An excellent guide will be found in Victor Fournel's Le Théâtre au xvii. Siècle, La Comédie.
24
Translated into English for the first time in full, 1897, by T. T. Allen.
25
Or was this Rivarol's ironical jest?
26
The twelfth part of Marianne is by Madam Riccoboni. Only five parts of the Paysan are by Marivaux.
27
First authorised edition, 1762; surreptitiously printed, 1755.
28
The Swiss naturalist Charles Bonnet (1720-93) endeavoured to reconcile his sensationalism with a religious faith and a private interpretation of Christianity.
29
This phrase had been used by Boisguillebert and by the Marquis d'Argenson before Gournay made it a power. On D'Argenson (1694-1757), whose Considérations sur le Gouvernement de la France were not published until 1764, see the study by Mr. Arthur Ogle (1893).
30
Among writers who fostered the new feeling for external nature, Ramond (1755-1827), who derived his inspiration, partly scientific, partly imaginative, from the Swiss Alps and the Pyrenees, deserves special mention.
31
In the first edition, Delphine dies by her own hand.
32
See section VII (#x11_x_11_i73), this chapter.
33
The influence of the great actress Rachel helped to restore to favour the classical theatre of Racine and Corneille.
34
It is one of Mérimée's merits that he awakened in France an interest in Russian literature.
35
The History of Civilisation in France closes with the fourteenth century.