Le Mondain

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Le Mondain 
by Voltaire
Maurice Quentin de La Tour, portrait de Voltaire (1735) avec agrandissement.jpg
Portrait of Voltaire from 1735, by Maurice Quentin de La Tour
Written 1736
First published in 1736
Country France
Language French
Subject(s) philosophy, paradise

Le Mondain ("The Worldling" or "The Man of the World") is a philosophical poem written by French enlightenment writer and philosopher Voltaire in 1736. It satirises Christian imagery, including the story of Adam and Eve, to defend a way of life focused on worldly pleasure rather than the promised pleasure of a religion's afterlife. It opposes religious morality and especially the teaching of original sin. Its points echo Voltaire's prose works Lettres philosophiques and Remarques sur Pascal. Voltaire noted a trend against using poetic forms to make philosophical arguments, and wrote Le Mondain in deliberate opposition to this trend.[1]

Content

The poem is set in the Garden of Eden but, contrary to the teaching of original sin, Eden is not portrayed as a paradise from which humanity would be expelled, but a state of barbarity. Adam's nails are described as long and dirty since no-one has yet invented a tool to trim or clean them. The implication is that the world we experience is hence not a prison into which we have been thrown as punishment.[2] Instead, the poem's closing line says, "Le paradis terrestre est où je suis" ("The earthly paradise is where I am.")

Reaction

Line 22 of the poem, "Le superflu, chose très-nécessaire" ("The superfluous, a very necessary thing"), became a common catch-phrase.[1][2]

Responding to hostile reactions in 1737, Voltaire wrote a poem in the same style, Défense du Mondain ou l'apologie du luxe ("Defense of the Worldling or an Apology for Luxury").[2] The themes of the two are somewhat different; Le Mondain focusing on the personal benefits of worldly pleasure, while the Défense talks about the social benefits of seeking pleasure.[1]

The French dramatist Alexis Piron wrote a poem in response, L'Antimondain, in 1738.[1]

The poem's publication caused a scandal which led to Voltaire fleeing in 1738 from Cirey-sur-Blaise in France to Brussels, where he spent three months before returning.[3]

Published editions

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Introduction" in Le Mondain Critical edition by Haydn T. Mason, in Œuvres complètes de Voltaire, Volume 16 (Voltaire Foundation, Oxford) ISBN 0729407942
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3.  Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Further reading

  • Cronk, Nicholas. "The epicurean spirit: champagne and the defence of poetry in Voltaire's Le Mondain", Studies in Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century 371 (1999), pp. 53–80.

External links

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