WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Ninon de l'Enclos and her century cover

Ninon de l'Enclos and her century

Chapter 29: FOOTNOTES:
Open in WeRead

About This Book

The biography traces the life of a celebrated seventeenth-century salon hostess, born to mismatched parents and shaped by a father who encouraged intellectual independence, whose early education fostered a lifelong devotion to reading and free thought. It follows her emergence as a central figure in literary and social circles, hosting salons that brought together poets, playwrights, philosophers, and courtiers. The narrative sketches her romantic entanglements, friendships with prominent cultural figures, and encounters with political turmoil that led to flight and financial strain. Interwoven are accounts of theatrical and musical tastes, charitable work, wit and scandal, and reflections on aging, reputation, and the social position of women.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] De Mirecourt.

[2] De Mirecourt.

[3] This anecdote is attributed by St Simon to another source, and to a much later date; but it truly occurred as here recorded.

[4] “Est animal rubrum, callidum, rapax, et vorax omnium benificiorum. Mazarin is a misfortune to the queen, her evil genius, consequently ours. I hate him as I do the devil, and hold him for what he is, morus nebule, a creature destitute of honour, a mime in a red hat, and a long-robed charlatan.”

Guy Patin.

[5] Gayot de Pitaval, Causes Celébres.

[6] Du Tillet.

[7] St Simon.

[8] Maître Patelin.

[9] Leigh Hunt.