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Henri Lambert de Thibouville

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Name
  
Henri-Lambert Thibouville

Died
  
1784

Role
  
Writer

Henri-Lambert d'Herbigny, marquis de Thibouville (1710 in Paris - 1784) was a notable French writer, wit and homosexual.

Contents

Career

Born to a conseiller d'Etat, he at first followed a military career, rising to the rank of mestre de camp in the regiment des dragons de la Reine. He then left the army for a literary career and linked himself to Voltaire, via an assiduous correspondence (more than 50 letters by Voltaire to Thibouville survive). His taste for the theatre and declamation allowed him to act as intermediary between Voltaire and actors putting on his plays, and sometimes between Voltaire and his editors.

Sexuality

In 1731 Thibouville had married to Louise-Elisabeth de Rochechouart, taking a female mistress, Melanie de Laballe (who had debuted at the Comedie Francaise in 1746 in the role of Agnes in Ecole des femmes and died of smallpox in 1748 aged only 16). This gave rise to the epigram

Melchior Grimm described Thibouville, probably around 1759, as "even more attached than M. de Villette to the cult of love which our sages rudely proscribe, but which those of ancient Greece excused with such indulgence", referring to his notorious homosexuality . Voltaire himself, in the first editions of La Pucelle d'Orleans, mentioned him alongside Honore-Armand de Villars, accused of the same vice, in the following verses:

In a letter of 21 May 1755 to Thibouville Voltaire denied being the real author of those lines - "My poor Pucelle has become an infamous p..., accused of insupportable vulgarities. It is still mixed up with satire; for their commodity of rhyme, scandalous verses have been slipped into it against the people to whom I am most attached." However, Voltaire was accustomed to making these disingenous denials and the veracity of this one is questionable.

Works

Thibouville's reputation rests more on his wit than his talent and his literary works have received little critical acclaim. The surviving ones include:

  • Thelamine, tragedy, 1739 ;
  • L'Ecole de l'Amitie, novel, 1757 ;
  • Le Danger des passions, ou anectodotes syriennes et egyptiennes, 1758 ;
  • Reponses d'Abeilard a Heloise, 1758 ;
  • Namir, tragedy, 1759;
  • Qui ne risque rien n'a rien, 1772 ;
  • Plus heureux, 1772.
  • References

    Henri-Lambert de Thibouville Wikipedia