[A Popular History of France From The Earliest Times by Francois Pierre Guillaume Guizot]@TWC D-Link book
A Popular History of France From The Earliest Times

CHAPTER XLVIII
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_Esther_ and _Athalie,_ played in 1689 and 1691 by the young ladies of St.Cyr, were not regarded by their author and his austere friends as any derogation from the pious engagements he had entered into.
Racine, left an orphan at four years of age, and brought up at Port-Royal under the influence and the personal care of M.Le Maitre, who called him his son, did not at first answer the expectations of his master.

The glowing fancy of which he already gave signs caused dismay to Lancelot, who threw into the fire one after the other two copies of the Greek tale _Theayene et Chariclee_ which the young man was reading.

The third time, the latter learnt it off by heart, and, taking the book to his severe censor, "Here," said he, "you can burn this volume too, as well as the others." Racine's pious friends had fine work to no purpose; nature carried the day, and he wrote verses.

"Being unable to consult you, I was prepared, like Malherbe, to consult an old servant at our place," he wrote to one of his friends, "if I had not discovered that she was a Jansenist like her master, and that she might betray me, which would be my utter ruin, considering that I receive every day letter upon letter, or rather excommunication upon excommunication, all because of a poor sonnet." To deter the young man from poetry, he was led to expect a benefice, and was sent away to Uzes to his uncle's, Father Sconin, who set him to study theology.

"I pass my time with my uncle, St.Thomas, and Virgil," he wrote on the 17th of January, 1662, to M.Vitard, steward to the Duke of Luynes; "I make lots of extracts from theology and some from poetry.


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