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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
‘All the gold in the world and all the promises of heaven’ could not persuade Sainte-Beuve to carry on his study of jansenism into the eighteenth century. The spirit of Port-Royal was not there, ‘or at least it was only found in traces, dried up like a branch of a river that has turned aside into the sands and lost itself among the rocks...It is found even less in the entirely political Jansenism which was, or which appeared so considerable for a moment in the eighteenth century, and which allowed many to be of the party, without being of the dogma, or indeed, of religion at all’. The story of Jansenism after the death of Louis XIV is indeed a story of the war of the parlements against the crown – remonstrances, exiles. writs, denunciations, pamphlets; of the rising discontent of the lower clergy, demanding economic justice and a share in the government of the church; of the convulsionist movement, a strange spiritual underworld of masochism and miracles. Upon this barbarous scene of political and social strife and crude illiterate spirituality Sainte-Beuve turned his back, and those who have walked with him through the magic world of Port-Royal will understand his bitterness. The journée du guichet when Angélique Arnauld renounced human affections, the night of fire of 23 November when Pascal wept tears of joy, the cold ethereal beauty of the paintings of Philippe de Champaigne, the intellectual adventure of the alliance with cartesianism, the grammar, the logic, the translation of the new testament, the plays of Racine and the Pensées of Pascal – the eighteenth century can offer nothing like this.
1 Sainte-Beuve, , Port-Royal 6 (7) (8 ed Paris 1912) 7 vols, 5 p 483 Google Scholar.
2 Ibid 6 (13), in 8 ed 6 p 242.
3 For the fusion of jansenist and classical inspiration in his work see Marin, L., ‘Philippe de Champaigne et Port-Royal’, Annales 25 (Paris 1970) pp 9 Google Scholar et seq.
4 Clark, Ruth. Lettres de Germain Vuillart, ami de Port-Royal à M. Louis de Préfontaine, 1694-1700 (Paris 1951) p 162 Google Scholar.
5 Carreyre, J., Le Jansénisme durant ia Régence, 3 vols (Paris 1929-33) 3, p 391 Google Scholar.
6 Bremond, H., Histoire littéraire du sentiment religieux en France 4 (Paris 1920) p 244 Google Scholar. On Bremond generally see Henri Bremond, 1865-1913, Actes du Colloque d’Aix, 10.66 (Fac. Lettres Aix-en-Provence 1967).
7 Gazier, A., Histoire Générale du mouvement Janséniste, 2 vols (Paris 1922-4)Google Scholar.
8 Mme de Sévigné, 9 June and 31 July, 1680, Lettres, 3 vols (Pléiade 1960) 2 pp 734, 805. Compare the Maréchal d’Harcourt’s observation, ‘Un Janséniste n’est souvent autre chose qu’un homme qu’on veut perdre à la cour’, Frêche, G., Un chancelier gallican: D’Aguesseau, Trav. et recherches, Fac. de droit et des sciences écon. Paris (1969) p 40 Google Scholar.
9 Orcibal, [J.], Louis XIV contre Innocent XI[: les appels au futur concile de 1688] (Paris 1949) p 81 Google Scholar. An example of the refinement of definition needed is Neveu, Bruno, Sébastien-Joseph du Cambout de Pontchâteau, 1634-1600. et ses missions à Rome (Paris 1969) p 46 Google Scholar—’Plutôt que Janséniste, nous qualifierions . . . Pontchâteau de portroyaliste’. For Jansenism in Louvain, see Nuttinck, M., La vie et l’œuvre de Zeger-Bernard van Espen, un canoniste janséniste, gallican et régalien à l’Université de Louvain, 1646—1728 (Louvain 1969)Google Scholar.
10 Goldmann, L., Le Dieu caché: étude sur la vision tragique dans les Pensées de Pascal et le théâtre de Racine (Paris 1959)Google Scholar.
11 Kolakowski, J., Chrétiens sans Eglise, French trans A. Posner (Paris 1969) pp 350-62Google Scholar.
12 A modem historian favourable to Jansenism describes Jansenius as over-systematising Augustine, as Augustine had over-systematised Paul. Thus Jansenius was wrong, but Augustine was wrong before him, which neither side could admit in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries— Thomas, J.-F., Le problème moral & Port-Royal (Paris 1963) pp 166-7Google Scholar, 175. Though a friend of Jansenius, Saint-Cyran was not enthusiastic about the Augustinus, Orcibal, J., La spiritualité de Saint-Cyran (Paris 1962) p 81 Google Scholar; and it was Saint-Cyran who gave the decisive imprint to the movement which was to be called ‘Jansenism’, Orcibal, J., Jean Duvergier de Hauranne, abbé de Saint-Cyran, 1181-1638, 2 vols (Paris 1947) p 682 Google Scholar. Arnauld in turn derived his theology from Saint-Cyran and Augustine, not from Jansenius, Laporte, J., La doctrine de Port-Royal (Paris 1927) 1 (1) p xv Google Scholar, and Arnauld’s Apologie de M. Jansenius (Paris 1644) was more read in France than the Augustinus itself, Abercrombie, N., The Origins of Jansenism (Oxford 1936) p 214 Google Scholar.
13 In Du Mysticisme à la révolte. Les Jansénistes du XVIIe sihle (Paris 1968) A. Adam heads his chapter on this point: ‘The Birth of a Party’. For the importance of the communion issue see the local example in Gallerand, J., ‘Le Jansénisme en Blésois’, RHEF 55 (1969) pp 30–45 Google Scholar; for the issue of casuistry, L. Cognet’s edition of the Provinciales (Paris 1965) pp viii-x.
14 Jansen, P., Le Cardinal de Mazarin et le Jansénisme (Paris 1967) pp 45–53 Google Scholar, 72-5, 84-8.
15 Moss, C. B., The Old Catholic Movement (London 1948) p 78 Google Scholar.
16 Tans, J. A. C., ‘Les Idées politiques des Jansénistes’, Neophilogus (Groningen Jan 1956) pp 1–8 Google Scholar.
17 Clark, Ruth, Strangers and Sojourners at Port-Royal (Cambridge 1932) p 131 Google Scholar. A frondeur using the plea of religion to oppose the crown would not necessarily be insincere— for example the pious bishop of Agde became an ardent jansenist after his brother had been destroyed by the king; see Azema, X., Un prélat janséniste: Louis Foucquet (Paris 1963) pp 38–47 Google Scholar.
18 Namer, G., L’abbé Le Roy et ses amis: essai sur le Jansénisme extrémiste intramondam (Paris 1964) p 59 Google Scholar.
19 Ibid p 102.
20 Ibid pp 44-52.
21 An opponent of Jansenism expressed horror at the condemnation of scriptural phrases—’Qui n’en eut éTé effrayé?’. Mémoires de l’abbé Le Gendre, ed Roux, M. (Paris 1863) p 303 Google Scholar.
22 For the story of the magistrate of Grenoble who persuaded an opponent of Jansenism to use the book as a devotional manual by having it bound up with the title page of a Jesuit work, see Esmonin, E., ‘La société grenobloise au temps de Louis XV d’après les miscellanea de Letourneau’, Etudes sur la France des 17e et 18e siècles (Paris 1964) pp 484-5Google Scholar.
23 See Thomas, J.-F., La querelle de l’Unigenitus (Paris 1950)Google Scholar. He admits, however, that propositions 5, 38, 39, 59 and 61-3 deserved condemnation.
24 A later pope, Benedict XIV, conceded that this was wrong.
25 Parquez, [J.], [La Bulle Unigénitas et le jansénisme politique] (Paris 1936) pp 38-9Google Scholar.
26 For the global condemnation as the stumbling block, see the opinion of the benedictines of Tronchet in 1718 in Raison, L. M., Le Mouvement janséniste au diocèse de Dol (Rennes 1931) pp 59–60 Google Scholar.
27 This is the line taken by apologists for the bull (Carreyre, 2 xx pp 59, 160; 3 pp 341-4, 347-8). John Wesley was exaggerating when he spoke of‘that diabolical bull Unigenitus, which destroys the very foundation of Christianity’. It was possible to accept the bull, but by intellectual procedures that were hardly straightforward.
28 The connexion between Jansenism and the enlightenment needs a major study— ‘Ce Jansénisme des Lumières, si riche et si méconnu, mais si multiple et divergent’, Himelfarb, H., ‘Saint-Simon et le jansénisme’, Studies in Voltaire and the 18th Century 87 (Geneva 1972) pp 749-68Google Scholar. R. Shackleton discusses two philosophes with jansenist backgrounds and suggests the possibility of an alliance between philosophes and jansenists—until convulsionism made this impossible—in ‘Jansenism and the Enlightenment’, Studies on Voltaire and the 18th Century 57 (1967) pp 1388-96Google Scholar. The jansenist priest Gordon is one of Voltaire’s more attractive characters. But his kindness to l’Ingénu is repaid by his being converted to more sensible beliefs—he forgets efficacious grace for ever (L’Ingénu in Romans et Contes , ed Bénac, H. (Paris 1958) pp 248 Google Scholar, 262, 283).
28 Appolis, E., ‘Un prélat philojansénistc?’. La Régence (Centre Aixois d’Etudes 1970) p 243 Google Scholar.
30 Durand, [V.], [Le Jansénisme au XVIIIe siècle et Joachim Colbert] (Toulouse 1907) pp 348-9Google Scholar.
31 Carreyre, 2 p 102.
32 Ibid 1 p 142.
33 The parallel between Pascal’s words and the appeal to a general council is drawn by Roy, Le, La France et Rome de 1700 à 1715 (Paris 1892) p xix Google Scholar.
34 In 1688, Louis XIV had initiated such an appeal, see Orcibal, Louis XIV contre Innocent XI.
35 Godart, [J.], [Le Jansénisme à Lyon: Benoît Fourgon, 1687-1773] (Paris 1934) PP 199–206 Google Scholar.
36 Voltaire, Siècle de Louis XIV cap 37. ‘On parle du feu roi et de la Constitution (Unigénitos) avec une liberté étonnante’, letter of 16 October, 1715 in Denis, D. P., ‘Dom Charles de l’Hostellerie, 1714-20’, Revue Mabillon (Ligugé 1909) p 376 Google Scholar.
37 Barbier, , Chronique de la Régence et du règne de Louis XIV, 1718-63 (Paris 1857) 2 p 21 Google Scholar, October 1727 (compare p 54).
38 Mousset, [A.], [L’Etrange histoire des convulsionnaires de Saint-Médard] (Paris 1953) p 55 Google Scholar.
39 Ibid p 63; Barbier 2 p 199.
40 Mousset, pp 147-76; Felice, Ph. de, Foules en délire: essai sur quelques formes inférieures de la mystique (Paris 1947) pp 247-8Google Scholar.
41 Gagnol, , [Le Jansénisme convulsionnaire et l’affaire de la Planchette] (Paris 1911)Google Scholar. A case of 1787 in Pensa, H., Sorcellerie et religion . . . au XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles (Paris 1953) p 245 Google Scholar—but is this really jansenist?
42 In 1727, Paris, L., Histoire de l’abbaye d’Avenay (Reims 1879) 1 pp 491-2Google Scholar; in 1728, Dayon, [P.], [Amiens, capitale provinciale: étude sur la société urbaine du XVIIe siècle] (Paris 1967) p 423 Google Scholar; in 1729, Godart, pp 112, 117. The Saint-Médard healings began in the early thirties, Knox, R. A., Enthusiasm (Oxford 1950) p 376 Google Scholar.
43 Mousset, p 129; Gagnol, pp 120, 126. It is easy to ridicule these examples—but compare them with what Bremond accepts as genuine spirituality in L’ascension mystique d’un curé provençal, 2 vols (Fontenelle 1951).
44 Durand, p 317.
45 Fleury held that the convulsionists were imitating the protestant manifestations in the Appolis, Cévennes, E., ‘L’histoire provinciale du Jansénisme au XVIIIe siècle’, Annales 7 (1952) p 91 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Sainte-Beuve describes how, under persecution, collective hallucinations can begin, as in the mysterious singing at Port-Royal in 1706, when the abbess lay dying: ‘Le délire commence, mais sur un ton assez doux; les Convulsions, qui viendront vingt et un ans plus tard, seront moins mélodieuses’, Port Royal 6 (12), in 8 ed 6 p 188.
46 Préclin, E., Les Jansénistes au XVIIIe siècle et la Constitution civile du Clergé (Paris 1929) pp 180-97Google Scholar. Another case in Bost, Ch., ‘Documents: la conversion de Pierre de Claris’, Bulletin de la Société de l’histoire du protestantisme français (Paris 1924) pp 33–42 Google Scholar.
47 For the rôle of women in eighteenth century popular Jansenism see the complaints of Massillon and Languet—in Blampignon, L’ Episcopat de Massillon (Paris 1884) pp 254-7Google Scholar, and Carreyre, 2 xx p 56. Seamstresses were supposed to be especially inclined to Jansenism. See the observations of a curé of Orleans in 1752 in Marcilhacy, C., Le diocèse d’Orléans au milieu du XIXe siècle (Paris 1964) p 427 Google Scholar, and the phrase ‘plus janséniste qu’un valet ou une lingère’ cited by Shaw, E. P., The Case of the Abbé de Moncrif (New York 1953) p 34 Google Scholar.
48 Carreyre 2 xx p 285.
49 Davon, p 373.
50 There is an excellent Cambridge thesis by Dr N. W. McMaster on Jean Le Noir (‘The extremist jansenists, 1660-1703, with special regard to Jean le Noir and Gabriel Gerberon’). It has become customary to refer to the arguments in favour of the curés as ‘richerist’. Edmond Richer published a gallican treatise in 1611 claiming that power in the church should reside in the hierarchy of bishops and priests—by including the priests he gave his theory a democratic nuance, an indication that, alongside episcopal gallicanism, there was room for a ‘gallicanisme parochiste’. See Préclin, E., ‘Edmond Richer’, Revue d’histoire moderne 29 (1930) pp 242-69Google Scholar.
51 Fleury’s ‘avalanche’ of lettres de cachet did much to discredit this weapon of royal power, Antoine, M., Le Conseil du roi sous la règne de Louis XV (Paris 1970) pp 505-6Google Scholar. Examples of curés in prison or confined in monasteries in Levé, Mgr [Martial], [Louis-François Gabriel d’Orléans de la Motte, évêque d’Amiens 1683-1774] (Abbeville 1962) pp 97-9Google Scholar, 100 and Charrier, J., Histoire du Jansénisme dans le Diocèse de Nevers (Paris 1920) pp 99–100 Google Scholar. For humiliations inflicted on curés see Journal de Dom Pierre Chastelain, ed Jadert, M. (Reims 1902) pp 45 Google Scholar, 50, and Bergier, J.-B., Histoire de la Communauté des prêtres missionaires de Beaupré et des missions faites en Franche Comté, 1676-1850 (Besançon 1853) pp 168-9Google Scholar.
52 Appolis, E., Entre Jansénistes et Zelanti: le Tiers Parti Catholique au XVIIIe siècle (Paris 1960)Google Scholar. Taveneaux, R., Le Jansénisme en Lorraine, 1640-1789 (Paris 1960) p 356 Google Scholar, adds bishop Coislin of Metz to the Tiers Parti, an important addition as he was one of the first.
53 Gazier, 1 p 297, found only half a dozen all told in the jansenist necrologies.
54 Meyer, J., La Noblesse bretonne au XVIIIe siècle, 2 vols (Paris 1966) 2 pp 993-4Google Scholar, 998.
55 Barbier 2 pp 115-16 (April 1730).
56 Egret, J., Louis XV et l’opposition parlementaire 1715-1774 (Paris 1970)Google Scholar; Sherman, J. H., The Parlement of Paris (London 1968)Google Scholar, and on Law’s Scheme, Shennan in HJ 8 (1965); Doyle, W., ‘The Parlements of France and the Breakdown of the Old Régime, 1771-8’, French Historical Studies 6 (Raleigh, Carolina, N. 1970) pp 415-58Google Scholar.
57 Fleury had been diplomatic in his own diocese on the jansenist issue, Ardoin, P., Le Jansénisme en basse Provence au XVIIIe siècle, 2 vols (Marseille 1936) 1 pp 90-3Google Scholar. Probably, he had no real respect for the bull but was concerned only with authority in church and state (see his words in Gazier 1 p 300). He manoeuvred cautiously when he first came to power, but was utterly ruthless in enforcing orthodoxy— he was a ‘chef de parti’ not a national statesman, Hardy, G., Le Cardinal de Fleury et le mouvement janséniste (Paris 1925) pp 17–18 Google Scholar.
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59 Barbier 2 p 39 (March 1738).
60 Taveneaux, R., Jansénisme et politique (Paris 1965) p 41 Google Scholar. For what follows see also Plongeron, B., Théologie et politique an siècle âes Lumières, 1770-1820 (Geneva 1973)pp 102-8Google Scholar.
61 Life by Régnault, [E.], 2 vols (Paris 1882)Google Scholar. He was a combination of the slack aristocratic prelate, the fanatically orthodox churchman and the recklessly generous man of charity.
62 Guyot, P.-J., Répertoire universel et raisonné de jurisprudence, 64 vols (Paris 1775-83)Google Scholar and suppl 14 vols (1786) 57 pp 121-31.
63 Paris 1721, Journal et mémoires de Mathieu Marais, 174-37, ed Lescure, De, 4 vols (Paris 1863) 2 pp 177-8Google Scholar; Nantes 1729, Bachelier, , Le Jansénisme à Nantes (Angers 1934)pp 223-45Google Scholar; Arles 1734—an attempt by the archbishop to deprive the aged visiting bishop of Castres of the last sacraments, Rcmacle, L., Ultramontains et Gallicans au XVIIIe siècle. Honoré de Qttiqtieran de Betuijeu et Jacques de Forbin-Janson (Marseille 1872) p 168 Google Scholar; Rennes 1738, Raison, L.-M., ‘Le Jansénisme à Rennes’, Annales de Bretagne 48 (Rennes 1941) pp 245-77Google Scholar; Saumur 1739, ibid p 243; Paris 1738, Barbier 3 p 129; Amiens 1741, Levé pp 100-1); Douai 1741, Parguez p 110; Dax 1741, A. Degert, Histoire des évêques de Dax (Dax 1903) pp 391-7; Bayonne, 1743—bishop Christophe de Beaumont in earlier days (Régnault 1 pp 93-4)Google Scholar.
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65 Journal et mémoires du marquis d’Argenson, ed Rathery, E. J. B., 9 vols (Paris 1859-67) 8 p 313 Google Scholar (24 June, 1754).
66 How did archbishop Christophe differ from St Christopher? ‘Il ne veut ni porter Jésus-Christ ni souffrir qu’on le porte’, Lettres de Piron, ed Lavaquary, E. (Paris 1920) p 67 Google Scholar.
67 In enforcing respect for the bull, he accustomed people to pay no respect to the sacrament, Voltaire, Histoire du Parlement de Paris, cap 65.
68 On miracles Barbier 2 pp 44, 501, and Diderot, , Pensées philosophiques, ed Nikiaus, R. (Paris 1950) pp 38-9Google Scholar, caps 53-4. For martyrs, cap 55.
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