Online Encyclopedia

PIERRE NICOLE (1625–1695)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 663 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PIERRE NICOLE (1625–1695)  , one of the most distinguished of the French Jansenists, was the son of a provincial
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barrister, and was born at
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Chartres . Sent to Paris in 1642 to study
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theology, he soon entered into relations with the Jansenist community at
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Port Royal (q.v.) through his aunt,
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Marie
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des Anges Suireau, who was for a short time abbess of the convent . Some
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scruple of conscience forbade him to proceed to the priest-hood, and he remained throughout
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life a " clerk in minor orders," although a profound theological scholar . For some years he was a master in the " little school " for boys established at Port Royal, and had the honour of teaching Greek to young
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Jean Racine, the future poet . But his chief duty was to act, in collaboration with Antoine
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Arnauld, as general editor of the controversial literature put forth by the Jansenists . He had a large share in
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collecting the materials for Pascal's Provincial Letters (1656) ; in 1658 he translated the Letters into Latin, under the pseudonym of Nicholas Wendrock . In 1664 he himself began a series of letters,
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Les Imaginaires, intended to show that the heretical opinions commonly ascribed to the Jansenists really existed only in the
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imagination of the
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Jesuits . His letters being violently attacked by Desmaretz de Saint-Sorlin, an erratic minor poet who professed
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great devotion to the Jesuits, Nicole replied to him in another series of letters, Les Visionnaires (1666) . In the course of these he observed that poets and dramatists were no better than " public poisoners." This remark stung Racine to the
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quick; he turned not only on his old master, but on all Port Royal, in a scathing reply, which—as Boileau told him—did more honour to his head than to his heart . About the same time Nicole became involved in a controversy about transubstantiation with the Huguenot Claude; out of this grew a massive
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work, La Perpetuite de la foi de l'eglise catholique touchant l'eucharistie (1669), the joint effort of Nicole and Antoine Arnauld . But Nicole's most popular production was his Essais de morale, a series of short discussions on
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practical
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Christianity . The first
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volume was published in 1671, and was followed at irregular intervals by others; altogether the series numbers fourteen volumes .

In 1679, on the renewal of the persecution of the Jansenists, Nicole was forced to

fly to Belgium in
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company with Arnauld . But the two soon parted . Nicole was elderly and in poor
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health; the life of a fugitive was not to his taste, and he complained that he wanted rest . " Rest," answered Arnauld, " when you haveeternity to rest in!" In 1683 Nicole made a rather ambiguous peace with the authorities, and was allowed to come back to Paris . There he continued his
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literary labours up to the last; he was writing a refutation of the new
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heresy of the Quietists, when
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death overtook him on the 16th of November 1695 . Nicole was one of the most attractive figures of Port Royal . Many stories are told of his quaint absent-mindedness and unreadiness in conversation . His books are distinguished by exactly opposite qualities; they are neat and orderly to excess . Hence they were exceedingly popular with Mme de Sevigne and readers of her class . No other Jansenist writer, not even Pascal, was so successful in putting the position of Port Royal before the
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world . And although a
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modern appetite quails before fourteen volumes on morality, there is much solid sense and practical knowledge of human nature to be found in the Essais de morale . Several abridgments of the work exist, notably a Choix des essais de morale de Nicole, ed .

Silvestre de Saci (Paris, 1857) . Nicole's life is told at length in the 4th volume of Sainte Beuve's Port-Royal . (ST .

End of Article: PIERRE NICOLE (1625–1695)
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