Anne Dacier (1654–1720)
Anne Dacier (1654–Aug. 17, 1720), born in Preuilly-sur-Claise, France, daughter of French professor of classical languages Tanneguy Lefèbvre. Dacier was a classical commentator, translator, and editor, renowned for her translations of Homer’s Iliad (1699) and Odyssey (1708) and for her work with her husband André Dacier on the Delphin editions of Latin classics.
Dacier’s treatise Des Causes de la corruption de goût (1714; “Of the Causes of the Corruption of Taste”) contributed to the querelle des anciens et des modernes, a dispute concerning the merits of the ancients (classical authors), which Dacier defended, versus the moderns (contemporary authors).
Alexander Pope consulted Dacier’s work extensively for his translation of the Iliad but was characteristically dismissive, mentioning her alongside Eliza Haywood in Book II of The Dunciad, and writing to John Sheffield, first duke of Buckingham, on the “French dispute concerning Homer”:
I cannot think quite so highly of the Lady [Dacier]’s learning, tho’ I respect it very much. It is great complaisance in that polite nation, to allow her to be a Critic of equal rank with her husband. To instance no further, his remarks on Horace shew more good Sense, Penetration, and a better Taste of his author, and those upon Aristotle's art of poetry more Skill and Science, than any of hers on any author whatever. In truth, they are much more slight, dwell more in generals, and are besides for the most part less her own; of which her remarks upon Homer are an example, where Eustathius is transcribed ten times for once that he is quoted. Nor is there at all more depth or learning in those upon Terence, Plautus, (or where they were most wanted) upon Aristophanes, only the Greek scholia upon the latter are some of the best extant. (Monday, 12 September 1718)Dacier was, however, recognized as a pre-eminent scholar by other of her contemporaries. French scholar and man of letters Gilles Ménage, for example, called her “the most erudite woman in the present or the past” (History of Women Philosophers, 1690). French author and salonnière Madame de Lambert, Marquise de Saint-Bris, wrote: “I esteem Madame Dacier infinitely. Our sex owes her a great deal. She has protested against the common error which condemns us to ignorance. As much as from contempt as from an alleged superiority, men have denied us all learning. Madame Dacier is an example proving that we are capable of learning. She has associated erudition with good manners” (New Reflections on Women, 1727). Dacier died at the Louvre in Paris on August 17, 1720.