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against it would encounter only its envelope; it would be repelled

after a sanguinary struggle; its germ lying too deep to be extirpated。



And when; at length; after religion and custom; we regard the

State; that is to say; the armed power possessing both physical force

and moral authority; we find for it an almost equally noble origin。  It

has; in Europe at least; from Russia to Portugal and from Norway to

the two Sicilies; in its origin and essence; a military foundation in

which heroism constitutes itself the champion of right。  Here and there

in the chaos of tribes and crumbling societies; some man has arisen

who; through his ascendancy; rallies around him a loyal band; driving

out intruders; overcoming brigands; re…establishing order; reviving

agriculture; founding a patrimony; and transmitting as property to his

descendants his office of hereditary justiciary and born general。

Through this permanent delegation a great public office is removed

from competition; fixed in one family; sequestered in safe hands;

thenceforth the nation possesses a vital center and each right obtains

a visible protector。  If the sovereign confines himself to his

traditional responsibilities; is restrained in despotic tendencies;

and avoids falling into egoism; he provides the country with the best

government of which the world has any knowledge。  Not alone is it the

most stable; capable of continuation; and the most suitable for

maintaining together a body of 20 or 30 million people; but again one

of the most noble because devotion dignifies both command and

obedience and; through the prolongation of military tradition;

fidelity and honor; from grade to grade; attaches the leader to his

duty and the soldier to his commander。    Such are the strikingly

valid claims of social traditions which we may; similar to an

instinct; consider as being a blind form of reason。  That which makes

it fully legitimate is that reason herself; to become efficient; is

obliged to borrow its form。  A doctrine becomes inspiring only through

a blind medium。  To become of practical use; to take upon itself the

government of souls; to be transformed into a spring of action; it

must be deposited in minds given up to systematic belief; of fixed

habits; of established tendencies; of domestic traditions and

prejudice; and that it; from the agitated heights of the intellect;

descends into and become amalgamated with the passive forces of the

will; then only does it form a part of the character and become a

social force。  At the same time; however; it ceases to be critical and

clairvoyant; it no longer tolerates doubt and contradiction; nor

admits further restrictions or nice distinctions; it is either no

longer cognizant of; or badly appreciates; its own evidences。  We of

the present day believe in infinite progress about the same as people

once believed in original sin; we still receive ready…made opinions

from above; the Academy of Sciences occupying in many respects the

place of the ancient councils。  Except with a few special savants;

belief and obedience will always be unthinking; while Reason would

wrongfully resent the leadership of prejudice in human affairs; since;

to lead; it must itself become prejudiced。





III。  REASON AT WAR WITH ILLUSION。



The classic intellect incapable of accepting this point of view。  …

…  The past and present usefulness of tradition are misunderstood。  

Reason undertakes to set them aside。



  Unfortunately; in the eighteenth century; reason was classic; not

only the aptitude but the documents which enable it to comprehend

tradition were absent。   In the first place; there was no knowledge of

history; learning was; due to its dullness and tediousness; refused;

learned compilations; vast collections of extracts and the slow work

of criticism were held in disdain。  Voltaire made fun of the

Benedictines。  Montesquieu; to ensure the acceptance of his 〃Esprit des

lois;〃 indulged in wit about laws。  Reynal; to give an impetus to his

history of commerce in the Indies; welded to it the declamation of

Diderot。  The Abbé Barthélemy covered over the realities of Greek

manners and customs with his literary varnish。  Science was expected to

be either epigrammatic or oratorical; crude or technical details would

have been objectionable to a public composed of people of the good

society; correctness of style therefore drove out or falsified those

small significant facts which give a peculiar sense and their original

relief to ancient personalities。    Even if writers had dared to

note them; their sense and bearing would not have been understood。  The

sympathetic imagination did not exist'9'; people were incapable of

going out of themselves; of betaking themselves to distant points of

view; of conjecturing the peculiar and violent states of the human

brain; the decisive and fruitful moment during which it gives birth to

a vigorous creation; a religion destined to rule; a state that is sure

to endure。  The imagination of Man is limited to personal experiences;

and where in their experience; could individuals in this society have

found the material which would have allowed them to imagine the

convulsions of a delivery? How could minds; as polished and as amiable

as these; fully adopt the sentiments of an apostle; of a monk; of a

barbarian or feudal founder; see these in the milieu which explains

and justifies them; picture to themselves the surrounding crowd; at

first souls in despair and haunted by mystic dreams; and next the rude

and violent intellects given up to instinct and imagery; thinking with

half…visions; their resolve consisting of irresistible impulses? A

speculative reasoning of this stamp could not imagine figures like

these。  To bring them within its rectilinear limits they require to be

reduced and made over; the Macbeth of Shakespeare becomes that of

Ducis; and the Mahomet of the Koran that of Voltaire。  Consequently; as

they failed to see souls; they misconceived institutions。  The

suspicion that truth could have been conveyed only through the medium

of legends; that justice could have been established only by force;

that religion was obliged to assume the sacerdotal form; that the

State necessarily took a military form; and that the Gothic edifice

possessed; as well as other structures; its own architecture;

proportions; balance of parts; solidity; and even beauty; never

entered their heads。    Furthermore; unable to comprehend the past;

they could not comprehend the present。  They knew nothing about the

mechanic; the provincial bourgeois; or even the lesser nobility; these

were seen only far away in the distance; half…effaced; and wholly

transformed through philosophic theories and sentimental haze。  〃Two or

three thousand〃'10' polished and cultivated individuals formed the

circle of ladies and gentlemen; the so…called honest folks; and they

never went outside of their own circle。  If they fleeting had a glimpse

of the people from their chateaux and on their journeys; it was in

passing; the same as of their post…horses; or of the cattle on their

farms; showing compassion undoubtedly; but never divining their

anxious thoughts and their obscure instincts。  The structure of the

still primitive mind of the people was never imagined; the paucity and

tenacity of their ideas; the narrowness of their mechanical; routine

existence; devoted to manual labor; absorbed with the anxieties for

daily bread; confined to the bounds of a visible horizon; their

attachment to the local saint; to rites; to the priest; their deep…

seated rancor; their inveterate distrust; their credulity growing out

of the imagination; their inability to comprehend abstract rights; the

law and public affairs; the hidden operation by which their brains

would transform political novelties into nursery fables or into ghost

stories; their contagious infatuations like those of sheep; their

blind fury like that of bulls; and all th

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