Premium OGER-BLANCHET
182
-
MAZARINADES] - . . In-4, 120 Mazarinades, some light spottin…
See original version (French)
182
-
MAZARINADES] - . . In-4, 120 Mazarinades, some light spottin…
See original version (French)
Estimate €500
Voluntary lot
Description
MAZARINADES] - . . In-4, 120 Mazarinades, some light spotting, ivory vellum.
Adieu (1') de Jules Mazarin à la France, à Paris et à messieurs du Parlement. Paris, Mathurin Henault, 1649, 6 pages. Signed Francese Cornelio. MOREAU 37.
- Burlesque advice from Mazarin's horse to his master. Paris, veuve Musnier, 1649, 8 pages. MOREAU 494, with enough wit and libertinage to make it one of the most curious pieces on the Fronde.
- Agréable et véritable récit de ce qui s'est passé devant et depuis l'enlèvement du roi hors de la ville de Paris par le conseil de Jules Mazarin, en vers burlesques. Paris, Jacques Guillery, 1649, 16 pages. MOREAU 55. This play appeared after the capture of Charenton.
- Agréable récit de ce qui s'est passé aux dernières barricades de Paris, décrits en vers burlesques. Paris, Nicolas Bessin, 1649, 23 pages. MOREAU 56 presents L'Agréable récit des barricades, a burlesque work of the Fronde, very witty and appreciated, compared favourably to Scarron. It details its various editions, often faulty, and notes that the third is the most complete. The author, probably Verderonne, adopted a satirical tone directed not against the court, but against the frondeurs in parliament and the bourgeoisie.
- Ballade à Jules Mazarin sur son jeu de hoc. Paris, 1649, 4 pages. MOREAU 563. This ballad was also printed under the titles Satyre de Mazarin envoyée à M. le duc de Beaufort, Ballade du Mazarin, grand joueur de hoc, and Ballades servant à l'histoire.
- Censor (le) politique au très-auguste parlement de Paris. Paris, Mathieu Colombel, 1649, 28 pages. MOREAU 668.excellent piece, in which we find very judicious observations on the tailles, on criminal justice, on sales by decrees or seizures of property, on imprisonment for civil purposes.
- Congé (le) du cardinal Mazarin, avec une anagramme sur son nom et surnom (S. 1.), 1649, 4 pages. MOREAU 754.signed P. M., avocat en cour. Execrable. The anagram of Jules Mazarin is, here, La luyne (sic) amère. It is a reproduction of some pamphlet against the Constable de Luynes, whose emblem was the herb of Aluyne or wormwood.
- Dernière (la) soupe à l'oignon pour Mazarin ou la Confirmation de l'arrêt du huitième janvier 1649, in burlesque verse. Paris, Nicolas Jacquard, 1649, 6 pages. MOREAU 1028. The text corrects an error of attribution: the works signed Nicolas Ledru are not by Isaac de Laffemas, but partly by his son, the abbé de Laffemas, a satirical author of the Fronde. Tallemant des Réaux describes him as witty but not very serious, the author of pamphlets against Mazarin. One source also confirms that Cardinal Mazarin mentioned him in his notebooks.
- Déroute (la) des partisans rostis, in burlesque verse. Paris, veuve Musnier, 1649, 11 pages. MOREAU 1051. Same play under both titles.
- Dialogue burlesque de Gilles le niais et du capitan Spacamon. Paris, veuve Théod. Pépingué and Est. Mau-croy, 1649, 8 pages. MOREAU 1072. Rare.
- Extase de la France mourant d'amour pour Jésus-Christ crucifié, in burlesque verse. Paris, Claude Morlot, 1649, 8 pages. MOREAU 1337. Fortunately the verses are not burlesque; but they are very bad.
- Fidèle traduction du sermon de Pâques fleuries, fait, en présence du roi et de sa cour, par un père théatin, dans l'église de Saint-Germain en Laye, en vers burlesques. Paris, Claude Morlot, 1649, 7 pages. MOREAU 1391. Is this not the translation of the pamphlet mentioned by Naudé on p. 190 of the Mascurat, under the title of : Sermon d'État prêché à Saint-Germain devant la cour?
- Flambeau (le) d'Olympe, dédié à monseigneur le duc de Beaufort, avec la voix et les vœux du peuple, par le sieur Barroys. Paris, widow of Anthoine Coulon, 1649, 8 pages. MOREAU 1398. On the summit of Mount Olympus, in Anatolia (sic), there is a fire in the middle of which a tree is born, without being burnt. This tree is the Duke of Beaufort.
- France (la) speaking to the sleeping Duke of Orleans. Paris (s. d.), 4 pages. MOREAU 1435. A very pungent pamphlet, which has only the misfortune of being one of the most common. It appeared in the early months of 1649.
- Nocturne (le) enlèvement du roi hors de Paris, fait par le cardinal Mazarin, la nuit des Rois, en vers burlesques. Paris, Arnoult Cottinet, 1649, 32 pages. MOREAU 2530. Naudé, page 285 of the Mascurat, says that this pamphlet is only an imitation of the Agréable récit des barricades. This is true. There is some wit in it though. There is another edition dating from 1649 and 32 pages long, but published by Pierre le Champenois. Arnould Cottinet also reprinted it in 1649, along with the Troisième babillard, the Coq à l'âne and the Anagramme prophétique sur la sortie du cardinal.
- Visions astrologiques de Michel Nostradamus sur toutes les affaires de ce temps et la confusion de Mazarin, en vers burlesques. Paris, widow André Musnier, 1649, 11 pages. MOREAU 4038. These visions are in general rather ridiculous; there are some very insolent ones, etc.
See original version (French)
Auto-translation. Refer to original language for legal validity.
Pictures credits: Contact the Auction House
You may also like