Charles Dufresny, Sieur de la Rivière (1648,
Paris -
October 6 1724, Paris) was a
French dramatist. The allegation that his grandfather was an illegitimate son of
Henry IV procured him the liberal patronage of
Louis XIV, who gave him the post of
valet de chambre, and affixed his name to many lucrative privileges. Dufresny's expensive habits neutralized all efforts to enrich him, and as if to furnish a piquant commentary on the proverb that poverty makes us acquainted with strange bedfellows, he married, as his second wife, a washerwoman, in discharge of her bill a whimsicality which supplied
Lesage with an episode in the
Diable boiteux, and was made the subject of a comedy by
J. M. Deschamps (
Charles Rivière Dufresny, ou le mariage impromptu).
His plays, destitute for the most part of all higher qualities, abound in sprightly wit and pithy sayings. In the six volumes of his Théatre (Paris, 1731), some of the best are L'Esprit de contradiction (1700), Le Double Veuvage (1701), La Joueuse (1709), La Coquette de village (1715), La Réconciliation normande (1719)
and Le Mariage fait et rompu (1721). A volume of Poésies diverses, two volumes of Nouvelles historiques (1692), and Les Amusements sérieux et comiques d'un Siamois (1705), a work to which Montesquieu was indebted for the idea of his Lettres persanes, complete the list of Dufresny's writings.
The best edition of his works is that of 1747 (4 vols.). His Théatre was edited (1882) by Georges d'Heylli.
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