Le Lutrin, poème héroï-comique by Nicolas Boileau Despréaux
Published in the late 1600s, Nicolas Boileau Despréaux's Le Lutrin (The Lectern) is a masterclass in highbrow silliness. It takes the formal, heroic style of epic poems and uses it for the most trivial subject imaginable.
The Story
The plot is wonderfully simple. In a Parisian church, a treasurer places a giant lectern (a stand for holding books) right in front of the choir stalls. A Canon, who loves his afternoon naps in the choir, finds his light blocked and his comfort ruined. This sparks an all-out, albeit very polite, war. The Canon rallies his allies, the Treasurer gathers his supporters, and what follows is a series of escalating skirmishes. They don't fight with swords, but with decrees, meetings, and strategic maneuvering. The poem treats their arguments over furniture placement with the solemn weight of a nation's destiny, describing their "heroic" resolve and the "grave peril" of the offending lectern.
Why You Should Read It
The joy here is in the contrast. Boileau isn't mocking the church itself, but the human tendency to inflate our small problems into grand causes. He nails the absurdity of institutional bureaucracy and ego. Reading it, I kept thinking of modern workplace dramas or neighborhood association disputes—the stakes feel life-or-death to those involved, but look ridiculous from the outside. The characters aren't deep, but they're perfect archetypes: the lazy official, the stubborn administrator, the sycophantic followers. Boileau's wit is dry and precise. He doesn't shout the joke; he lets the ridiculous situation speak for itself through the overly dignified language.
Final Verdict
This book is perfect for readers who enjoy classic satire like Gulliver's Travels or modern workplace comedies. It's a great, accessible entry point to 17th-century French literature because the humor is so universal. You don't need to know the epic poems it's parodying to get the joke—we've all seen a petty argument blown out of proportion. History buffs will appreciate its snapshot of clerical life, and poetry fans will admire its technical skill. Just be ready for a different kind of hero's journey: one where the greatest enemy is a badly placed piece of church furniture.
Mason Williams
1 year agoAmazing book.
Noah Wilson
6 months agoFive stars!
Mary Perez
1 year agoGreat read!
Jessica Gonzalez
5 months agoCompatible with my e-reader, thanks.
Sandra Garcia
3 weeks agoEssential reading for students of this field.