Les Miserables

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888 Les Miserables


CHAPTER VIII


FAITH, LAW


A few words more.
We blame the church when she is saturated with in-
trigues, we despise the spiritual which is harsh toward the
temporal; but we everywhere honor the thoughtful man.
We salute the man who kneels.
A faith; this is a necessity for man. Woe to him who be-
lieves nothing.
One is not unoccupied because one is absorbed. There is
visible labor and invisible labor.
To contemplate is to labor, to think is to act.
Folded arms toil, clasped hands work. A gaze fixed on
heaven is a work.
Thales remained motionless for four years. He founded
philosophy.
In our opinion, cenobites are not lazy men, and recluses
are not idlers.
To meditate on the Shadow is a serious thing.
Without invalidating anything that we have just said,
we believe that a perpetual memory of the tomb is proper
for the living. On this point, the priest and the philosopher
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