An Answer to a scurrilous pamphlet, lately printed, intituled, A letter from Monsieur de Cros, to the Lord ----

audiobook

An Answer to a scurrilous pamphlet, lately printed, intituled, A letter from Monsieur de Cros, to the Lord ----

by William Temple

EN·~1 hours·4 chapters

Chapters

4 total
1

AN ANSWER - TO A Scurrilous Pamphlet, LATELY PRINTED, - Intituled, A Letter from Monsieur de Cros, to the Lord ——

0:07
2

Il n' point de plus courte vie que celle d'un mauvais livre. Mr. Vaugelas.

0:04
3

LONDON, Printed for Randal Taylor near Stationers-Hall, 1693.

0:03
4

An Answer to a late scurrillous Pamphlet, Intituled, A Letter from Monsieur de Cros, &c.

1:06:31

Description

A spirited defence from a celebrated memoirist of the late seventeenth century, this pamphlet launches a pointed rebuttal to Monsieur de Cros’s thinly veiled accusations. Written in a lively, baroque prose that mixes classical allusion with sharp sarcasm, the author explains why he felt compelled to set the record straight, even as he privately preferred to avoid the quarrel. The text offers a vivid glimpse of the literary culture of Restoration England, where reputation and courtly intrigue were pursued as fiercely as any battlefield.

Readers will hear the author's witty catalog of de Cros’s deficiencies—an empty hero, a faulty structure, and a spray of unfounded claims—while also catching references to real political figures and the shadowy machinations of the era’s ministries. The piece balances formal argument with playful mock‑epic comparisons, making it a fascinating study of early modern polemics and the personal stakes behind public pamphleteering. This engaging, well‑preserved argument invites listeners into a world of honor, satire, and the stubborn defense of one’s legacy.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (64K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Colin Bell, Joseph Cooper and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2010-06-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

William Temple

William Temple

1628–1699

Best known as a polished diplomat and essayist, he helped shape English foreign policy in the age of Charles II and later turned his country retirement into a center of writing and reflection.

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