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May 1998

An early dissident: Madame de Staël

by Renee Winegarten

There is a world elsewhere.
—Coriolanus Act III, scene iii

Exile is a terrible fate, a source of bitterness and grief since the time of the ancient Hebrews as they sat down by the waters of Babylon and wept. In our own tormented era, a great many people have felt what it means to be forcibly cut off, perhaps forever, from their treasured familiar culture. On this theme, Anne Louise Germaine Necker, Mme. de Staël (1766–1817), the great forerunner of the modern literary and political dissidents, still has much of value to communicate. For a woman as highly strung and imaginative as she was, exile figured as grimly as death itself—and she was by no means the first to think in that way. She often remembered that, nearly a hundred years earlier, the statesman and writer Viscount Bolingbroke had associated exile and death. Her thoughts also turned to the Roman poet Ovid sent into exile by the Emperor Au ...

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Renee Winegarten writes regularly about French culture for The New Criterion and is the author of Accursed Politics: Some French Women Writers and Political Life (Ivan
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 16 May 1998, on page 17
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