Pierre Thomas
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the New Orleans Saints Halfback, see Pierre Thomas (American football)
French literature |
---|
By category |
French literary history |
Medieval |
French writers |
Chronological list |
France portal |
Literature portal |
Pierre Thomas, sieur du Fossé (1634 - 1698) was a French scholar and author, and was the son of a master of accounts at Rouen. He was sent as a child to be educated at Port-Royal des Champs, and there he received his final bent towards the life of a recluse, and even of a hermit, which drew him to establish himself in the neighborhood of Port-Royal des Champs.
In 1661 he came to Paris, and in 1666 was arrested along with Louis-Isaac Lemaistre de Sacy, and after a month in the Bastille was exiled to his estate of Fossé. He later made yearly visits to Paris. Apart from his collaboration with de Sacy, Thomas wrote some hagiographic works and left Mémoires (1697-1698 and again 1876-1879), which are highly praised by Sainte-Beuve as being a remarkable mirror of the life at Port-Royal.
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.