368:, completed on 25 November 1392. 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.
623:
353:, 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
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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 (n. 285, probably written sometime after 1380) praising Chaucer as a great philosopher, translator, ethicist, and poet.
332:
In 1380, Charles died, and
Deschamps's estate was pillaged by the English, after which he often used the name "Brulé des Champs". In his childhood he had been an eyewitness of the English invasion of 1358, he had been present at the siege of
656:, 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.
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Kendrick, Laura (2014). "Medieval
Vernacular Versions of Ancient Comedy: Geoffrey Chaucer, Eustache Deschamps, Vitalis of Blois and Plautus'
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Deschamps wrote two texts upon his teacher
Machaut's death in 1377. They were combined and set to music into
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He also wrote about the decline in morals of his time, and also of the worsening state of affairs during the
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Kendrick, Laura. 1983. "Rhetoric and the Rise of Public Poetry: The Career of
Eustache Deschamps".
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665:, edited and translated by Deborah M. Sinnreich-Levi. East Lansing, MI: Colleagues Press.
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for a lengthy discussion of the ballade, which includes commentary on
Deschamps's poetry
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765:, with introductions by Stephen Nichols and Glending Olson. New York: AMS Press, 1998.
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341:. In consequence he hated the English and continuously abused them in his many poems.
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in 1360 and seen the march on
Chartres, and he had witnessed the signing of the
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L'Art de dictier et de fere chansons, balades, virelais et rondeaulx
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Ancient Comedy and
Reception: Essays in Honor of Jeffrey Henderson
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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Eustache
Deschamps, French Courtier-Poet: His Work and His World
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Charles. He received many other important offices, was
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He was the author of a treatise on French verse entitled
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Boudet, Jean-Patrice, and Hélène Millet (eds.). 1997.
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672:Selected Poetry of Eustache Deschamps
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681:Eustache Deschamps: Leben und Werke
663:Eustache Deschamps' L'Art de dictier
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398:Weapons, loves/O flower of flowers
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563:. Penguin Books. pp. 31–32.
349:Deschamps wrote as many as 1,175
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394:Armes, amours/O flour des flours
782:One of his poems in translation
714:. De Gruyter. pp. 377–396.
652:Deschamps, Eustache. 1878–1903
614:Eustache Deschamps et son temps
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279:Morel, in French "Nightshade".
710:". In S. Douglas Olson (ed.).
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1:
560:The Waning of the Middle Ages
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751:UK public library membership
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777:A few examples of his poems
670:Deschamps, Eustache. 2003.
661:Deschamps, Eustache. 1994.
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371:His one long poetic work,
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295:and later studied law at
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701:80, n. 1 (Winter): 1–13.
679:Hoepffner, Ernst. 1904.
557:Huizinga, Johan (1990).
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759:Sinnreich-Levi, Deborah
736:Oxford University Press
644:Encyclopædia Britannica
482:Encyclopædia Britannica
688:Huot, Sylvia. 1999. .
287:Deschamps was born in
29:Francophone literature
407:Deschamps translated
185:Countries and regions
699:Studies in Philology
374:Le Miroir de Mariage
317:, and afterwards of
293:Guillaume de Machaut
639:Deschamps, Eustache
172:Short story writers
147:Writers by category
731:Grove Music Online
478:Eustache Deschamps
442:F. Andrieu § Music
339:Treaty of Brétigny
325:, and governor of
297:Orleans University
273:Eustache Deschamps
177:Children's writers
142:Chronological list
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55:Renaissance
36:by category
791:Categories
734:. Oxford:
708:Amphitryon
452:References
402:F. Andrieu
234:Literature
101:Classicism
96:Précieuses
753:required)
301:Charles V
157:Novelists
152:Essayists
121:Symbolism
88:Movements
722:(2001).
690:Speculum
351:ballades
111:Decadent
50:Medieval
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606:Sources
323:Dauphin
221:Portals
134:Writers
42:History
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359:Senlis
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319:Senlis
315:Valois
310:bailli
289:Vertus
277:byname
229:France
198:Quebec
193:France
106:Rococo
25:French
428:Notes
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345:Works
335:Reims
208:Haiti
167:Poets
565:ISBN
440:See
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