''Live now and listen, do not wait in vain Until tomorrow; pluck life''s rose today.''Joachim du Bellay and Pierre de Ronsard are two of the major sixteenth-century French poets and leaders of the extraordinary group known as ''La Pl¿de''. Determined to create a national vernacular literature, the Pl¿de poets profited from an intense study of Greek and Roman models and from a creative use of classical mythology to produce a body of verse that reflects the vigour and variety of European Renaissance culture. Du Bellay broke new ground with the gritty realism and resentment of the Regrets and with his meditation in the Antiquities on the rise and fall of the Roman Empire. In a series of sonnet sequences (Cassandre, Marie, Astr¿ H¿ne) Ronsard developed the Petrarchan tradition of love poetry with a wider range of situations, a richer imagery, and more robust sensuality. His reputation as France''s greatest love-poet should not, however, obscure his excellence in an astonishing variety of f