The '''Lettres provinciales''' ('Provincial letters') are a series of eighteen letters written by
French philosopher and
theologian Blaise Pascal under the pseudonym Louis de Montalte. They are a defense of
Jansenist Antoine Arnauld, a friend of Pascal's who in 1656 was condemned by the Faculté de Théologie at the
Sorbonne in
Paris for views that were claimed to be
heretical. The first letter is dated
January 23,
1656 and the eighteenth
March 24,
1657. A fragmentary nineteenth letter is frequently included with the other eighteen.
Structurally, the first few letters ridicule the dispute between the Thomists and the Jesuits on the nature of salvation, rather asserting a Jansenist (often understood as crypto-Calvinist) understanding of salvation. The rest of the letters are mainly an attack on
Jesuit casuistry.
Letter XVI contains the famous quote, "I would have written a shorter letter, but I did not have the time."
The reaction to the ''Lettres provinciales'' was substantial. Pascal's use of wit, humor, and mockery in attacking existing institutions made his work extremely popular. However, its publication was primarily via the
underground press, and in
1660 Louis XIV banned the book and ordered it shredded and burned. Nevertheless, the letters survived and influenced the prose of later French writers like
Voltaire and
Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Said
Voltaire concerning the greatness of the letters, "All types of eloquence are contained in these letters."
See also
★
Casuistry
★
Port-Royal Logic