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  1. Much of Péguy’s journalism, which he published in his own magazine, Cahiers de la quinzaine, argues the principles of Péguysme, his own blend of ideas. Gingras defined Péguysme as “a deeply personalist philosophy combining socialism, patriotism, and Catholicism.

  2. 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.

  3. The Cahiers de doléances (French pronunciation: [kaje də dɔleɑ̃s]; or simply Cahiers as they were often known) were the lists of grievances drawn up by each of the three Estates in France, between January and April 1789, the year in which the French Revolution began.

  4. Sep 1, 2024 · Besides running a bookstore that was a centre of pro-Dreyfus agitation, Péguy in 1900 began publishing the influential journal Cahiers de la Quinzaine (“Fortnightly Notebooks”), which, though never reaching a wide public, exercised a profound influence on French intellectual life for the next 15 years.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Oct 22, 2019 · The cahiers de doléance (French for 'ledger of complaints') were compilations of written views and grievances, prepared in early 1789 on the orders of Louis XVI. They were later presented to the Estates General.

  6. “Everything,” Péguy wrote in one of his most quoted aphorisms, “begins in mysticism [la mystique] and ends in politics [la politique].” Péguy wrote Notre Jeunesse as a response to—and an attack upon—a long essay by his friend Daniel Halévy about the Dreyfus Affair in the Cahiers .

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  8. Péguy himself enthusiastically embraced the Dreyfusard cause, and in 1900, having split from the Société he founded a bimonthly review, Les Cahiers de la Quinzaine [Fortnightly Notebooks], thereafter the main outlet for his political and literary writings.

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