THE STRICKEN YEARS
and a glass o f wine in the morning.’ Proudhon himself showed
no such evidences o f indestructibility. From Dampierre he told
Euphrasie that his hair was falling, as a result o f the erysipelas,
and that his beard, which had been blond when he set out on his
travels, had turned decidedly grey in a few days. These signs
seemed to belie his efforts to convince himself that his health
might really be improving, and it was with a rather desperate
bravado that he wrote to Delhasse from Dampierre, prophesying
‘a universal European bankruptcy, political, economic, social and
moral,’ which would precipitate the social revolution. ‘Feeble as
I am,’ he added, ‘I shall live long enough to see that downfall.’
In mid-September he returned to Passy, having gained a vast
pleasure from the kindness o f the friends among whom he had
travelled; he even thought of a final return to the Franche-Comtd,
where he might end his days in the congenial company and
pleasant air o f some village o f the Jura. But he was still anxious
about his condition. He jested to Beslay that, instead o f being
cured, he was more likely to become accustomed to his illness,
but he wrote to Delhasse in a more gloomy tone, as if he were
already conscious o f the proximity of his end. ‘I live in resignation,
so passionately does man cling to life, but if I were called from
this earth, I should not be at all surprised; I should only regret not
having been able to put my hand to my testament. My testament
— if I can say this without seeming to ape Jesus and Moses— is
the complete exposition o f my thoughts on Justice.’ By October
he was complaining to Cretin of the alarming asthmatic symp
toms which appeared with increasing regularity, and he declared
that he was weaker than ever before, with no sign o f a halt to
the frightening regression. ‘I do not think I can continue in this
way for another year, and I believe that if, after next summer—
supposing I get so far— I do not triumph over my illness, which
despite you has become chronic, I must make up my mind and
set my last wishes in order.’
Now, with the desperation o f a man who knows he has little
time, he forced himself to work in spite o f his sickness. ‘Every
day,’ he told Buzon at the end o f October, ‘from seven to noon,
I work at my task; a repugnant labour, inspired by sorrow, anger,
disgust, the desire for death, which I have not yet been able to
finish... Despite the gods, despite everything, I will have the
last word.’ And as he laboured, fighting often for breath, battling
martin jones
(Martin Jones)
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