Élie Catherine Fréron (1719–1776)
He was a French critic and controversialist.
He was born at Quimper in Brittany and educated by the Jesuits. He made such
rapid academic progress that he was appointed professor at the college of
Louis-le-Grand before he turned twenty. He became a contributor to the
"Observations sur les écrits modernes" of the abbé Guyot Desfontaines. The very
fact of his collaboration with Desfontaines, one of Voltaire's bitterest
enemies, was sufficient to arouse the latter's hostility, and although Fréron
had begun his career as one of his admirers, his attitude towards Voltaire soon
changed.
Fréron in 1746 founded a similar journal of his own, entitled Lettres de la
Comtesse de ... It was suppressed in 1749, but he immediately replaced it by
Lettres sur quelques écrits de ce temps, which, with the exception of a short
suspension in 1752, on account of an attack on the character of Voltaire, was
continued till 1754, when it was succeeded by the more ambitious Année
littéraire. His death in 1776 in Paris is said to have been hastened by the
temporary suppression of this journal.
Fréron is now remembered solely for his attacks on Voltaire and the
Encyclopaedists, and for the retaliation from Voltaire, who, besides attacking
Fréron in epigrams, and even incidentally in some of his tragedies, directed
against him a virulent satire, Le Pauvrediable, and made him the principal
personage in a comedy L'Ecossaise, in which the journal of Fréron is designated
L'Ane littéraire. |