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Charles Péguy

Charles Pierre Péguy (French: [ʃaʁl peɡi]; 7 January 1873 – 5 September 1914) was a French poet, essayist, and editor. His two main philosophies were socialism and nationalism; by 1908 at the latest, after years of uneasy agnosticism, he had become a believing (but generally non-practicing) Roman Catholic.[1][2][3] From that time, Catholicism strongly influenced his works.

Charles Péguy
Portrait of Charles Péguy, by
Jean-Pierre Laurens, 1908
BornCharles Pierre Péguy
(1873-01-07)7 January 1873
Orléans, Third French Republic
Died5 September 1914(1914-09-05) (aged 41)
Villeroy, France
OccupationWriter
Alma materÉcole Normale Supérieure

Biography Edit

Péguy was born into poverty in Orléans.[4] His mother Cécile, widowed when he was an infant, mended chairs for a living. His father Désiré Péguy was a cabinet maker, who died in 1874 as a result of combat wounds. Péguy studied at the Lycée Lakanal in Sceaux, winning a scholarship at the École normale supérieure (Paris), where he attended notably the lectures of Henri Bergson and Romain Rolland, whom he befriended. He formally left without graduating, in 1897, though he continued attending some lectures in 1898. Influenced by Lucien Herr, librarian of the École Normale Supérieure, he became an ardent Dreyfusard.

In 1897, Péguy married Charlotte-Françoise Baudoin; they had one daughter and three sons, one of whom was born after Péguy's death. Around 1910 he fell deeply in love with Blanche Raphael, a young Jewish friend; however, he was faithful to his wife.

From his earliest years, he was influenced by socialism. He joined the Socialist Party in 1895. From 1900 until his death in 1914, he was the main contributor to and the editor of the literary magazine Les Cahiers de la Quinzaine, which at first supported the Socialist Party director Jean Jaurès. However, Péguy ultimately ended this support after he began viewing Jaurès as a traitor to the nation and to socialism. In the Cahiers, Péguy published not only his own essays and poetry, but also works by important contemporary authors such as Romain Rolland.

His free-verse poem, "Portico of the Mystery of the Second Virtue", has gone through more than 60 editions in France. It was a favourite book of Charles de Gaulle.

When the First World War broke out, Péguy became a lieutenant in the 19th company of the French 276th Infantry Regiment. He died in battle, shot in the forehead, near Villeroy, Seine-et-Marne on the day before the beginning of the Battle of the Marne.[5] There is a memorial to Péguy near the field where he was killed.

 
Charles Péguy Memorial

Influence Edit

 
Cover of Die Aktion with Péguy's portrait by Egon Schiele

During the Second World War both supporters and opponents of Vichy France cited Péguy. Edmond Michelet was the first of many members of the French Resistance to quote Péguy; de Gaulle, familiar with Péguy's writing, quoted him a 1942 speech. Those who opposed Vichy's anti-Semitism laws often cited him. By contrast, Robert Brasillach praised Péguy as a "French National Socialist", and Péguy's sons Pierre and Marcel wrote that their father was an inspiration for Vichy's National Revolution ideology and "above all, a racist".[6] It has been written that Péguy would likely have been horrified by his future influence on fascism.[7][8]

The English novelist Graham Greene alluded to Péguy in Brighton Rock, while The Heart of the Matter has as its epigraph a quotation from Péguy.[9] In The Lawless Roads Greene refers to Péguy "challenging God in the cause of the damned".[10]

The Swiss theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar, in the course of describing the history of art as an ongoing, sometimes more and sometimes less successful approximation of God's creativeness, noted that Péguy's Eve was a "theological redemption of the project of Proust", meaning that where Proust was gifted with memory and charity, the Eve of Péguy – not necessarily Péguy himself – was gifted with memory, charity, and direct knowledge of the redemption of God.[11]

English poet Geoffrey Hill published a book-length poem in 1983 in homage to Péguy, entitled The Mystery of the Charity of Charles Péguy.[12]

Famous quotations Edit

"The world has changed more in the last 30 years than in all the time since Jesus Christ." (said in 1913) [13]

"The sinner is at the very heart of Christianity. Nobody is so competent as the sinner in matters of Christianity. Nobody, except the saint." This is the epigraph to Graham Greene's novel The Heart of the Matter (1948).[14]

"It will never be known what acts of cowardice have been committed for fear of not looking sufficiently progressive." (Notre Patrie, 1905)

"Tyranny is always better organised than freedom".[15]

"Kantian ethics has clean hands but, in a manner of speaking, actually no hands."[16]

"How maddening, says God, it will be when there are no longer any Frenchmen."[17]

"There will be things that I do that no one will be left to understand." (Le Mystère des saints Innocents)

"It is impossible to write ancient history because we do not have enough sources, and impossible to write modern history because we have too many". (Clio, 1909)

"Everything begins in mysticism and ends in politics." (Notre Jeunesse, 1909)

"Homer is original this morning, and nothing is perhaps so old as today's newspaper."[18][19]

Works Edit

Essays

  • (1901). De la Raison.
  • (1902). De Jean Coste.
  • (1905). Notre Patrie.
  • (1907–08). Situations.
  • (1910). Notre Jeunesse.
  • (1910). Victor-Marie, Comte Hugo.
  • (1911). Un Nouveau Théologien.
  • (1913). L'Argent.
  • (1913). L'Argent Suite.
  • (1914). Note sur M. Bergson et la Philosophie Bergsonienne.
  • (1914). Note Conjointe sur M. Descartes et la Philosophie Cartésienne (posth.)
  • (1931). Clio. Dialogue de l'Histoire et de l'âme Païenne (posth.)
  • (1972). Véronique. Dialogue de l'Histoire et de l'âme Charnelle. Paris: Gallimard (posth.)

Poetry

  • (1912). Le Porche du Mystère de la Deuxième Vertu.
  • (1913). La Tapisserie de Sainte Geneviève et de Jeanne d'Arc.
  • (1913). La Tapisserie de Notre-Dame.
  • (1913). Ève.

Plays

  • (1897). Jeanne d'Arc. Paris: Librairie de la Revue Socialiste.
  • (1910). Le Mystère de la Charité de Jeanne d'Arc.
  • (1912). Le Mystère des Saints Innocents.

Miscellany

  • (1927). Lettres et Entretiens (posth.)
  • (1980). Correspondance, 1905–1914: Charles Péguy – Pierre Marcel. Paris: Minard (posth.)

Collected Works

  • (1916–55). Œuvres Complètes de Charles-Péguy. Paris: Gallimard (20 vols.)
  • (1941). Œuvres Poétiques Complètes. Bibliothèque de la Pléiade: Gallimard.
  • (1987–92). Œuvres en Prose Complètes:
    • Tome I. Bibliothèque de la Pléiade: Gallimard, 1987.
    • Tome II. Bibliothèque de la Pléiade: Gallimard, 1988.
    • Tome III. Bibliothèque de la Pléiade: Gallimard, 1992.

Works in English translation Edit

  • (1943). "Freedom," Commonweal, 8 January, p. 293.
  • (1943). Basic Verities. Prose and Poetry, Trans. by Ann and Julien Green. New York: Pantheon Books Inc.
  • (1944). Man and Saints. Prose and Poetry, Trans. by Ann and Julien Green. New York: Pantheon Books Inc.
  • (1950). The Mystery of the Charity of Joan of Arc, Trans. by Julien Green. New York: Pantheon Books Inc. [London: Hollis & Carter, 1950; Carcanet, 1986].
  • (1956). The Mystery of the Holy Innocents, Trans. by Pansy Pakenham. London: The Harvill Press [New York: Harper, 1956].
    • (1999). "The Mystery of the Holy Innocents," Communio 26 (2).
  • (1958). Temporal and Eternal, Tran. by Alexander Dru. London: The Harvill Press [New York: Harper, 1958; Liberty Fund, 2001].
  • (1964). A Vision of Prayer. Mount Saint Bernard Abbey: Saint Bernard Press.
  • (1965). God Speaks. New York: Pantheon Books Inc.
  • (1970). The Portico of the Mystery of the Second Virtue, Trans. by Dorothy Brown Aspinwall. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press.
    • (1994). "On the Mystery of Hope," Communio 21 (3).
    • (1996). The Portal of the Mystery of Hope, Trans. by David Louis Schindler Jr. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark [Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2003; Continuum, 2005].
  • (2009). "On Money," Communio 36 (3).

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "Peguy's Catholicism was closely allied with his love of France. Of him, as also of Psichari, it might almost be said that they were Catholics because they were Frenchmen. A non-Catholic Frenchman seemed a monstrosity, something cut off from the true life of his country. Some Catholicism is international or indifferent to country, with almost the motto, 'What matters country so long as the Church survives?' But that is not the Catholicism of these young Frenchmen, nor the Catholicism of the recent religious revival." – Rawlinson, Gerald Christopher (1917). "Charles Péguy," in Recent French Tendencies from Renan to Claudel. London: Robert Scott, p. 121.
  2. ^ "In France the classic type of the fervent but non-practising Catholic was probably best represented by Charles Péguy". — Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Erik von (1952). Liberty or Equality. Caldwell, Idaho: The Caxton Printers, Ltd., p. 194.
  3. ^ Ralph McInerny. "Charles Péguy" 30 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine, 2005.
  4. ^ MacLeod, Catriona (1937). "Charles Péguy (1873–1914)," The Irish Monthly, Vol. 65, No. 770, pp. 529–541.
  5. ^ Schmitt, Hans (1953). "Charles Péguy: The Man and the Legend, 1873–1953," Chicago Review, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 24–37.
  6. ^ Jackson, Julian (2001). France: The Dark Years, 1940–1944. Oxford University Press. pp. 4–5. ISBN 0-19-820706-9.
  7. ^ Sternhell, Zeev (1994). The Birth of Fascist Ideology: From Cultural Rebellion to Political Revolution. Princeton University Press. p. 35. ISBN 0-691-03289-0.
  8. ^ Zaretsky, Robert (1996). "Fascism: the Wrong Idea," The Virginia Quarterly Review, pp. 149-155.
  9. ^ Grahame C. Jones, "Graham Greene and the Legend of Péguy". Comparative Literature, XXI(2), Spring 1969, pp. 138–40.
  10. ^ Quoted by Grahame C. Jones, in "Graham Greene and the Legend of Péguy", fn2, p. 139.
  11. ^ Nichols, Aidan. The Word Has Been Abroad. p. 125. Catholic University Press, 1998
  12. ^ Hill, Geoffrey (1985). Notes – Collected Poems. London: Penguin Books.
  13. ^ Schofield, Hugh (7 January 2014). "La Belle Epoque: Paris 1914". BBC.
  14. ^ Mooney, Harry John; Thomas F. Staley (1964). The Shapeless God: Essays on Modern Fiction. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 51.
  15. ^ Gabay, J. Jonathan (2005). Gabay's Copywriters' Compendium: The Definitive Professional Writer's Guide. Butterworth-Heinemann. pp. 524. ISBN 0-7506-8320-1.
  16. ^ Rrenban, Monad (2005). Wild, Unforgettable Philosophy: In Early Works of Walter Benjamin. Lexington Books. p. 210. ISBN 0-7391-0845-X.
  17. ^ Gannon, Martin J.; Rajnandini Pillai; et al. (2013). Understanding Global Cultures: Metaphorical Journeys Through 31 Nations. SAGE Publications. p. 231. ISBN 978-1-4129-9593-1.
  18. ^ Homère est nouveau ce matin, et rien n'est peut-être aussi vieux que le journal d'aujourd-hui.
  19. ^ Notes on Bergson and Descartes. Translated by Bruce K. Ward. Cascade Books. 2019. p. 35.

References Edit

  • Adereth, Maxwell (1967). Commitment in Modern French Literature: A Brief Study of 'Littérature Engagée' in the Works of Péguy, Aragon, and Sartre. London: Victor Gollancz.
  • Halévy, Daniel (1918). Charles Péguy et les Cahiers de la Quinzaine. Paris: Payot et Cie.
  • Jussem-Wilson, Nelly (1965). Charles Péguy. London: Barnes and Barnes.
  • Jorge Juan Molinas Lara (2014). Crisis and commitment: Political ethics on Charles Péguy. The University of Valencia.
  • Moran, Sean Farrell (1989). "Patrick Pearse and the European Revolt Against Reason", The Journal of the History of Ideas,50, 4, 423–66
  • Mounier, Emmanuel (1931). La Pensée de Charles Péguy. Paris: Plon.
  • O'Donnell, Donat (1951). "The Temple of Memory: Péguy," The Hudson Review, Vol. 3, No. 4, pp. 548–574.
  • Rolland, Romain (1944). Péguy. Paris: A. Michel.
  • Schmitt, Hans A. (1967). Charles Péguy: The Decline of an Idealist. Louisiana State University Press.
  • Secrétain, Roger (1941). Péguy, Soldat de la Liberté. Montréal: Valiquette.
  • Servais, Yvonne (1950). "Charles Peguy and the Sorbonne: 1873–1914," Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, Vol. 39, No. 154, pp. 159–170.
  • Servais, Yvonne (1953). Charles Péguy: The Pursuit of Salvation. Cork University Press.
  • Turquet-Milnes, G. (1921). "Charles Péguy," in Some Modern French Writers. A Study in Bergsonism. New York: Robert M. McBride & Company, pp. 212–241.
  • Villiers, Marjorie (1965). Charles Péguy: A Study in Integrity. Londres: Collins.

External links Edit

charles, péguy, charles, pierre, péguy, french, ʃaʁl, peɡi, january, 1873, september, 1914, french, poet, essayist, editor, main, philosophies, were, socialism, nationalism, 1908, latest, after, years, uneasy, agnosticism, become, believing, generally, practic. Charles Pierre Peguy French ʃaʁl peɡi 7 January 1873 5 September 1914 was a French poet essayist and editor His two main philosophies were socialism and nationalism by 1908 at the latest after years of uneasy agnosticism he had become a believing but generally non practicing Roman Catholic 1 2 3 From that time Catholicism strongly influenced his works Charles PeguyPortrait of Charles Peguy by Jean Pierre Laurens 1908BornCharles Pierre Peguy 1873 01 07 7 January 1873Orleans Third French RepublicDied5 September 1914 1914 09 05 aged 41 Villeroy FranceOccupationWriterAlma materEcole Normale Superieure Contents 1 Biography 2 Influence 3 Famous quotations 4 Works 4 1 Works in English translation 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBiography EditPeguy was born into poverty in Orleans 4 His mother Cecile widowed when he was an infant mended chairs for a living His father Desire Peguy was a cabinet maker who died in 1874 as a result of combat wounds Peguy studied at the Lycee Lakanal in Sceaux winning a scholarship at the Ecole normale superieure Paris where he attended notably the lectures of Henri Bergson and Romain Rolland whom he befriended He formally left without graduating in 1897 though he continued attending some lectures in 1898 Influenced by Lucien Herr librarian of the Ecole Normale Superieure he became an ardent Dreyfusard In 1897 Peguy married Charlotte Francoise Baudoin they had one daughter and three sons one of whom was born after Peguy s death Around 1910 he fell deeply in love with Blanche Raphael a young Jewish friend however he was faithful to his wife From his earliest years he was influenced by socialism He joined the Socialist Party in 1895 From 1900 until his death in 1914 he was the main contributor to and the editor of the literary magazine Les Cahiers de la Quinzaine which at first supported the Socialist Party director Jean Jaures However Peguy ultimately ended this support after he began viewing Jaures as a traitor to the nation and to socialism In the Cahiers Peguy published not only his own essays and poetry but also works by important contemporary authors such as Romain Rolland His free verse poem Portico of the Mystery of the Second Virtue has gone through more than 60 editions in France It was a favourite book of Charles de Gaulle When the First World War broke out Peguy became a lieutenant in the 19th company of the French 276th Infantry Regiment He died in battle shot in the forehead near Villeroy Seine et Marne on the day before the beginning of the Battle of the Marne 5 There is a memorial to Peguy near the field where he was killed Charles Peguy MemorialInfluence Edit Cover of Die Aktion with Peguy s portrait by Egon SchieleDuring the Second World War both supporters and opponents of Vichy France cited Peguy Edmond Michelet was the first of many members of the French Resistance to quote Peguy de Gaulle familiar with Peguy s writing quoted him a 1942 speech Those who opposed Vichy s anti Semitism laws often cited him By contrast Robert Brasillach praised Peguy as a French National Socialist and Peguy s sons Pierre and Marcel wrote that their father was an inspiration for Vichy s National Revolution ideology and above all a racist 6 It has been written that Peguy would likely have been horrified by his future influence on fascism 7 8 The English novelist Graham Greene alluded to Peguy in Brighton Rock while The Heart of the Matter has as its epigraph a quotation from Peguy 9 In The Lawless Roads Greene refers to Peguy challenging God in the cause of the damned 10 The Swiss theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar in the course of describing the history of art as an ongoing sometimes more and sometimes less successful approximation of God s creativeness noted that Peguy s Eve was a theological redemption of the project of Proust meaning that where Proust was gifted with memory and charity the Eve of Peguy not necessarily Peguy himself was gifted with memory charity and direct knowledge of the redemption of God 11 English poet Geoffrey Hill published a book length poem in 1983 in homage to Peguy entitled The Mystery of the Charity of Charles Peguy 12 Famous quotations Edit The world has changed more in the last 30 years than in all the time since Jesus Christ said in 1913 13 The sinner is at the very heart of Christianity Nobody is so competent as the sinner in matters of Christianity Nobody except the saint This is the epigraph to Graham Greene s novel The Heart of the Matter 1948 14 It will never be known what acts of cowardice have been committed for fear of not looking sufficiently progressive Notre Patrie 1905 Tyranny is always better organised than freedom 15 Kantian ethics has clean hands but in a manner of speaking actually no hands 16 How maddening says God it will be when there are no longer any Frenchmen 17 There will be things that I do that no one will be left to understand Le Mystere des saints Innocents It is impossible to write ancient history because we do not have enough sources and impossible to write modern history because we have too many Clio 1909 Everything begins in mysticism and ends in politics Notre Jeunesse 1909 Homer is original this morning and nothing is perhaps so old as today s newspaper 18 19 Works EditEssays 1901 De la Raison 1902 De Jean Coste 1905 Notre Patrie 1907 08 Situations 1910 Notre Jeunesse 1910 Victor Marie Comte Hugo 1911 Un Nouveau Theologien 1913 L Argent 1913 L Argent Suite 1914 Note sur M Bergson et la Philosophie Bergsonienne 1914 Note Conjointe sur M Descartes et la Philosophie Cartesienne posth 1931 Clio Dialogue de l Histoire et de l ame Paienne posth 1972 Veronique Dialogue de l Histoire et de l ame Charnelle Paris Gallimard posth Poetry 1912 Le Porche du Mystere de la Deuxieme Vertu 1913 La Tapisserie de Sainte Genevieve et de Jeanne d Arc 1913 La Tapisserie de Notre Dame 1913 Eve Plays 1897 Jeanne d Arc Paris Librairie de la Revue Socialiste 1910 Le Mystere de la Charite de Jeanne d Arc 1912 Le Mystere des Saints Innocents Miscellany 1927 Lettres et Entretiens posth 1980 Correspondance 1905 1914 Charles Peguy Pierre Marcel Paris Minard posth Collected Works 1916 55 Œuvres Completes de Charles Peguy Paris Gallimard 20 vols 1941 Œuvres Poetiques Completes Bibliotheque de la Pleiade Gallimard 1987 92 Œuvres en Prose Completes Tome I Bibliotheque de la Pleiade Gallimard 1987 Tome II Bibliotheque de la Pleiade Gallimard 1988 Tome III Bibliotheque de la Pleiade Gallimard 1992 Works in English translation Edit 1943 Freedom Commonweal 8 January p 293 1943 Basic Verities Prose and Poetry Trans by Ann and Julien Green New York Pantheon Books Inc 1944 Man and Saints Prose and Poetry Trans by Ann and Julien Green New York Pantheon Books Inc 1950 The Mystery of the Charity of Joan of Arc Trans by Julien Green New York Pantheon Books Inc London Hollis amp Carter 1950 Carcanet 1986 1956 The Mystery of the Holy Innocents Trans by Pansy Pakenham London The Harvill Press New York Harper 1956 1999 The Mystery of the Holy Innocents Communio 26 2 1958 Temporal and Eternal Tran by Alexander Dru London The Harvill Press New York Harper 1958 Liberty Fund 2001 1964 A Vision of Prayer Mount Saint Bernard Abbey Saint Bernard Press 1965 God Speaks New York Pantheon Books Inc 1970 The Portico of the Mystery of the Second Virtue Trans by Dorothy Brown Aspinwall Metuchen N J Scarecrow Press 1994 On the Mystery of Hope Communio 21 3 1996 The Portal of the Mystery of Hope Trans by David Louis Schindler Jr Edinburgh T amp T Clark Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Co 2003 Continuum 2005 2009 On Money Communio 36 3 Notes Edit Peguy s Catholicism was closely allied with his love of France Of him as also of Psichari it might almost be said that they were Catholics because they were Frenchmen A non Catholic Frenchman seemed a monstrosity something cut off from the true life of his country Some Catholicism is international or indifferent to country with almost the motto What matters country so long as the Church survives But that is not the Catholicism of these young Frenchmen nor the Catholicism of the recent religious revival Rawlinson Gerald Christopher 1917 Charles Peguy in Recent French Tendencies from Renan to Claudel London Robert Scott p 121 In France the classic type of the fervent but non practising Catholic was probably best represented by Charles Peguy Kuehnelt Leddihn Erik von 1952 Liberty or Equality Caldwell Idaho The Caxton Printers Ltd p 194 Ralph McInerny Charles Peguy Archived 30 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine 2005 MacLeod Catriona 1937 Charles Peguy 1873 1914 The Irish Monthly Vol 65 No 770 pp 529 541 Schmitt Hans 1953 Charles Peguy The Man and the Legend 1873 1953 Chicago Review Vol 7 No 1 pp 24 37 Jackson Julian 2001 France The Dark Years 1940 1944 Oxford University Press pp 4 5 ISBN 0 19 820706 9 Sternhell Zeev 1994 The Birth of Fascist Ideology From Cultural Rebellion to Political Revolution Princeton University Press p 35 ISBN 0 691 03289 0 Zaretsky Robert 1996 Fascism the Wrong Idea The Virginia Quarterly Review pp 149 155 Grahame C Jones Graham Greene and the Legend of Peguy Comparative Literature XXI 2 Spring 1969 pp 138 40 Quoted by Grahame C Jones in Graham Greene and the Legend of Peguy fn2 p 139 Nichols Aidan The Word Has Been Abroad p 125 Catholic University Press 1998 Hill Geoffrey 1985 Notes Collected Poems London Penguin Books Schofield Hugh 7 January 2014 La Belle Epoque Paris 1914 BBC Mooney Harry John Thomas F Staley 1964 The Shapeless God Essays on Modern Fiction University of Pittsburgh Press p 51 Gabay J Jonathan 2005 Gabay s Copywriters Compendium The Definitive Professional Writer s Guide Butterworth Heinemann pp 524 ISBN 0 7506 8320 1 Rrenban Monad 2005 Wild Unforgettable Philosophy In Early Works of Walter Benjamin Lexington Books p 210 ISBN 0 7391 0845 X Gannon Martin J Rajnandini Pillai et al 2013 Understanding Global Cultures Metaphorical Journeys Through 31 Nations SAGE Publications p 231 ISBN 978 1 4129 9593 1 Homere est nouveau ce matin et rien n est peut etre aussi vieux que le journal d aujourd hui Notes on Bergson and Descartes Translated by Bruce K Ward Cascade Books 2019 p 35 References EditAdereth Maxwell 1967 Commitment in Modern French Literature A Brief Study of Litterature Engagee in the Works of Peguy Aragon and Sartre London Victor Gollancz Halevy Daniel 1918 Charles Peguy et les Cahiers de la Quinzaine Paris Payot et Cie Jussem Wilson Nelly 1965 Charles Peguy London Barnes and Barnes Jorge Juan Molinas Lara 2014 Crisis and commitment Political ethics on Charles Peguy The University of Valencia Moran Sean Farrell 1989 Patrick Pearse and the European Revolt Against Reason The Journal of the History of Ideas 50 4 423 66 Mounier Emmanuel 1931 La Pensee de Charles Peguy Paris Plon O Donnell Donat 1951 The Temple of Memory Peguy The Hudson Review Vol 3 No 4 pp 548 574 Rolland Romain 1944 Peguy Paris A Michel Schmitt Hans A 1967 Charles Peguy The Decline of an Idealist Louisiana State University Press Secretain Roger 1941 Peguy Soldat de la Liberte Montreal Valiquette Servais Yvonne 1950 Charles Peguy and the Sorbonne 1873 1914 Studies An Irish Quarterly Review Vol 39 No 154 pp 159 170 Servais Yvonne 1953 Charles Peguy The Pursuit of Salvation Cork University Press Turquet Milnes G 1921 Charles Peguy in Some Modern French Writers A Study in Bergsonism New York Robert M McBride amp Company pp 212 241 Villiers Marjorie 1965 Charles Peguy A Study in Integrity Londres Collins External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Charles Peguy Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles Peguy Works by Charles Peguy at Faded Page Canada Works by or about Charles Peguy at Internet Archive Works by Charles Peguy at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Charles Peguy at Find a Grave Charles Peguy biography by James Horrox at The Literary Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Peguy amp oldid 1167924050, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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