Partly autograph draft of a section of Siècle de Louis XIV

Identifiers

CMV:

CMV32830

Repository:

Shelfmark:

MS 15 (A), ‘Siècle de Louis XIV’

Title:

Partly autograph draft of a section of Siècle de Louis XIV

Collection(s):

Link to Archive Catalogue:

Link to Digital Resource:

OCLC Number:

Reproductions:

Content

People:

Voltaire: Author

Incipit Diplomatic:

L’affaire en Quietisme si malheureusement importante sous Louïs 14.

Incipit Modernised:

Language(s):

In Own Hand:

Brief Summary:

Partly autograph draft of a passage at OCV, vol.13D, ch.38, p.144-46, l.344-408

Detailed Summary:

An alternate version of Voltaire Foundation MS 15 (B). Besterman has incorrectly ordered the pages so p.2 should be read before p.1. Voltaire has included a second leaf, providing the text which forms lines 365-380 of chapter 38 (OCV, vol.13D). The reader therefore needs to read Wagnière’s text to the symbol, then read Voltaire’s addition, before returning to Wagnière’s text.

Voltaire writes that Quietism removed Cardinal de Bouillon from the court. He was the nephew of Turenne, to whom Voltaire notes that the king owed his salvation in the civil war. United by friendship with the Archbishop of Cambrai and charged with the king’s orders against him, he sought to reconcile his two duties and bring the two parties to conciliation. An Italian priest named Giori was a spy with the opposite faction and worked his way into Cardinal de Bouillon’s confidence, asking him for a thousand crowns which, after he had obtained them, he disappeared with. The letters between Giori and the Cardinal, Voltaire writes, were the Cardinal’s downfall at court, though he suggests that the Cardinal was punished wrongly. His letters show that he had conducted himself with wisdom and dignity, and that he had obeyed the orders of the king in condemning the mystics, whom Voltaire describes as the alchemists of religion. The king wrote a letter of reproach to Cardinal de Bouillon on 16th March 1699. After the rise of Telemachus in Europe, however, the Cardinal was recalled to court by the king but on the way he learned of the death of the Dean of the Sacred College in Rome and so instead took up the role instead. This embittered the king, who exiled the Cardinal for ten years. The Cardinal left France forever in 1710 at a time of great instability for Louis XIV and resigned from his position as the Grand Chaplain of France.

Genre(s):

Status:

Physical Description

Material(s):

Extent:

2 ff.

Format:

Dimensions:

198 x 142 mm

Hands:

2

Watermark:

P.1-2 are watermarked with indistinguishable text. P.3-4 feature a watermark of a bell and crown. Also featured in this watermark is the date 1742.

Countermark:

Binding:

Additional Comments:

There is a faint horizontal foldline suggesting that the manuscript may have been folded in this manner at one stage.

Materiality Keywords:

Decorations:

Undecorated

Additions:

There is a symbol drawn by Voltaire on p.2 that corresponds to f.2 written in his own hand. Revisions have been made throughout by Voltaire including crossings out and marginal notes. A title has been added to p.2, partly in the hand of Wagnière and partly in the hand of Voltaire reading: ‘page 363 à la fin apres cet mote a perdre’.

Marginalia Keywords:

Inclusions:

A sheet of paper containing notes about the content and provenance of MSS 15 (A) and 15 (B) in an unknown modern hand written in blue and red ink. The notes misattribute the text to ch.28 of the Siècle de Louis XIV, rather than Chapter 38.

History

Date:

Ownership:

Origin (transcript):

Origin:

Provenance:

Bibliography

Bibliography:

J. Vidal-Mégret, Collection d’autographes littéraires, lettres et manuscrits des XVIIe, XVIIIe, XIXe et XXe siècles. 2ème partie. Catalogue de la vente aux enchères du 26 février 1969 à l’Hôtel Drouot (Paris, 1969), no.156 (9).

OCV Reference:

OCV Manuscript Reference: