Pierre Jean de Beranger
August 19, 2012
On this date in 1780, Pierre Jean de Beranger was born in Paris. Although he briefly attended a school based on the principles of Rousseau,
he was largely unschooled and illiterate when he was apprenticed at age
14 to a printer, who educated him. Jean was an eye witness to the
storming of the Bastille, and a life-long republican. By 1802, he was
living in a garret in Paris in great poverty, where he wrote lyric
poetry, songs and epics. He became a protege of Lucien Bonaparte, who
sent him money and gave him commissions, eventually helping him find
work as a clerk at a university. By 1813, Beranger was a highly popular
songwriter. His first collection of songs, including many high-spirited
satires on the clergy, was published in 1815. The song "Le Roi
d'Yvetot," a satire about Napoleon, literally traveled by word of mouth
and was sung throughout France. His second collection of songs, also
including anti-clerical works, was published in 1821, and lost him his
university position. He was tried, found guilty, fined 500 francs and
imprisoned three months. Reportedly, Beranger found his warm, furnished
jailroom preferable to his own cold lodgings. Beranger was imprisoned
for nine months upon publication of his fourth collection of songs. In
1848, he was elected by near acclamation to the Constituent Assembly.
Reluctantly, he was seated, but later quietly resigned. Numbering among
his friends were many eminent Frenchmen, including Chateaubriand and
Jacques Laffitte. D. 1857.
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor (FFRF)
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Sunday, August 19, 2012
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