Free eBooks at Planet eBook.com 2081
Revolutionists are accused of sowing fear abroad. Every
barricade seems a crime. Their theories are incriminated,
their aim suspected, their ulterior motive is feared, their
conscience denounced. They are reproached with raising,
erecting, and heaping up, against the reigning social state,
a mass of miseries, of griefs, of iniquities, of wrongs, of
despairs, and of tearing from the lowest depths blocks of
shadow in order therein to embattle themselves and to com-
bat. People shout to them: ‘You are tearing up the pavements
of hell!’ They might reply: ‘That is because our barricade is
made of good intentions.’
The best thing, assuredly, is the pacific solution. In short,
let us agree that when we behold the pavement, we think of
the bear, and it is a good will which renders society uneasy.
But it depends on society to save itself, it is to its own good
will that we make our appeal. No violent remedy is neces-
sary. To study evil amiably, to prove its existence, then to
cure it. It is to this that we invite it.
However that may be, even when fallen, above all when
fallen, these men, who at every point of the universe, with
their eyes fixed on France, are striving for the grand work
with the inflexible logic of the ideal, are august; they give
their life a free offering to progress; they accomplish the will
of providence; they perform a religious act. At the appoint-
ed hour, with as much disinterestedness as an actor who
answers to his cue, in obedience to the divine stage-man-
ager, they enter the tomb. And this hopeless combat, this
stoical disappearance they accept in order to bring about
the supreme and universal consequences, the magnificent