Charles de Marguetel de Saint-Denis, seigneur de Saint-Évremond (born 1614?, Saint-Denis-le-Gast, France—died Sept. 20, 1703, London, Eng.) was a French gentleman of letters and amateur moralist who stands as a transitional figure between Michel de Montaigne (d. 1592) and the 18th-century philosophes of the Enlightenment.
Pursuing a military career in his early life, he won promotion for loyalty to King Louis XIV’s minister Cardinal Mazarin during the civil wars of the Fronde (1648–53). In 1661, however, a facetious letter of Saint-Évremond’s deriding the late Mazarin’s Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659) was accidentally brought to light, and he fled from France to escape arrest. Welcomed to London by King Charles II, he spent the rest of his life there except for an interval in Holland (1665–70).
Saint-Évremond wrote for his friends, not for publication; but a few of his pieces were leaked to the press in his lifetime. The 1705 edition of his works is largely superseded by a modern collection of his prose works and letters, published in 1962. His poems, mainly occasional pieces, are negligible; but Les Académiciens (1643), a comedy in verse, is still amusing, as is his prose comedy “in the English style,” Sir Politick Would-Be (c. 1664).
Saint-Évremond’s prose consists of letters and discourses ranging from hilarious satire (Retraite de M. le duc de Longueville, 1649; Conversation du Maréchal d’Hoquincourt avec le Père Canaye, c. 1663) to literary criticism, distinguished by antidogmatic common sense, on the various genres. It also includes a series of ethical writings, which plead for a prudently moderated hedonism and for religious toleration.