Quick Facts
Born:
1612 or 1613, Normandy or Paris, France
Died:
Oct. 20, 1691, Paris

Isaac de Benserade (born 1612 or 1613, Normandy or Paris, France—died Oct. 20, 1691, Paris) was a minor French poet of the courts of Louis XIII and Louis XIV.

Benserade began visiting the salon of the Marquise de Rambouillet, the literary centre of Paris, in 1634 and wrote a succession of romantic verses that won him a reputation culminating in the “sonnets controversy” of 1649, in which his sonnet “Job” was pitted against Vincent Voiture’s “Uranie” in a lively court debate over poetic style. Although Benserade was adjudged the loser, he became a favourite and was repeatedly called upon to write libretti for royal ballets, a function that he discharged with a wit frequently regarded by his court audience as daring and even impertinent. Elected to the French Academy in 1674, Benserade was criticized in 1676 for his Metamorphoses d’Ovide en rondeaux. He distinguished himself, however, by his support of the candidacy of Jean de La Fontaine for the academy and by his defense of the rationalism of Pierre Bayle, which the censorship threatened.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.

lyric, a verse or poem that is, or supposedly is, susceptible of being sung to the accompaniment of a musical instrument (in ancient times, usually a lyre) or that expresses intense personal emotion in a manner suggestive of a song. Lyric poetry expresses the thoughts and feelings of the poet and is sometimes contrasted with narrative poetry and verse drama, which relate events in the form of a story. Elegies, odes, and sonnets are all important kinds of lyric poetry.

In ancient Greece an early distinction was made between the poetry chanted by a choir of singers (choral lyrics) and the song that expressed the sentiments of a single poet. The latter, the melos, or song proper, had reached a height of technical perfection in “the Isles of Greece, where burning Sappho loved and sung,” as early as the 7th century bc. That poetess, together with her contemporary Alcaeus, were the chief Doric poets of the pure Greek song. By their side, and later, flourished the great poets who set words to music for choirs, Alcman, Arion, Stesichorus, Simonides, and Ibycus, who were followed at the close of the 5th century by Bacchylides and Pindar, in whom the tradition of the dithyrambic odes reached its highest development.

Latin lyrics were written by Catullus and Horace in the 1st century bc; and in medieval Europe the lyric form can be found in the songs of the troubadours, in Christian hymns, and in various ballads. In the Renaissance the most finished form of lyric, the sonnet, was brilliantly developed by Petrarch, Shakespeare, Edmund Spenser, and John Milton. Especially identified with the lyrical forms of poetry in the late 18th and 19th centuries were the Romantic poets, including such diverse figures as Robert Burns, William Blake, William Wordsworth, John Keats, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lamartine, Victor Hugo, Goethe, and Heinrich Heine. With the exception of some dramatic verse, most Western poetry in the late 19th and the 20th century may be classified as lyrical.

Illustration of "The Lamb" from "Songs of Innocence" by William Blake, 1879. poem; poetry
Britannica Quiz
A Study of Poetry
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Meg Matthias.