Monsieur (de) Sallebray (or Salbray, whose first name is unknown) was a 17th-century French poet and playwright.
He may have been a bedroom valet of King Louis XIV and published five theatre plays and some poems.
In his catalogue of the Bibliothèque dramatique de Monsieur de Soleinne (n° 1177), Paul Lacroix writes: "There's something of Corneille in this author, to whom Corneille sometimes borrows thoughts and verse. This response by Andromaque to Ulysse (La Troade) is sublime: Threat me to live and not to die.
Monsieur (de) Sallebray (or Salbray, whose first name is unknown) was a 17th-century French poet and playwright.
He may have been a bedroom valet of King Louis XIV and published five theatre plays and some poems.
In his catalogue of the Bibliothèque dramatique de Monsieur de Soleinne (n° 1177), Paul Lacroix writes: "There's something of Corneille in this author, to whom Corneille sometimes borrows thoughts and verse. This response by Andromaque to Ulysse (La Troade) is sublime: Threat me to live and not to die.