what is property-第42章
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ure to use such languagethe period of social gestation are proportional to the loftiness of the capacity。 But while the physician; the poet; the artist; and the savant produce but little; and that slowly; the productions of the farmer are much less uncertain; and do not require so long a time。 Whatever be then the capacity of a man;when this capacity is once created;it does not belong to him。 Like the material fashioned by an industrious hand; it had the power of BECOMING; and society has given it BEING。 Shall the vase say to the potter; 〃I am that I am; and I owe you nothing〃?
The artist; the savant; and the poet find their just recompense in the permission that society gives them to devote themselves exclusively to science and to art: so that in reality they do not labor for themselves; but for society; which creates them; and requires of them no other duty。 Society can; if need be; do without prose and verse; music and painting; and the knowledge of the movements of the moon and stars; but it cannot live a single day without food and shelter。
Undoubtedly; man does not live by bread alone; he must; also (according to the Gospel); LIVE BY THE WORD OF GOD; that is; he must love the good and do it; know and admire the beautiful; and study the marvels of Nature。 But in order to cultivate his mind; he must first take care of his body;the latter duty is as necessary as the former is noble。 If it is glorious to charm and instruct men; it is honorable as well to feed them。 When; then; societyfaithful to the principle of the division of labor intrusts a work of art or of science to one of its members; allowing him to abandon ordinary labor; it owes him an indemnity for all which it prevents him from producing industrially; but it owes him nothing more。 If he should demand more; society should; by refusing his services; annihilate his pretensions。 Forced; then; in order to live; to devote himself to labor repugnant to his nature; the man of genius would feel his weakness; and would live the most distasteful of lives。
They tell of a celebrated singer who demanded of the Empress of Russia (Catherine II) twenty thousand roubles for his services: 〃That is more than I give my field…marshals;〃 said Catherine。 〃Your majesty;〃 replied the other; 〃has only to make singers of her field…marshals。〃
If France (more powerful than Catherine II) should say to Mademoiselle Rachel; 〃You must act for one hundred louis; or else spin cotton;〃 to M。 Duprez; 〃You must sing for two thousand four hundred francs; or else work in the vineyard;〃do you think that the actress Rachel; and the singer Duprez; would abandon the stage? If they did; they would be the first to repent it。
Mademoiselle Rachel receives; they say; sixty thousand francs annually from the Comedie…Francaise。 For a talent like hers; it is a slight fee。 Why not one hundred thousand francs; two hundred thousand francs? Why! not a civil list? What meanness! Are we really guilty of chaffering with an artist like Mademoiselle Rachel?
It is said; in reply; that the managers of the theatre cannot give more without incurring a loss; that they admit the superior talent of their young associate; but that; in fixing her salary; they have been compelled to take the account of the company's receipts and expenses into consideration also。
That is just; but it only confirms what I have said; namely; that an artist's talent may be infinite; but that its mercenary claims are necessarily limited;on the one hand; by its usefulness to the society which rewards it; on the other; by the resources of this society: in other words; that the demand of the seller is balanced by the right of the buyer。
Mademoiselle Rachel; they say; brings to the treasury of the Theatre…Francais more than sixty thousand francs。 I admit it; but then I blame the theatre。 From whom does the Theatre… Francais take this money? From some curious people who are perfectly free。 Yes; but the workingmen; the lessees; the tenants; those who borrow by pawning their possessions; from whom these curious people recover all that they pay to the theatre; are they free? And when the better part of their products are consumed by others at the play; do you assure me that their families are not in want? Until the French people; reflecting on the salaries paid to all artists; savants; and public functionaries; have plainly expressed their wish and judgment as to the matter; the salaries of Mademoiselle Rachel and all her fellow…artists will be a compulsory tax extorted by violence; to reward pride; and support libertinism。
It is because we are neither free nor sufficiently enlightened; that we submit to be cheated in our bargains; that the laborer pays the duties levied by the prestige of power and the selfishness of talent upon the curiosity of the idle; and that we are perpetually scandalized by these monstrous inequalities which are encouraged and applauded by public opinion。
The whole nation; and the nation only; pays its authors; its savants; its artists; its officials; whatever be the hands through which their salaries pass。 On what basis should it pay them? On the basis of equality。 I have proved it by estimating the value of talent。 I shall confirm it in the following chapter; by proving the impossibility of all social inequality。
What have we shown so far? Things so simple that really they seem silly:
That; as the traveller does not appropriate the route which he traverses; so the farmer does not appropriate the field which he sows;
That if; nevertheless; by reason of his industry; a laborer may appropriate the material which he employs; every employer of material becomes; by the same title; a proprietor;
That all capital; whether material or mental; being the result of collective labor; is; in consequence; collective property;
That the strong have no right to encroach upon the labor of the weak; nor the shrewd to take advantage of the credulity of the simple;
Finally; that no one can be forced to buy that which he does not want; still less to pay for that which he has not bought; and; consequently; that the exchangeable value of a product; being measured neither by the opinion of the buyer nor that of the seller; but by the amount of time and outlay which it has cost; the property of each always remains the same。
Are not these very simple truths? Well; as simple as they seem to you; reader; you shall yet see others which surpass them in dullness and simplicity。 For our course is the reverse of that of the geometricians: with them; the farther they advance; the more difficult their problems become; we; on the contrary; after having commenced with the most abstruse propositions; shall end with the axioms。
But I must close this chapter with an exposition of one of those startling truths which never have been dreamed of by legists or economists。
% 8。That; from the Stand…point of Justice; Labor destroys Property。
This proposition is the logical result of the two preceding sections; which we have just summed up。
The isolated man can supply but a very small portion of his wants; all his power lies in association; and in the intelligent combination of universal effort。 The division and co…operation of labor multiply the quantity and the variety of products; the individuality of functions improves their quality。
There is not a man; then; but lives upon the products of several thousand different industries; not a laborer but receives from society at large the things which he consumes; and; with these; the power to reproduce。 Who; indeed; would venture the assertion; 〃I produce; by my own effort; all that I consume; I need the aid of no one else〃? The farmer; whom the early economists regarded as the only real producerthe farmer; housed; furnished; clothed; fed; and assisted by the mason; the carpenter; the tailor; the miller; the baker; the butcher; the grocer; the blacksmith; &c。;the farmer; I say; can he boast that he produces by his own unaided effort?
The various articles of consumption are given to each by all; consequently; the production of each involves the production of all。 One product cannot exist without another; an isolated industry is an impossible th