Alain CHARTIER Achille CAULIER.
Cy cõmence lospital... Lot 27
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Alain CHARTIER [Achille CAULIER].
Cy cõmence lospital damours.
Plaquette in-8, red morocco, triple fillet on the edge of the covers and wide right-hand frame formed by two double fillets criss-crossing in the middles, the fields between them decorated in small irons with fillets, flowers, circles, dots..., spine with 5 nerves finely decorated in small irons, interior lace, gilt edges (
Thibaron - Dor.
Wampflug).
Bechtel, 369/H-58 // Brunet, III-345 // CIBN, I-C-282 // Tchemerzine-Scheler, II-276.
(34f.) / a-c8, d10 / 20 to 22 lines, gothic car / 130 x 189 mm.
Second edition, and first in Gothic type, of this poem attributed by early bibliographies to Alain Chartier, because it was published in his works, and now referenced under the name of its true author, Achille Caulier, a Tournai-born priest to whom we owe two other works,
La Cruelle femme en amour and
Lay en l'onneur de la Vierge Marie.
L'Hôpital d'amour is a kind of response to Alain Chartier's
La Belle dame sans mercy by Alain Chartier. The poet falls in love with a lady who proves inflexible to his love. He returns home and, in a dream, walks the path
of trop-dure-responce, strewn with pitfalls and corpses in which he recognizes unhappy lovers, Philis, Héro et Léandre, Narcisse, Pyrame et Thisbé..., then arrives at the hospital d'amours where he is welcomed by the portière
Bel Accueil, the nurse
Courtoisie, etc., who make him take a drug. He then returns to his lady and gets
a frank kiss. He then visits the
d'Amours cemetery, recognizing the graves of Tristan, Lancelot... and even Alain Chartier... then, after a few more twists and turns, gets another kiss from his lady and wakes up.
The attribution to Alain Chartier is all the more questionable as the poet claims to have met him dead in the
cimetière d'amours. The true author's name can be guessed from the acrostic in the first lines of the first 6 stanzas forming the name
ACILLE.
The original edition was published in Lyon between 1489 and 1492. It was followed by the present edition, published in the same city by Gaspar Ortuin around 1490, dated according to the wear of the characters.
A large lettering on the title and a curious woodcut on the verso depicting Cupid, blindfolded, aiming his arrows at a crowd of men and women from all walks of life; in the background, Pyramus, Thisbe and the lioness are skewered on a pike.
A superb copy in a fine gilt Thibaron binding by Wampflug, who worked with Lortic before setting up on his own in 1855.
A bump to the upper cut of the second plate. Wood engraving partly formerly colored and partly faded.
Provenance: Léon Cailhava(October 21, 1845, no. 303), Nicolas Yemeniz(no. 1626) in lemon morocco, then Étienne-Marie Bancel in his current binding (bookplate, May 8, 1882, no. 240).
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