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JOSEPH JOUBERT (1754–1824)

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 522 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOSEPH JOUBERT (1754–1824)  , French moralist, was born at Montignac (
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Correze) on the 6th of May 1754 . After completing his studies at Toulouse he spent some years there as a teacher . His delicate
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health proved unequal to the task, and after two years spent at home in study Joubert went to Paris at the be-ginning of 1778 . He allied himself with the chiefs of the philosophic party, especially with Diderot, of whom he was in some sort a
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disciple, but his closest friendship was with the abbe de Fontanes . In 1790 he was recalled to his native place to act as juge de paix, and carried out the duties of his office with
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great fidelity . He had made the acquaintance of Mme de Beaumont in a Burgundian cottage where she had taken
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refuge from the Terror, and it was under her inspiration that Joubert's genius was at its best . The atmosphere of serenity and affection with which she surrounded him seemed necessary to the development of what Sainte-Beuve calls his " esprit aile, ami du ciel et
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des hauteurs." Her
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death in 1803 was a great blow to him, and his
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literary activity, never great, declined from that time . In 1809, at the solicitation of Joseph de Bonald, he was made an inspector-general of
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education, and his professional duties practically absorbed his interests during the rest of his
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life . He died on the 3rd of May 1824 . His
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manuscripts were entrusted by his widow to Chateaubriand, who published a selection of Pensees from them in 1838 for private circulation . A more
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complete edition was published by Joubert's
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nephew, Paul de Raynal, under the title Pensees, essais, maximes et correspondance (2 vols . 1842) .

A selection of letters addressed to Joubert was published in 1883 . Joubert constantly strove after perfection, and the small quantity of his

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work was partly due to his
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desire to find adequate and luminous expression for his discriminating criticism of literature and morals . If Joubert's readers in England are not numerous, he is well known at second hand through the sympathetic essay devoted to him in Matthew Arnold's Essays in Criticism (1st series) . See Sainte-Beuve, Causeries du lundi, vol. i . ; Portraits litteraires, vol. ii . ; Ind a
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notice by Paul de Raynal, prefixed to the edition of 1842 .

End of Article: JOSEPH JOUBERT (1754–1824)
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