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+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Atheism Among the People, by Alphonse de Lamartine.
+ </title>
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Atheism Among the People, by Alphonse de Lamartine
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Atheism Among the People
+
+Author: Alphonse de Lamartine
+
+Translator: Edward E. Hale
+ Francis Le Baron
+
+Release Date: May 5, 2008 [EBook #25339]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATHEISM AMONG THE PEOPLE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marilynda Fraser-Cunliffe, Sam W. and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This file was made using scans of public domain works
+from the University of Michigan Digital Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">LAMARTINE ON ATHEISM.</p>
+
+<h1 style="padding-top: 3em;">ATHEISM<br />
+<br />
+<span style="font-size: small;">AMONG</span><br />
+<br />
+THE PEOPLE</h1>
+
+<p class="center" style="padding-top: 3em;">BY</p>
+
+<h2 style="padding-top: 3em;">ALPHONSE DE LAMARTINE.</h2>
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+
+<p class="center" style="padding-top: 5em;">BOSTON:<br />
+PHILLIPS, SAMPSON AND COMPANY,<br />
+110 <span class="smcap">Washington Street</span>.<br />
+1850.</p>
+
+
+
+<p class="center" style="padding-top: 7em;">
+Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1850,<br />
+<small>BY PHILLIPS, SAMPSON AND COMPANY,</small><br />
+In the Clerk&rsquo;s Office of the District Court of Massachusetts.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center" style="padding-top: 5em; font-size: small;">STEREOTYPED BY<br />
+CHARLES W. COLTON,<br />
+No. 2 Water Street.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>ADVERTISEMENT.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Through the past year, M. de Lamartine has
+published a monthly journal, called The People&rsquo;s
+Counsellor, &ldquo;<i>Le Conseiller du Peuple</i>.&rdquo; Each
+number of this journal contains an Essay, by him,
+on some specific subject, of pressing interest to
+the French people,&mdash;generally, some political
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>As a companion to one of these numbers, he
+published the Essay which we here translate.
+We have thought that its interest and merit are
+by no means local; but, that it will be read with
+as much interest in America, as in France.</p>
+
+<p class="sig"><span class="smcap">Edward E. Hale</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Francis Le Baron</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="address"><i>Worcester, Mass. March 7, 1850.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg&nbsp;7]</a></span></p>
+
+<h1 style="padding-top: 3em;">ATHEISM AMONG THE PEOPLE.</h1>
+
+
+
+<h2 style="padding-top: 3em;">I.</h2>
+
+
+<p>I have often asked myself, &ldquo;Why
+am I a Republican?&mdash;Why am I the
+partizan of equitable Democracy, organized
+and established as a good and
+strong Government?&mdash;Why have I a
+real love of the People&mdash;a love always
+serious, and sometimes even tender?&mdash;What
+has the People done for me? I
+was not born in the ranks of the People.
+I was born between the high
+Aristocracy and what was then called
+<em>the inferior classes</em>, in the days when
+there were classes, where are now
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg&nbsp;8]</a></span>
+equal citizens in various callings. I
+never starved in the People&rsquo;s famine;
+I never groaned, personally, in the
+People&rsquo;s miseries; I never sweat with
+its sweat; I was never benumbed with
+its cold. Why then, I repeat it, do I
+hunger in its hunger, thirst with its
+thirst, warm under its sun, freeze under
+its cold, grieve under its sorrows?
+Why should I not care for it as little
+as for that which passes at the antipodes?&mdash;turn
+away my eyes, close my
+ears, think of other things, and wrap
+myself up in that soft, thick garment of
+indifference and egotism, in which I can
+shelter myself, and indulge my separate
+personal tastes, without asking whether,
+below me,&mdash;in street, garret, or cottage,
+there is a rich People, or a beggar People;
+a religious People, or an atheistic
+People; a People of idlers, or of workers;
+a People of Helots, or of citizens?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg&nbsp;9]</a></span>
+And whenever I have thus questioned
+myself, I have thus answered myself:&mdash;&ldquo;I
+love the people because I believe in
+God. For, if I did not believe in God,
+what would the people be to me? I
+should enjoy at ease that lucky throw
+of the dice, which chance had turned
+up for me, the day of my birth; and,
+with a secret, savage joy, I should say,
+&lsquo;So much the worse for the losers!&mdash;the
+world is a lottery. Woe to the
+conquered!&rsquo;&rdquo; I cannot, indeed, say
+this without shame and cruelty,&mdash;for,
+I repeat it, <em>I believe in God</em>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>II.</h2>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what is there in common,&rdquo; you
+will say to me, &ldquo;between your belief in
+God and your love for the People?&rdquo; I
+answer: My belief in God is not that
+vague, confused, indefinite, shadowy
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg&nbsp;10]</a></span>
+sentiment which compels one to suppose
+a principle because he sees consequences,&mdash;a
+cause where he contemplates
+effects, a source where he sees
+the rush of the inexhaustible river of
+life, of forms, of substances, absorbed
+for ever in the ocean, and renewed unceasingly
+from creation. The belief in
+God, which is thus perceived and conceived,
+is, so to speak, only a mechanical
+sensation of the interior eye,&mdash;an
+instinct of intelligence, in some sort
+forced and brutal,&mdash;an evidence, not
+reasonable, not religious, not perfect,
+not meritorious; but like the material
+evidence of light, which enters our eyes
+when we open them to the day; like
+the evidence of sound which we hear
+when we listen to any noise; like the
+evidence of touch when we plunge our
+limbs in the waves of the sea, and
+shiver at the contact. This elementary,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg&nbsp;11]</a></span>
+gross, instinctive, involuntary belief in
+God, is not the living, intelligent, active,
+and legislative faith of humanity. It is
+almost animal. I am persuaded that if
+the brutes even,&mdash;if the dog, the horse,
+the ox, the elephant, the bird, could
+speak, they would confess, that, at the
+bottom of their nature, their instincts,
+their sensations, their obtuse intelligence,
+assisted by organs less perfect
+than ours, there is a clouded, secret sentiment
+of this existence of a superior
+and primordial Being, from whom all
+emanates, and to whom all returns,&mdash;a
+shadow of the divinity upon their
+being, a distant approach to the conception
+of that idea, which fills the
+worlds, and for which alone the worlds
+have been made,&mdash;the idea of God!</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>This may be a bold, but it is not an
+impious supposition. For God, having
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg&nbsp;12]</a></span>
+made all things for himself alone, must
+have placed, upon all that he made, an
+impress of himself; more or less clear,
+more or less luminous, more or less
+profound, a presentiment or a remembrance
+of a Creator. But this faith,
+when it stops here, is not worthy of the
+name. It is a species of <em>Pantheism</em>,
+that is to say, a confused &ldquo;visibility,&rdquo; a
+physical working together into indissoluble
+union of something impersonal,
+something blind, something fatal, and
+something divine, which, in the elements
+composing the universe, we may
+call <span class="smcap">God</span>. But this &ldquo;visibility&rdquo; can
+give to man no moral decision,&mdash;can
+give to God no worship. The Pantheism
+of which I am accused as a philosopher
+and poet, that Pantheism which
+I have always scorned as a contradiction
+and as a blasphemy, resembles
+entirely the reasoning of the man who
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg&nbsp;13]</a></span>
+should say, &ldquo;I see an innumerable
+multitude of rays, therefore there is no
+sun.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>III.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Faith, or reasonable and effective
+belief in God, proceeds, undoubtedly,
+from this first instinct; but in proportion
+as intelligence develops itself, and
+human thought expands, it goes from
+knowledge to knowledge, from conclusion
+to conclusion, from light to light,
+from sentiment to sentiment, infinitely
+farther and higher, in the idea of God.
+It does not see him with the eyes of
+the body, because the Infinite is not
+visible by a narrow window of flesh,
+pierced in the frontal bone of an insect
+called Man; but it sees Him, with a
+thousand times more certainty, by the
+spirit, that immaterial eye of the soul,
+which nothing blinds; and after having
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg&nbsp;14]</a></span>
+seen him with evidence, it reasons upon
+the consequences of his existence, upon
+the divine aims of His creation, upon
+the terrestrial as well as eternal destinies
+of His creatures, upon the nature
+of the homage and adoration that God
+expects, upon his moral laws, upon the
+public and private duties which he
+imposes on his creatures by their consciences,
+upon the liberty He leaves
+them; so that with the sufferings of
+conflict He may give to them the merits
+and the prize of virtue. Thus in
+man does the instinct of God become
+Faith. Thus man can speak the greatest
+word that has ever been spoken
+upon the earth or in the stars, the word
+which fills the worlds by itself alone,
+the word which commenced with them,
+and which can only end with them;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I believe in God!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg&nbsp;15]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>IV.</h2>
+
+
+<p>It is in this sense, my friends, that I
+say to you, &ldquo;I believe in God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But, once having said this word with
+the universe of beings and of worlds,
+and blessed this invisible God for having
+rendered himself visible, sensible,
+evident, palpable, adorable in the mirror
+of weak human intelligence, made gradually
+more and more pure, I reason
+with myself on the best worship to be
+rendered Him in thought and action.
+Let me show how, by this reasoning, I
+am forcibly drawn to the love of the
+People.</p>
+
+<p>I say to myself, then, &ldquo;Who is this
+God? Is he a vain <em>notion</em>, which has
+no effect on the thoughts and acts of
+man, his creature; who inspires nothing
+in him; who gives him no commands;
+who imposes nothing upon
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg&nbsp;16]</a></span>
+him; who does not reward, and who
+does not punish?&mdash;No! God is not a
+mere <em>notion</em>, an idea, an evidence;&mdash;God
+is a <em>law</em>,&mdash;the living law, the supreme
+law, the universal law, the eternal
+law. Because God is a law on
+high, he is a duty on the earth; and
+when man says, &lsquo;I believe in God,&rsquo; he
+says, at the same time, &lsquo;I believe in my
+duty towards God,&mdash;I believe in my
+duty towards man.&rsquo; God is a government!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And what are these duties? They
+are of three sorts:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Duty towards God</em>,&mdash;that is to say,
+the duty of developing, as much as
+possible, my intelligence and my reason,
+to arrive at the purest idea and the
+highest worship of the Supreme Being,
+by whom and for whom all is, all exists:&mdash;<em>Religion</em>.</p>
+
+<p><em>Private Duties</em>,&mdash;that is to say, the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg&nbsp;17]</a></span>
+exact and tender discharge of all sentiments
+to which form has been given,
+either in written or unwritten laws,
+which bind me to those, to whom, in
+the order of nature, I hold most closely,&mdash;the
+nearest to myself in the human
+group&mdash;father, mother, brothers, sisters,
+wife, children, friends, neighbors:&mdash;<em>the
+Family</em>.</p>
+
+<p><em>Collective Duties</em>,&mdash;that is to say, devotions,
+even to the sacrifice of myself,
+even to death, to the progress, the well-being,
+the preservation, the amelioration
+of this great human family, of which
+my family, and my country, are only
+parts; and of which I myself am only
+a miserable and vanishing fraction, a
+leaf of a summer, which vegetates
+and withers on a branch of the immense
+trunk of the human race:&mdash;<em>Society</em>.</p>
+
+<p>Let us speak to-day only of these last
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg&nbsp;18]</a></span>
+duties,&mdash;because, now we are occupied
+with politics alone.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>V.</h2>
+
+
+<p>God, when one believes in Him as
+you and I do, imposes then on man a
+duty towards the society of which he
+makes a part. You admit it, do you not?</p>
+
+<p>Then follow, and analyze with me
+this society. Of whom, and how, is it
+composed?</p>
+
+<p>It is composed, at the same time, of
+strong and weak, conquerors and conquered,
+victors and vanquished, oppressors
+and oppressed, masters and slaves,
+nobles and serfs, of citizens and bondmen
+or subjects disinherited and enslaved,
+considered as living furniture,
+as tools and laughing-stocks to their
+fellow-men, as were the Blacks in our
+colonies before the Republic.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg&nbsp;19]</a></span>
+Thanks to the increase of general
+reason, to the light of philosophy, to
+the inspiration of Christianity, to the
+progress of the idea of justice, of charity,
+and of fraternity, in laws, manners,
+and religion, society in America, in
+Europe, and in France, especially since
+the Revolution, has broken down all
+these barriers, all these denominations
+of caste, all these injurious distinctions
+among men. Society is composed only
+of various conditions, professions, functions,
+and ways of life, among those
+who form what we call a Nation; of
+proprietors of the soil, and proprietors
+of houses; of investments, of handicrafts,
+of merchants, of manufacturers,
+of farmers; of day-laborers becoming
+farmers, manufacturers, merchants, or
+possessors of houses or capital, in their
+turn; of the rich, of those in easy circumstances,
+of the poor, of workmen
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg&nbsp;20]</a></span>
+with their hands, workmen with their
+minds; of day-laborers, of those in
+need, of a small number of men enjoying
+considerable acquired or inherited
+wealth, of others of a smaller fortune
+painfully increased and improved, of
+others with property only sufficient for
+their needs; there are some, finally,
+without any personal possession but
+their hands, and gleaning for themselves
+and for their families, in the
+workshop, or the field, and at the
+threshold of the homes of others on
+the earth, the asylum, the wages, the
+bread, the instruction, the tools, the
+daily pay, all those means of existence
+which they have neither inherited,
+saved, nor acquired. These last are
+what have been improperly called <em>the
+People</em>. This name is extended now;
+it embraces really all the People; but
+still it is used as the name of the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg&nbsp;21]</a></span>
+indigent and suffering part of the People.</p>
+
+<p>It is more especially of this class that
+I intend to speak, in saying to you, &ldquo;To
+love the People, it is necessary to believe
+in God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>VI.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The love of the People, the conscience
+of the citizen, the sentiment
+which induces the individual to lose
+himself in the mass, to submit himself
+to the community, to sacrifice himself
+to its needs,&mdash;his interest, his individuality,
+his egotism, his ambition, his
+pride, his fortune, his blood, his life, his
+reputation even, sometimes, to the safety
+of his country, to the happiness of the
+People, to the good of humanity, of
+which he is a member in the sight of
+God,&mdash;in one word, all these virtues,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg&nbsp;22]</a></span>
+necessary under every form of government,&mdash;useful
+under a monarchy, indispensable
+under a republic,&mdash;never
+have been derived, and never can be
+derived, from any thing but that single
+sentence, pronounced with religious
+faith, at the commencement, in the
+middle, at the end of all our patriotic
+acts:&mdash;&ldquo;I believe in God!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The People who do not believe
+strongly, efficaciously in this first principle,
+in this supreme original, in this
+last end of all existence, cannot have
+a faith superior to their individual selfishness.</p>
+
+<p>The People who cannot have a
+principle superior to their individual
+selfishness, in their acts as citizens,
+cannot have national virtue.</p>
+
+<p>The People who cannot have national
+virtue cannot be free; for they
+can have neither the courage which
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg&nbsp;23]</a></span>
+enables them to defend their own liberty,
+nor the conscience which forces
+them to respect the liberty of others,
+and to obey the laws, not as an outward
+force, but as a second conscience.</p>
+
+<p>The People who can neither defend
+their liberty, nor restrain it, may be, by
+turns, slaves or tyrants, but they can
+never be republicans.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, Atheism in the People is
+the most invincible obstacle to the
+establishment and consolidation of that
+sublime form of government, the idol
+of all ages, the tendency of all perfect
+civilization, the dream of every sage,
+the model of all great souls,&mdash;the government
+of the entire People by the
+reason and conscience of each citizen,&mdash;otherwise
+called the <span class="smcap">Republic</span>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg&nbsp;24]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>VII.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Must I demonstrate to you so simple
+a truth? Can you not comprehend,
+without explanation of mine, that a
+nation, where each citizen thinks only
+of his own private well-being here below,
+and sacrifices constantly the general
+good to his personal and narrow
+interest;&mdash;where the powerful man
+wishes to preserve all the power for
+himself alone, without making an equitable
+and proportional division to the
+weak;&mdash;where the weak wishes to
+conquer at any price, that he may
+tyrannize in his turn;&mdash;where the
+rich wishes to acquire and concentrate
+the greatest possible amount of wealth,
+to enjoy it alone, and even without circulating
+it in work, in wages, in assistance,
+in benevolence, in good deeds to
+his brothers;&mdash;where the poor wishes
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg&nbsp;25]</a></span>
+to dispossess violently and unjustly
+those who possess more than himself,
+instead of recognizing that diversity
+of chances, of conditions, of professions,
+of fortunes, of which human
+life is composed,&mdash;instead of acquiring
+prosperity for his family, in his turn
+and degree, by effort, by order, by
+labor, by economy, by the assistance
+of borrowed capital, by the law of inheritance,
+by the free transfer of real
+estate, by free entrance into different
+callings and trades, by free competition
+in the money market;&mdash;where each
+class of citizens declares itself an enemy
+to every other, and heaps upon each
+other all manner of evil, instead of
+doing all the good in its power, and
+uniting in the holy harmony of social
+unity;&mdash;where each individual draws
+around him, for himself alone, the
+common mantle, willing to tear it in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg&nbsp;26]</a></span>
+pieces for himself, and thus leave the
+whole world naked,&mdash;do you not understand,
+I say, that such a People,
+having no God but its selfishness, no
+judge but interest, no conscience but
+cupidity, will fall, in a short time, into
+complete destruction, and, being incapable
+of a Republican government, because
+it casts aside the government of God
+himself, will rush headlong into the
+government of the brute: the government
+of the strongest, the despotism
+of the sword, the divinity of the cannon,&mdash;that
+last resort of anarchy,
+which is at once the remedy and the
+death of nations without God!</p>
+
+<p>Now has not this weakening of the
+sentiment of God in the soul of the
+People been, from year to year, from
+century to century, indeed, I might say,
+the most discouraging and threatening
+symptom, in the eyes of those who
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg&nbsp;27]</a></span>
+desire the progress of their race, who
+aspire to the moral perfection of the
+human spirit, who hope in Republican
+institutions, who love the People, who
+wish to cultivate their reason, who desire
+that the People should understand
+themselves, respect themselves, and,
+finally, by their enlightenment, their
+conscientiousness, their moderation and
+virtue, give the lie to those who declare
+them in a state of perpetual infancy,
+perpetual madness, or perpetual weakness?</p>
+
+<p>Yes, this is but too true: men have
+been blotting out God, for a century
+past, from the souls of the People, and
+more especially in latter years. The
+masses have been driven to Atheism,
+they have been driven on every side
+and by every hand.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, by blasphemies, such as
+were never heard upon the earth, until
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg&nbsp;28]</a></span>
+an insult to the Creator became a
+means of popularity among His creatures;
+blasphemies which would have
+darkened the sun and extinguished the
+stars, if God had not commanded His
+creation to pass unnoticed the revolt
+of a blind and foolish insect against
+Infinity, and refused Himself to sink to
+the foolishness of avenging impiety!
+Read those lines which I dare not
+write, those lines where an apostle of
+Atheism effaces the name of God from
+the beautiful creation and endeavors to
+substitute his own! * * *</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>VIII.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Sometimes the masses have been
+driven to Atheism by science. There
+are some geometers great in paradox,
+men who, of all the senses that the
+Creator has given to his creatures, have
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg&nbsp;29]</a></span>
+cultivated only one, the sense of touch,&mdash;leaving
+out entirely that chief sense,
+which connects and confirms all others,&mdash;<em>the
+sense of the invisible</em>, the <em>moral
+sense</em>. These <em>savans</em>, geometers, physicians,
+arithmeticians, mathematicians,
+chemists, astronomers, measurers of
+distances, calculators of numbers, have
+early acquired the habit of believing
+only in the <em>tangible</em>. These are the
+beings who, so to speak, live and think
+in the dark; all, which is not palpable,
+does not exist for them. They measure
+the earth, and say, &ldquo;We have not met
+God in any league of its surface!&rdquo;
+They heat the alembic, and say, &ldquo;We
+have not perceived God in the smoke
+of any of our experiments!&rdquo; They
+dissect dead bodies, and say, &ldquo;We have
+not found God, or thought, in any bundle
+of muscles or nerves in our dissection!&rdquo;
+They calculate columns of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg&nbsp;30]</a></span>
+figures, long as the firmament, and say,
+&ldquo;We have not seen God in the sum of
+any of our additions!&rdquo; They pierce,
+with eye and glass, into the dazzling
+mysteries of night, to discover, across
+thousands and thousands of leagues,
+the groups and the evolutions of the
+celestial worlds, and say, &ldquo;We have not
+discovered God at the end of our telescopes!
+The existence of God does not
+concern us; it is no affair of ours!&rdquo;&mdash;Madmen!
+They do not suspect that
+the knowledge and adoration of God
+are, at bottom, the only business of the
+creature; and that all these distances,
+these globes, these numbers, these mysteries
+of the living being, this dissected
+mechanism of the dead, these compositions
+and decompositions of combined
+elements, these hosts of stars, and these
+eternal evolutions of suns around the
+divine hand which guides them, have
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg&nbsp;31]</a></span>
+no other reason for existence, for movement,
+and for duration, than to compel
+the acknowledgment, fear, admiration,
+and adoration of God, by that supreme
+sense, that sense superior to all other
+senses, that sense imponderable and
+impalpable, invisible yet beholding all
+things,&mdash;that sense which we call <em>intelligence</em>!</p>
+
+<p>Alas! it is not that God has denied
+this sense to these men of figures, of
+science, and calculation; but they have
+blinded themselves, they have cultivated
+the other senses so much, that they
+have weakened this. They have believed
+too much in matter, and so they
+have lost the eye of the spirit. These
+men, we are told, have made great
+progress in experimental science, but
+they have made good, evil, to the
+People, by saying to them, &ldquo;We,
+who are so high, we cannot see
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg&nbsp;32]</a></span>
+God!&mdash;blind men! what do you see,
+then?&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>IX.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Besides these men, there is still
+another class,&mdash;inventors of another
+science, which they call &ldquo;<em>Political
+Economy</em>.&rdquo; This is the class of <em>Economists</em>.
+I do not, indeed, speak of all
+of them: there are among them some
+who are as spiritual as Fenelon, and
+these are, perhaps, at this day, the
+greater number. I speak only of those
+who, considering this world alone, have
+been driven, voluntarily or involuntarily,
+to Atheism in another way. Leaving
+the eternal and fastidious metaphysical
+and religions disputes in which the
+theologians of past centuries wasted
+the time, the good sense, and the blood
+of men, to honor their pretended God
+by immolating to Him the enemies of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg&nbsp;33]</a></span>
+their faith, these <em>false economists</em> have
+said to governments and people, &ldquo;Leave
+all this; there is only one science which
+is good for any thing: it is the science
+of Wealth. All else is vanity and vexation
+of spirit.&rdquo; This is the famous
+cry, the cry of a materialistic society:&mdash;&ldquo;<em>Grow
+rich!</em>&rdquo; The economists of
+this school, now highly enlightened,
+legitimate children of the materialists
+of the Eighteenth Century, see in humanity,
+only matter and the things that
+belong to matter; in men, only consumers
+and producers; in the social
+functions, only labor of the hands:&mdash;to
+labor, to sow, to reap, to hew, to
+build, to forge, to weave, to barter, to
+exchange, to sell, to buy, to acquire, to
+beget,&mdash;this is, according to these disciples
+of Malthus, the whole of man!
+These are the Lycurguses and the
+Moseses, the legislators of a trading
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg&nbsp;34]</a></span>
+People: the moral, intellectual, spiritual,
+religious man does not exist for
+them. They love liberty, not because
+it ennobles human nature; exercises
+free will, the most sublime of man&rsquo;s
+vital functions; cultivates his highest
+faculty,&mdash;conscience; purifies religion,
+the fundamental idea of mankind, from
+the superstitions that debase and dishonor
+it; sanctifies human society, by
+leading it to the knowledge and worship
+of God;&mdash;they love it because it abolishes
+Custom House duties! All legislation,
+all civilization, all religion, is
+reduced by them to a well-balanced
+account! <em>To have</em> and <em>to owe</em>, these
+are the only two words in their language!
+What matter to them the
+spirit, the soul, virtue, sentiment?&mdash;What
+the moral and consoling beliefs,
+the divine hopes, the supernatural certainties,
+revealed or proved, or the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg&nbsp;35]</a></span>
+immortal destiny, of man?&mdash;What the
+present intellectual life, and the future
+immaterial life of these harvests of human
+generations, which God sows that
+they may bear fruit in his name, may
+adore his grandeur,&mdash;which Death cuts
+down to bear them, ripe in faith and
+virtue, up to Heaven? All this can
+neither be bought nor sold; all this has
+neither stated price nor net revenue;
+all this is not current on the Exchange,&mdash;therefore
+it is nothing!</p>
+
+<p>Thus these men count for nothing
+the forms of worship and the forms of
+government. They are neither followers
+of Brama, of Confucius, of Mahomet,
+of Plato, or of Rousseau; neither
+absolute monarchists, constitutional
+royalists, nor republicans. They are of
+the politics, and of the religion, in
+which they can manufacture most, buy
+and sell easiest, trade the best, multiply
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg&nbsp;36]</a></span>
+fastest! Their civilization is traffic;
+their God is the dollar! This sect,
+useful in administering intelligently the
+affairs of commerce, has been a shadow
+over intellectual civilization; for it has
+forgotten heavenly things, and, in forgetting
+them, has contributed to make
+the People also forget them.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>X.</h2>
+
+
+<p>But that People which forgets God,
+forgets itself. What right has it to be
+a People, if it have not its origin and
+hope in Him? How can the men of
+any nation expect tyrants to remember
+and respect its destiny, if they themselves
+debase this destiny to that of a
+machine with ten fingers, destined to
+weave the greatest possible number of
+yards of cloth in seventy years, to people
+as many hundred acres as possible
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg&nbsp;37]</a></span>
+with creatures as much to be pitied
+and as miserable as themselves, and to
+serve, from generation to generation,
+as human manure for the land, to fertilize
+the soil of their birth, their life,
+and their graves? How can the moral
+spiritualism of a People long resist such
+theories? Where can they find God in
+this workshop of matter?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>XI.</h2>
+
+
+<p>But even this is nothing. The
+French Revolution came in 1789. It
+came to put an end to a double philosophy,&mdash;the
+spiritual philosophy of
+Rousseau&rsquo;s school, founded in reason
+and religion, the material philosophy of
+the school of Helvetius, Diderot, and
+their disciples, atheistic and cynical.
+The thought of the first of these philosophies
+was religious at bottom. It
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg&nbsp;38]</a></span>
+consisted merely in freeing the luminous
+idea of God from the shadows by
+which ignorance, intolerance, the inquisition
+of temporal dynasties and times
+of barbarism had falsified it,&mdash;in freeing
+this idea, debased as it was,&mdash;obscured,
+and enchained to thrones,&mdash;so
+as to restore reason to its liberty, to
+inquiry, to the free conscience of every
+worship and of every soul; to revive it
+in the eyes of the People, by leading
+them to the broad light of day, the evidence
+of nature, the dignity and efficacy
+of free worship.</p>
+
+<p>But, for this, it was necessary to
+dispossess the Middle Ages of their
+temporal power, of their <i>mort-main</i>
+possessions, of their civil jurisdictions,
+of their exclusive privileges, of their
+legal intolerance against all other divine
+thoughts, and all other individual or
+national faith, all other forms of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg&nbsp;39]</a></span>
+adoration and worship than what were imposed
+by the exclusive and established
+religion. To rally the people to this
+work, a work legitimate in itself, a work
+which the abuses of a crafty priesthood
+had made necessary, seven times, and
+whose accomplishment they had seven
+times partially and gradually undertaken,
+since the time of Charlemagne,&mdash;the
+philosophers of the second
+school, the irreligious school, the atheistic
+school, of Diderot and Helvetius,
+drove the masses from stupidity even
+to impiety, and the demagogues of &rsquo;93
+forced them from impiety to Atheism,
+and from Atheism to blood. Demagogues,
+those poisoners of liberty, corrupt
+every revolution in which they
+mingle; they defile every thing that
+they touch; they dishonor every truth
+which they profess, by polluting or perverting
+it. The age and philosophy,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg&nbsp;40]</a></span>
+Heaven and earth, desire what we too
+desire,&mdash;freedom of conscience, voluntary
+worship,&mdash;liberty of the human
+mind in matters of faith,&mdash;the fraternity
+of altars, invoking, each in its own
+language, that God whom the whole
+earth is spelling out, and who reveals,
+from age to age, still another letter of
+His divine name.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of this, Atheists and demagogues
+united to persecute religion, to
+revenge themselves for the old persecutions
+of the priesthood. They profaned
+the temples, violated conscience,
+blasphemed the God of the faithful, parodied
+the ceremonies, cast to the winds
+the pious symbols of worship, and persecuted
+the ministers of religion.</p>
+
+<p>In the name of the Revolution,
+and under the menace of terror, they
+dragged the People to these Saturnalia.
+They corrupted the eyes, the hands,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg&nbsp;41]</a></span>
+the minds, the souls of the populace.
+These violences to the altar were cast
+back on the religious idea itself. The
+People, seeing the temple fall, believed
+that Heaven itself crumbled; and that,
+following the profaned image of a vanishing
+worship, God himself would vanish
+from the world, with conscience,
+the supernatural law, the unwritten
+moral law, the soul and the immortality
+of the human race!</p>
+
+<p>When the ignorant People no longer
+saw God between them and annihilation,
+they plunged into the boundless
+and bottomless abyss of Atheism, they
+lost their divine sense, they became
+brutal as the animal, who sees in the
+earth only a pasture ground, instead of
+the footstool of Jehovah.</p>
+
+<p>But these irreligious abominations,
+and these Saturnalia of Atheism, however
+much injury they inflicted on the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg&nbsp;42]</a></span>
+religious spirit of the People, did not
+effect so much, perhaps, as the reign
+which followed this anarchy, the reign
+of Bonaparte, the so-called restorer of
+worship. And how?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>XII.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The Republic had passed its paroxysm
+of fever, of demagoguical madness,
+of persecution. The Directory had
+finally concentrated and regulated the
+republican power. This government
+was composed of men, naturally moderate
+and tolerant, or made so by the
+experience and the lassitude of anarchy;
+the moderate principles of the
+Revolution of 1789, and of the constituted
+Assembly, regained their level,
+thanks to a natural reaction, limited by
+good sense, as happens after every revolution
+that overshoots its mark. The
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg&nbsp;43]</a></span>
+priests officiated, without obstacle, in
+the temples restored by the municipalities
+to the faithful, religion was entirely
+free, even favored by public respect,
+and by that care for good morals which
+all serious governments feel. Faith,
+taking refuge in men&rsquo;s consciences,
+was, moreover, more sincere and more
+active, because it was neither constrained,
+nor favored, nor altered, nor
+profaned by the hand of government.</p>
+
+<p>This was, perhaps, the moment when
+there was the most religion in France,&mdash;for
+this was the moment when, after
+having had its martyrs, the religious
+sentiment had a life in itself, and owed
+nothing to the partial and interested
+protection of the powers of the State.
+For, the less the State imposes upon
+you a God of its own fashion, or its
+own choice, the more does your conscience
+rise, and the more does it attach
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg&nbsp;44]</a></span>
+itself to the God of your own reason,
+or your own faith!</p>
+
+<p>Bonaparte, whose genius was entirely
+military, but who, in affairs of moral,
+civil, and religious government, made
+it a matter of policy to contradict and
+extinguish all the truths of the Revolution,
+hastened to change all this. He
+wished to parody Charlemagne.</p>
+
+<p>Charlemagne had been the philosopher
+and revolutionary organizer of his
+time; Charlemagne had bound together
+the spiritual and temporal, crowning
+the Pontiff that he might be crowned
+by him in turn. Bonaparte desired a
+State religion, an agreement in which
+religion and the empire should mutually
+engage and mutually check each
+other; a Pope to subdue, to caress, to
+drive away, to recall, to persecute, by
+turns; a coronation by the hand of an
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg&nbsp;45]</a></span>
+enslaved Church; then a Church to
+chastise, when it did not obey;&mdash;in
+one word, all that shameful and scandalous
+<em>simony</em> of ancient times, when
+the temporal power played, in the sight
+of the nations, with the idea and name
+of God, in a manner as contemptuous
+as it was odious.</p>
+
+<p>The People, who saw clearly through
+this intrigue of an indifferent sovereign,&mdash;an
+Atheist at Toulon, a crafty politician
+at Marengo, a Mussulman in
+Egypt, a persecutor at Rome, an oppressor
+at Savona, a schismatic at
+Fontainbleau, a saint at Notre Dame
+de Paris,&mdash;protector of religion and
+profaner of consciences by turns,&mdash;felt
+their belief shaken anew. They asked
+themselves, &ldquo;What then is God for us,
+poor souls, since God is such an instrument
+of power for great men, and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg&nbsp;46]</a></span>
+such a police machine for governments?&rdquo;
+Scorn threw them back
+into Atheism. This was natural.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>XIII.</h2>
+
+
+<p>This system was continued, with
+more sincerity on the part of government,
+under the dynasty of the Restoration.
+But the interested favors of
+the Court, for the higher clergy of a
+particular worship, irritated the minds
+of the populace against the priesthood.</p>
+
+<p>The more it lavished power and human
+dignities upon priestly superiors,
+the more the mind of the People turned
+from the religious sentiment. Each
+favor of royal authority to the privileged
+Church cast thousands of souls
+into Atheism.</p>
+
+<p>The Revolution of July suppressed
+the religion of the State: it was a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg&nbsp;47]</a></span>
+progress towards the religion of conscience.
+But it favored the religion of
+the majority; it still leaned towards
+the supremacy of numbers in matters
+of faith. However, from the moment
+the State religion was suppressed, the
+religion of conscience gained ground in
+men&rsquo;s hearts. From 1830 to this day,
+every intelligent observer gladly acknowledges
+an immense progress in
+the religious sentiment in France.&mdash;Why?
+Because the suppression of
+the official religion of the State was a
+progress in the liberty of conscience,
+and all progress in liberty of conscience
+is a progress of human thought
+toward the idea of God. Go farther
+still, and complete liberty will destroy
+Atheism in the People!</p>
+
+<p>But the evil done was immense.
+The cynicism of Diderot, materialism,
+scepticism, revolutionary impiety, the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg&nbsp;48]</a></span>
+false and hypocritical piety of the empire,
+the concordat, the restoration of
+an imperial religion, and of an official
+and dynastic God by Napoleon, the
+tendency of the two Bourbon reigns to
+reconstruct a political church, everlastingly
+endowed with a monopoly of
+goods and of souls,&mdash;and, finally, the
+industrialism of the reign of Louis Philippe,
+turning every thought to trade,
+to manual labor, to worldly wealth, and
+making gold the true and only God of
+the century;&mdash;all this has borne its
+fruits.</p>
+
+<p>Look at these fruits at the present
+day, and say, if practical Atheism does
+not devour the souls of this People.
+But let us proceed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg&nbsp;49]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>XIV.</h2>
+
+
+<p>For eighteen years, new sects, or,
+rather, posthumous sects, have disputed
+for the soul of the People, under the
+names of Fourierism, of Pantheism, of
+Communism, of Industrialism, of Economism,
+and, finally, of Terrorism. Look
+at them, listen to them, read them,
+analyze them, sift them, handle them;
+and say, if, with the exception of a
+vague deifying of every thing,&mdash;that
+is to say, of nothing, by the Fourierites,&mdash;there
+is a single one of these philosophical,
+social, or political sects, which
+is not founded on the most evident
+practical Atheism; which has not matter
+for a God; material enjoyments for
+morality; exclusive satisfaction of the
+senses for an end; purely sensual gratifications
+for a paradise; this world for
+the sole scene of existence; the body
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg&nbsp;50]</a></span>
+for the only condition of being; the
+prolonging of life a few more years for
+its only hope; a sharpening of the
+senses to material appetites for a perspective;
+death for the end of all
+things; after death, an assimilation with
+the dust of the earth for a future;
+annihilation for justice, for reward, and
+for immortality!</p>
+
+<p>No, there has not been since 1830,
+there has not been since the Revolution,
+there is not at this moment, one
+of these schools of pretended apostles,
+prophets of the future, and saviors of
+the present, which is not Materialism in
+action. It is the deadly seed of the
+century of Helvetius, producing its
+poisons in the dregs of another century.
+It is man, deprived of his spiritual and
+immortal sense, reduced to a solid
+measure of organized matter, and seeking,
+not virtue, that key to his future
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg&nbsp;51]</a></span>
+destiny, in his soul; but, in his senses,
+mere enjoyment, that end of the brute,
+who only believes in what he can eat
+and drink.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>XV.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Analyze with me, if you are not
+overwhelmed with humiliation, the five
+or six Revelations of the latter days; and
+ask yourselves, as I have often asked
+myself, while listening to them, if these
+revealers of pretended human felicity
+do indeed address themselves to men,
+or to herds of fatted cattle! And are
+they astonished that the intellectual
+world resists them? Do they complain
+that the ignorant are their only disciples?
+Are they indignant that the
+ideas they attempt to spread, creep, like
+fetid mists, along the abysses of society,
+and excite, instead of enthusiasm, only
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg&nbsp;52]</a></span>
+the fanaticism of hunger and thirst?
+I can well believe it! What People is
+there who would become fanatics, only
+for their own destruction; renounce their
+moral nature, their divine souls, their
+immortal destinies, only for a morsel
+of more savory bread upon their table,
+for a larger portion of earth under their
+feet? No! no! enthusiasm soars aloft,
+it does not fall to earth. Bear me up
+to Heaven, if you wish to dazzle my
+eyes; promise me immortality, if you
+would offer to my soul a motive worthy
+of its nature, an aim worthy of its
+efforts, a price worthy of its virtue!
+But what do your systems of atheistic
+society show us in perspective? What
+do they promise us in compensation for
+our griefs? What do they give us in
+exchange for our souls? You know,&mdash;we
+will not speak of it.</p>
+
+<p>But, indeed, if these sects survive the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg&nbsp;53]</a></span>
+month which sees and which produces
+them; and, if these questions which
+they debate, and these systems which
+they bring before the astonished People,
+are destined to serve as enigmas to posterity;
+what will the future say of us?
+It will only explain the Materialism,
+Atheism, and brutality of the doctrines
+and sects by which we have been
+disturbed for ten or twelve years, as the
+nightmare of a starving People, whose
+dreams have, for an object, only a frantic
+satisfaction of the senses. All these
+philosophies, or all these deliriums, are
+the deliriums or philosophies of the
+stomach! &ldquo;All this epoch,&rdquo; future historians
+will say, &ldquo;the French must have
+been a nation distressed by a terrible
+famine, to have forgotten, in so total an
+eclipse of the intellectual nature, the
+great and immortal ideas which have
+alone inspired even these, the human
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg&nbsp;54]</a></span>
+race, and rendered the revolutions of
+the People worthy of the regard of posterity,
+and of the blood of man. The
+Eighteenth Century must have been a
+time when avaricious Nature shut up
+her bosom, and the earth brought forth
+neither fruit nor harvests, that this
+great intellectual People, formerly
+called the French People, should have
+forgotten their souls for a morsel of
+bread, their immortality for an income,
+and their God for a dollar! Let
+us turn away our eyes and weep over
+that age.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>XVI.</h2>
+
+
+<p>See where we were when the Republic
+arose: happy was it that the People
+had at bottom more of the true sentiment
+of God than these masters and
+heads of sects. For, what would have
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg&nbsp;55]</a></span>
+become of us, if, in that total eclipse
+of government, of armed force, and of
+law, which followed the 24th of February,
+the People, masters of all, of the
+fortunes and lives of the citizens, of
+Heaven and earth, had been a People
+of Materialists, of Terrorists, and of
+Atheists? The Revolution would have
+been a pillage, the Republic a scaffold,
+the dynasty of the People a deluge of
+blood. But there was no such thing.
+God was there. He revealed Himself
+in the multitude; Materialism disappeared
+in enthusiasm, which always
+exhibits the divinity of the human heart.</p>
+
+<p>We heard but one cry,&mdash;&ldquo;Honor to
+God! Respect for the altars! Liberty
+to their ministers! Self-denial, harmony,
+protection to the weak, inviolability
+of property, assistance to the miserable!&rdquo;
+Yes,&mdash;on the first day, and
+during the whole time that the People
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg&nbsp;56]</a></span>
+was alone and burning with excitement,
+it was religious! It was not until after
+the cooling of this enthusiasm that the
+materialistic sects, who waited their
+opportunity afar off, and who now torment
+the People, dared to offer their
+sensual symbols, and to set up Capital
+and Interest, the organization of labor,
+the increase of wages, and equality of
+conditions in this human manger, as the
+sole Divinities,&mdash;dared to infuse envy
+against the happy, the breath of hatred
+as the only consolation to the hearts
+of the miserable, lightning vengeance
+against the wrongs of Providence, imprecations
+against society, blasphemies
+against the existence of God, the enjoyments
+and bestialities of the corporeal
+nature, purchased by complete forgetfulness
+of the moral nature, and enjoyed
+in a debauch of ideas, and in a deification
+of matter.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg&nbsp;57]</a></span>
+This cannot last; the People will not
+allow themselves to be changed into
+hogs by the Circes of Atheism. Their
+souls will flash indignation against their
+transformers. A day will come when
+they will see that they are impoverished
+under the pretext of being enriched;
+that, when they are robbed of their
+souls and of God, both their titles to
+liberty are stolen from them. Atheism
+and Republicanism are two words which
+exclude each other. Absolutism may
+thrive without a God, for it needs only
+slaves. Republicanism cannot exist
+without a God, for it must have citizens.
+And what is it that makes
+citizens? Two things,&mdash;the sentiment
+of their rights, and the sentiment
+of their duties as a republican People.
+Where are your rights, if you have
+not a common Father in Heaven?
+Where are your duties, if you have not
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg&nbsp;58]</a></span>
+a Judge between your brothers and
+you? Republicanism draws you in
+both these ways to God.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>XVII.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Thus, look at every free People, from
+the mountains of Helvetia to the forests
+of America; see even the free British
+nation, where the Aristocracy is only
+the head of liberty, where the Aristocracy
+and Democracy mutually respect
+each other, and balance each other by
+an exchange of kindnesses and services
+which sanctify society while fortifying
+it. Atheism has fled before liberty: in
+proportion as despotism has receded,
+the divine idea has advanced in the
+souls of men. Liberty lives by morality.
+What is morality without a God?
+What is a law without a lawgiver?</p>
+
+<p>I know well, and I shall give you the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg&nbsp;59]</a></span>
+reason hereafter; I know well, and I
+mourn to think of it, that, even up to
+the present time, the French People
+have been the least religious People in
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p>Is this because the intelligence of
+France has not that force, and that
+severity, which are needed to carry long
+enough and far enough the idea of
+God,&mdash;the greatest idea of the human
+soul;&mdash;that idea, as it comes from all
+the evidences of nature, and all the
+depths of reflection, being the most
+powerful and the most grave of human
+intelligence,&mdash;and the intelligence of
+France being the most superficial, the
+most light, and the least reflecting of
+the European races?</p>
+
+<p>Is it because our governments have
+always been charged with thinking,
+believing, and praying, for us?</p>
+
+<p>Is it that they have always given us
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg&nbsp;60]</a></span>
+gods of the Court, worship according to
+Etiquette, and religions of State, instead
+of letting us form, make, and practise
+our faith for ourselves, by reason, by
+free-will, by voluntary piety, by association,
+by tradition, by the sympathies of
+the community, of worship, and of the
+family?</p>
+
+<p>Is it because we are, and always have
+been, a military People, a nation of
+soldiers and adventurers, led by kings,
+heroes, ambitious men, from battle-field
+to battle-field, making conquests
+and not keeping them, ravaging, dazzling,
+charming, and corrupting Europe,
+and bearing the manners, vices, bravado,
+lightness, and impiety of the camp into
+the homes of the People?</p>
+
+<p>I do not know; but it is certain that
+the nation has an immense progress to
+make in serious thought, if it wishes to
+maintain its liberty. If we look at the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg&nbsp;61]</a></span>
+comparative character, in matters of
+religious sentiment, of the great nations
+of Europe, America, and even Asia, the
+advantage is not on our side. While
+the great men of other nations live and
+die upon the scene of history, looking
+towards heaven, our great men seem
+to live and die in entire forgetfulness
+of the only idea for which life or death
+is worth any thing; they live and die
+looking at the spectators, or, at most,
+towards posterity.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, even at the present time, while
+we have had the greatest men, other
+nations have had the greatest citizens.
+It is great citizens that a Republic
+needs!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>XVIII.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Open the history of America, the
+history of England, and the history of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg&nbsp;62]</a></span>
+France; read the great lives, the great
+deaths, the great sufferings, the sublime
+words, when the ruling passion of life
+reveals itself in the last moments of
+the dying,&mdash;and compare them!</p>
+
+<p>Washington and Franklin fought,
+spoke, suffered; rose and fell, in their
+political life, from popularity to ingratitude,
+from glory to bitter scorn of their
+citizens,&mdash;always in the name of God,
+for whom they acted; and the liberator
+of America died, committing to the
+Divine protection, first, the liberty of
+his People,&mdash;and, afterwards, his own
+soul to His indulgent judgment.</p>
+
+<p>Strafford, dying for the constitution
+of his country, wrote to Charles I., to
+entreat his consent to his punishment,
+that he might spare trouble to the
+State: &ldquo;Put not your trust,&rdquo; wrote he,
+after this consent was obtained, &ldquo;put
+not your trust in princes, or in the son
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg&nbsp;63]</a></span>
+of man, because salvation is not in
+them, but from on high.&rdquo; While walking
+to the scaffold, he stopped under
+the windows of his friend, the Bishop
+of London; he raised his head towards
+him, and asked, in a loud voice, the
+assistance of his prayers in the terrible
+moment to which he had come. The
+primate, bowed with age, and bathed in
+tears, gave, in a stifled voice, his tender
+benedictions to his unhappy friend, and
+fell, without consciousness, into the
+arms of his attendants. Strafford continued
+his way, sustained by the Divine
+force, descending from this invocation
+upon him: he spoke with resignation
+to the People assembled to see him die.
+&ldquo;I fear only one thing,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and
+that is, that this effusion of innocent
+blood is a bad presage for the liberty
+of my country!&rdquo; (Alas! why did not
+the Convention recall these words
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg&nbsp;64]</a></span>
+among us, in &rsquo;93?) Stafford continued:&mdash;&ldquo;Now,&rdquo;
+said he, &ldquo;I draw near
+my end. One blow will make my
+wife a widow, my children orphans,
+deprive my poor servants of an affectionate
+master, and separate me from
+my dear brother, and my friends.
+May God be all of these!&rdquo; He disrobed
+himself, and placed his head on
+the block. &ldquo;I give thanks,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;to my heavenly Master for helping me
+to await this blow without fear; for not
+permitting me to be cast down for a
+single instant by terror. I repose my
+head as willingly on this block as I ever
+laid it down to sleep.&rdquo; This is faith in
+Patriotism! See Charles I., in his
+turn,&mdash;that model of a kingly death.
+At the moment that he was to receive
+the blow of the axe, the edge of which
+he had coolly examined and touched,
+he raised his head, and addressed the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg&nbsp;65]</a></span>
+clergyman who was present:&mdash;&ldquo;Remember!&rdquo;
+said he; as if he had said,
+&ldquo;Remember to advise my sons never to
+revenge their father!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Sidney, the young martyr of a patriotism,
+guilty, because too hasty, died to
+expiate the dream of the freedom of
+his country. He said to the jailer,
+&ldquo;May my blood purify my soul! I
+rejoice that I die innocent toward the
+king, but a victim resigned to the King
+of Heaven, to whom we owe all life.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The republicans of Cromwell sought
+only the way of God, even in the blood
+of battles. Their politics is nothing
+but faith; their government, a prayer;
+their death, a holy hymn;&mdash;they sang,
+like the Templars, on their funeral-pile.
+We see, we feel, we hear God, above
+all, in these revolutions, in these great
+popular movements, and in the souls
+of the great citizens of these nations.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg&nbsp;66]</a></span>
+But recross the Atlantic, traverse the
+Channel, approach our own time, open
+our annals; and listen to the great
+political actors in the drama of our
+liberty. It would seem as if God was
+hidden from the souls of men; as if his
+name had never been written in the
+language. History will have the air
+of being atheistic, while recounting to
+posterity these <em>annihilations</em>, rather than
+<em>deaths</em>, of the celebrated men of the
+greatest years of France. The victims
+alone have a God; the tribunes and
+lictors have none.</p>
+
+<p>See Mirabeau on his death-bed.
+&ldquo;Crown me with flowers,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;intoxicate me with perfumes, let me
+die with the sound of delicious music.&rdquo;
+Not one word of God, or of his soul!
+A sensual philosopher, he asks of death
+only a supreme sensualism; he desires
+to give a last pleasure even to agony.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg&nbsp;67]</a></span>
+Look at Madam Roland, that strong
+woman of the Revolution,&mdash;upon the
+car that carries her to death. She
+looks with scorn upon the stupid People,
+who kill their prophets and their sibyls.
+Not one glance to Heaven; only an
+exclamation for the earth she leaves:&mdash;&ldquo;O,
+Liberty!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Approach the prison door of the
+Girondines: their last night is a banquet,
+and their last hymn is the <i>Marseillaise</i>!</p>
+
+<p>Follow Camille Desmoulins to punishment:&mdash;a
+cold and indecent pleasantry
+at the tribunal; one long imprecation
+on the road to the guillotine;&mdash;those
+are the last thoughts of this
+dying man, about to appear on high!</p>
+
+<p>Listen to Danton, upon the platform
+of the scaffold, one step from God and
+immortality:&mdash;&ldquo;I have enjoyed much;
+let me go to sleep,&rdquo; he says;&mdash;then, to
+the executioner, &ldquo;You will show my
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg&nbsp;68]</a></span>
+head to the People; it is worth while!&rdquo;
+Annihilation for a confession of faith;
+vanity for his last sigh: such is the
+Frenchman of these latter days!</p>
+
+<p>What do you think of the religious
+sentiment of a free People, whose great
+characters seem to walk thus in procession
+to annihilation; and die, without
+even death, that terrible minister, recalling
+to their minds the fear or the
+promises of God?</p>
+
+<p>Thus the Republic,&mdash;which had no
+future,&mdash;reared by these men, and
+mere parties, was quickly overthrown
+in blood. Liberty, achieved by so
+much heroism and genius, did not find
+in France a conscience to shelter it, a
+God to avenge it, a People to defend it,
+against that other Atheism called Glory!
+All was finished by a soldier, and by the
+apostacy of republicans travestied into
+courtiers! And what could you
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg&nbsp;69]</a></span>
+expect? Republican Atheism has no
+reason to be heroic. If it is terrified,
+it yields. Would one buy it, it sells
+itself; it would be most foolish to
+sacrifice itself. Who would mourn for
+it?&mdash;the People are ungrateful, and
+God does not exist.</p>
+
+<p>Thus end atheistic revolutions!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>XIX.</h2>
+
+
+<p>If you wish that this revolution
+should not have the same end, beware
+of abject Materialism, degrading Sensualism,
+gross Socialism, of besotted
+Communism; of all these doctrines of
+flesh and blood, of meat and drink, of
+hunger and thirst, of wages and traffic,
+which these corruptors of the soul of
+the People preach to you, exclusively,
+as the sole thought, the sole hope, as
+the only duty, and only end of man!
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg&nbsp;70]</a></span>
+They will soon make you slaves of ease,
+serfs of your desires.</p>
+
+<p>Are you willing to have inscribed on
+the tomb of our French race, as on that
+of the <em>Sybarites</em>, this epitaph: &ldquo;This
+People ate and drank well, while they
+browsed upon the earth?&rdquo; No! You
+desire that History should write thus:
+&ldquo;This People worshipped well, served
+God and humanity well,&mdash;in thought, in
+philosophy, in religion, in literature, in
+arts, in arms, in labor, in liberty, in
+their Aristocracies, in their Democracies,
+in their Monarchies, and their Republics!
+This nation was the spiritual
+laborer, the conqueror of truth; the
+disciple of the highest God, in all the
+ways of civilization,&mdash;and, to approach
+nearer to him, it invented the Republic,
+that government of duties and of rights,
+that rule of spiritualism, which finds in
+<em>ideas</em> its only sovereignty.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg&nbsp;71]</a></span>
+Seek God, then. This is your nature
+and your grandeur. And do not seek
+Him in these Materialisms! For God
+is not below,&mdash;he is on high!</p>
+
+<p class="center">LAMARTINE,</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Representative of the People</i>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center" style="padding-top: 5em; padding-bottom: 3em;">THE END.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="bbox">
+<p><b>Transcriber's Note:</b></p>
+
+<p>This text uses some variant spelling&mdash;for example, partizan, demagoguical, apostacy,
+corruptors. This has been preserved as printed.</p>
+
+<p>The ellipsis in this text uses asterisks rather than dots.</p>
+
+<p>On page <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, the semicolon following 'rose' has been moved to follow 'suffered'&mdash;"... fought,
+spoke, suffered; rose and fell ..."</p>
+
+<p>A repetition of the book title has been deleted.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Atheism Among the People, by Alphonse de Lamartine
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Atheism Among the People, by Alphonse de Lamartine
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Atheism Among the People
+
+Author: Alphonse de Lamartine
+
+Translator: Edward E. Hale
+ Francis Le Baron
+
+Release Date: May 5, 2008 [EBook #25339]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATHEISM AMONG THE PEOPLE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marilynda Fraser-Cunliffe, Sam W. and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This file was made using scans of public domain works
+from the University of Michigan Digital Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ LAMARTINE ON ATHEISM.
+
+
+ ATHEISM
+ AMONG
+ THE PEOPLE
+
+
+ BY
+
+ ALPHONSE DE LAMARTINE.
+
+
+ BOSTON:
+ PHILLIPS, SAMPSON AND COMPANY,
+ 110 WASHINGTON STREET.
+ 1850.
+
+
+
+
+Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1850,
+BY PHILLIPS, SAMPSON AND COMPANY,
+In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of Massachusetts.
+
+
+STEREOTYPED BY
+CHARLES W. COLTON,
+No. 2 Water Street.
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+
+Through the past year, M. de Lamartine has published a monthly journal,
+called The People's Counsellor, "_Le Conseiller du Peuple_." Each
+number of this journal contains an Essay, by him, on some specific
+subject, of pressing interest to the French people,--generally, some
+political subject.
+
+As a companion to one of these numbers, he published the Essay which
+we here translate. We have thought that its interest and merit are by
+no means local; but, that it will be read with as much interest in
+America, as in France.
+
+ EDWARD E. HALE,
+ FRANCIS LE BARON.
+
+ _Worcester, Mass. March 7, 1850._
+
+
+
+
+ATHEISM AMONG THE PEOPLE.
+
+
+
+
+I.
+
+
+I have often asked myself, "Why am I a Republican?--Why am I the
+partizan of equitable Democracy, organized and established as a good
+and strong Government?--Why have I a real love of the People--a love
+always serious, and sometimes even tender?--What has the People done
+for me? I was not born in the ranks of the People. I was born between
+the high Aristocracy and what was then called _the inferior classes_,
+in the days when there were classes, where are now equal citizens in
+various callings. I never starved in the People's famine; I never
+groaned, personally, in the People's miseries; I never sweat with its
+sweat; I was never benumbed with its cold. Why then, I repeat it, do I
+hunger in its hunger, thirst with its thirst, warm under its sun,
+freeze under its cold, grieve under its sorrows? Why should I not care
+for it as little as for that which passes at the antipodes?--turn away
+my eyes, close my ears, think of other things, and wrap myself up in
+that soft, thick garment of indifference and egotism, in which I can
+shelter myself, and indulge my separate personal tastes, without
+asking whether, below me,--in street, garret, or cottage, there is a
+rich People, or a beggar People; a religious People, or an atheistic
+People; a People of idlers, or of workers; a People of Helots, or of
+citizens?"
+
+And whenever I have thus questioned myself, I have thus answered
+myself:--"I love the people because I believe in God. For, if I did
+not believe in God, what would the people be to me? I should enjoy at
+ease that lucky throw of the dice, which chance had turned up for me,
+the day of my birth; and, with a secret, savage joy, I should say,
+'So much the worse for the losers!--the world is a lottery. Woe to
+the conquered!'" I cannot, indeed, say this without shame and
+cruelty,--for, I repeat it, _I believe in God_.
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+
+"And what is there in common," you will say to me, "between your
+belief in God and your love for the People?" I answer: My belief in
+God is not that vague, confused, indefinite, shadowy sentiment which
+compels one to suppose a principle because he sees consequences,--a
+cause where he contemplates effects, a source where he sees the rush
+of the inexhaustible river of life, of forms, of substances, absorbed
+for ever in the ocean, and renewed unceasingly from creation. The
+belief in God, which is thus perceived and conceived, is, so to
+speak, only a mechanical sensation of the interior eye,--an instinct
+of intelligence, in some sort forced and brutal,--an evidence, not
+reasonable, not religious, not perfect, not meritorious; but like the
+material evidence of light, which enters our eyes when we open them
+to the day; like the evidence of sound which we hear when we listen
+to any noise; like the evidence of touch when we plunge our limbs in
+the waves of the sea, and shiver at the contact. This elementary,
+gross, instinctive, involuntary belief in God, is not the living,
+intelligent, active, and legislative faith of humanity. It is almost
+animal. I am persuaded that if the brutes even,--if the dog, the
+horse, the ox, the elephant, the bird, could speak, they would
+confess, that, at the bottom of their nature, their instincts, their
+sensations, their obtuse intelligence, assisted by organs less
+perfect than ours, there is a clouded, secret sentiment of this
+existence of a superior and primordial Being, from whom all emanates,
+and to whom all returns,--a shadow of the divinity upon their being,
+a distant approach to the conception of that idea, which fills the
+worlds, and for which alone the worlds have been made,--the idea of
+God!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This may be a bold, but it is not an impious supposition. For God,
+having made all things for himself alone, must have placed, upon all
+that he made, an impress of himself; more or less clear, more or less
+luminous, more or less profound, a presentiment or a remembrance of a
+Creator. But this faith, when it stops here, is not worthy of the
+name. It is a species of _Pantheism_, that is to say, a confused
+"visibility," a physical working together into indissoluble union of
+something impersonal, something blind, something fatal, and something
+divine, which, in the elements composing the universe, we may call
+GOD. But this "visibility" can give to man no moral decision,--can
+give to God no worship. The Pantheism of which I am accused as a
+philosopher and poet, that Pantheism which I have always scorned as a
+contradiction and as a blasphemy, resembles entirely the reasoning of
+the man who should say, "I see an innumerable multitude of rays,
+therefore there is no sun."
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+
+Faith, or reasonable and effective belief in God, proceeds, undoubtedly,
+from this first instinct; but in proportion as intelligence develops
+itself, and human thought expands, it goes from knowledge to knowledge,
+from conclusion to conclusion, from light to light, from sentiment to
+sentiment, infinitely farther and higher, in the idea of God. It does
+not see him with the eyes of the body, because the Infinite is not
+visible by a narrow window of flesh, pierced in the frontal bone of an
+insect called Man; but it sees Him, with a thousand times more
+certainty, by the spirit, that immaterial eye of the soul, which nothing
+blinds; and after having seen him with evidence, it reasons upon the
+consequences of his existence, upon the divine aims of His creation,
+upon the terrestrial as well as eternal destinies of His creatures, upon
+the nature of the homage and adoration that God expects, upon his moral
+laws, upon the public and private duties which he imposes on his
+creatures by their consciences, upon the liberty He leaves them; so that
+with the sufferings of conflict He may give to them the merits and the
+prize of virtue. Thus in man does the instinct of God become Faith. Thus
+man can speak the greatest word that has ever been spoken upon the earth
+or in the stars, the word which fills the worlds by itself alone, the
+word which commenced with them, and which can only end with them;--
+
+"I believe in God!"
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+
+It is in this sense, my friends, that I say to you, "I believe in
+God."
+
+But, once having said this word with the universe of beings and of
+worlds, and blessed this invisible God for having rendered himself
+visible, sensible, evident, palpable, adorable in the mirror of weak
+human intelligence, made gradually more and more pure, I reason with
+myself on the best worship to be rendered Him in thought and action.
+Let me show how, by this reasoning, I am forcibly drawn to the love of
+the People.
+
+I say to myself, then, "Who is this God? Is he a vain _notion_, which
+has no effect on the thoughts and acts of man, his creature; who
+inspires nothing in him; who gives him no commands; who imposes nothing
+upon him; who does not reward, and who does not punish?--No! God is
+not a mere _notion_, an idea, an evidence;--God is a _law_,--the living
+law, the supreme law, the universal law, the eternal law. Because God
+is a law on high, he is a duty on the earth; and when man says, 'I
+believe in God,' he says, at the same time, 'I believe in my duty
+towards God,--I believe in my duty towards man.' God is a government!"
+
+And what are these duties? They are of three sorts:--
+
+_Duty towards God_,--that is to say, the duty of developing, as much
+as possible, my intelligence and my reason, to arrive at the purest
+idea and the highest worship of the Supreme Being, by whom and for
+whom all is, all exists:--_Religion_.
+
+_Private Duties_,--that is to say, the exact and tender discharge of
+all sentiments to which form has been given, either in written or
+unwritten laws, which bind me to those, to whom, in the order of
+nature, I hold most closely,--the nearest to myself in the human
+group--father, mother, brothers, sisters, wife, children, friends,
+neighbors:--_the Family_.
+
+_Collective Duties_,--that is to say, devotions, even to the sacrifice
+of myself, even to death, to the progress, the well-being, the
+preservation, the amelioration of this great human family, of which my
+family, and my country, are only parts; and of which I myself am only
+a miserable and vanishing fraction, a leaf of a summer, which
+vegetates and withers on a branch of the immense trunk of the human
+race:--_Society_.
+
+Let us speak to-day only of these last duties,--because, now we are
+occupied with politics alone.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+
+God, when one believes in Him as you and I do, imposes then on man a
+duty towards the society of which he makes a part. You admit it, do
+you not?
+
+Then follow, and analyze with me this society. Of whom, and how, is it
+composed?
+
+It is composed, at the same time, of strong and weak, conquerors and
+conquered, victors and vanquished, oppressors and oppressed, masters
+and slaves, nobles and serfs, of citizens and bondmen or subjects
+disinherited and enslaved, considered as living furniture, as tools
+and laughing-stocks to their fellow-men, as were the Blacks in our
+colonies before the Republic.
+
+Thanks to the increase of general reason, to the light of philosophy,
+to the inspiration of Christianity, to the progress of the idea of
+justice, of charity, and of fraternity, in laws, manners, and
+religion, society in America, in Europe, and in France, especially
+since the Revolution, has broken down all these barriers, all these
+denominations of caste, all these injurious distinctions among men.
+Society is composed only of various conditions, professions,
+functions, and ways of life, among those who form what we call a
+Nation; of proprietors of the soil, and proprietors of houses; of
+investments, of handicrafts, of merchants, of manufacturers, of
+farmers; of day-laborers becoming farmers, manufacturers, merchants,
+or possessors of houses or capital, in their turn; of the rich, of
+those in easy circumstances, of the poor, of workmen with their
+hands, workmen with their minds; of day-laborers, of those in need, of
+a small number of men enjoying considerable acquired or inherited
+wealth, of others of a smaller fortune painfully increased and
+improved, of others with property only sufficient for their needs;
+there are some, finally, without any personal possession but their
+hands, and gleaning for themselves and for their families, in the
+workshop, or the field, and at the threshold of the homes of others on
+the earth, the asylum, the wages, the bread, the instruction, the
+tools, the daily pay, all those means of existence which they have
+neither inherited, saved, nor acquired. These last are what have been
+improperly called _the People_. This name is extended now; it embraces
+really all the People; but still it is used as the name of the
+indigent and suffering part of the People.
+
+It is more especially of this class that I intend to speak, in saying
+to you, "To love the People, it is necessary to believe in God."
+
+
+
+
+VI.
+
+
+The love of the People, the conscience of the citizen, the sentiment
+which induces the individual to lose himself in the mass, to submit
+himself to the community, to sacrifice himself to its needs,--his
+interest, his individuality, his egotism, his ambition, his pride, his
+fortune, his blood, his life, his reputation even, sometimes, to the
+safety of his country, to the happiness of the People, to the good of
+humanity, of which he is a member in the sight of God,--in one word,
+all these virtues, necessary under every form of government,--useful
+under a monarchy, indispensable under a republic,--never have been
+derived, and never can be derived, from any thing but that single
+sentence, pronounced with religious faith, at the commencement, in the
+middle, at the end of all our patriotic acts:--"I believe in God!"
+
+The People who do not believe strongly, efficaciously in this first
+principle, in this supreme original, in this last end of all
+existence, cannot have a faith superior to their individual
+selfishness.
+
+The People who cannot have a principle superior to their individual
+selfishness, in their acts as citizens, cannot have national virtue.
+
+The People who cannot have national virtue cannot be free; for they
+can have neither the courage which enables them to defend their own
+liberty, nor the conscience which forces them to respect the liberty
+of others, and to obey the laws, not as an outward force, but as a
+second conscience.
+
+The People who can neither defend their liberty, nor restrain it, may
+be, by turns, slaves or tyrants, but they can never be republicans.
+
+Therefore, Atheism in the People is the most invincible obstacle to
+the establishment and consolidation of that sublime form of
+government, the idol of all ages, the tendency of all perfect
+civilization, the dream of every sage, the model of all great
+souls,--the government of the entire People by the reason and
+conscience of each citizen,--otherwise called the REPUBLIC.
+
+
+
+
+VII.
+
+
+Must I demonstrate to you so simple a truth? Can you not comprehend,
+without explanation of mine, that a nation, where each citizen thinks
+only of his own private well-being here below, and sacrifices
+constantly the general good to his personal and narrow interest;--where
+the powerful man wishes to preserve all the power for himself alone,
+without making an equitable and proportional division to the
+weak;--where the weak wishes to conquer at any price, that he may
+tyrannize in his turn;--where the rich wishes to acquire and
+concentrate the greatest possible amount of wealth, to enjoy it alone,
+and even without circulating it in work, in wages, in assistance, in
+benevolence, in good deeds to his brothers;--where the poor wishes to
+dispossess violently and unjustly those who possess more than himself,
+instead of recognizing that diversity of chances, of conditions, of
+professions, of fortunes, of which human life is composed,--instead of
+acquiring prosperity for his family, in his turn and degree, by effort,
+by order, by labor, by economy, by the assistance of borrowed capital,
+by the law of inheritance, by the free transfer of real estate, by free
+entrance into different callings and trades, by free competition in the
+money market;--where each class of citizens declares itself an enemy to
+every other, and heaps upon each other all manner of evil, instead of
+doing all the good in its power, and uniting in the holy harmony of
+social unity;--where each individual draws around him, for himself
+alone, the common mantle, willing to tear it in pieces for himself,
+and thus leave the whole world naked,--do you not understand, I say,
+that such a People, having no God but its selfishness, no judge but
+interest, no conscience but cupidity, will fall, in a short time, into
+complete destruction, and, being incapable of a Republican government,
+because it casts aside the government of God himself, will rush
+headlong into the government of the brute: the government of the
+strongest, the despotism of the sword, the divinity of the
+cannon,--that last resort of anarchy, which is at once the remedy and
+the death of nations without God!
+
+Now has not this weakening of the sentiment of God in the soul of the
+People been, from year to year, from century to century, indeed, I
+might say, the most discouraging and threatening symptom, in the eyes
+of those who desire the progress of their race, who aspire to the
+moral perfection of the human spirit, who hope in Republican
+institutions, who love the People, who wish to cultivate their reason,
+who desire that the People should understand themselves, respect
+themselves, and, finally, by their enlightenment, their
+conscientiousness, their moderation and virtue, give the lie to those
+who declare them in a state of perpetual infancy, perpetual madness,
+or perpetual weakness?
+
+Yes, this is but too true: men have been blotting out God, for a
+century past, from the souls of the People, and more especially in
+latter years. The masses have been driven to Atheism, they have been
+driven on every side and by every hand.
+
+Sometimes, by blasphemies, such as were never heard upon the earth,
+until an insult to the Creator became a means of popularity among His
+creatures; blasphemies which would have darkened the sun and
+extinguished the stars, if God had not commanded His creation to pass
+unnoticed the revolt of a blind and foolish insect against Infinity,
+and refused Himself to sink to the foolishness of avenging impiety!
+Read those lines which I dare not write, those lines where an apostle
+of Atheism effaces the name of God from the beautiful creation and
+endeavors to substitute his own! * * *
+
+
+
+
+VIII.
+
+
+Sometimes the masses have been driven to Atheism by science. There are
+some geometers great in paradox, men who, of all the senses that the
+Creator has given to his creatures, have cultivated only one, the
+sense of touch,--leaving out entirely that chief sense, which connects
+and confirms all others,--_the sense of the invisible_, the _moral
+sense_. These _savans_, geometers, physicians, arithmeticians,
+mathematicians, chemists, astronomers, measurers of distances,
+calculators of numbers, have early acquired the habit of believing
+only in the _tangible_. These are the beings who, so to speak, live
+and think in the dark; all, which is not palpable, does not exist for
+them. They measure the earth, and say, "We have not met God in any
+league of its surface!" They heat the alembic, and say, "We have not
+perceived God in the smoke of any of our experiments!" They dissect
+dead bodies, and say, "We have not found God, or thought, in any
+bundle of muscles or nerves in our dissection!" They calculate columns
+of figures, long as the firmament, and say, "We have not seen God in
+the sum of any of our additions!" They pierce, with eye and glass,
+into the dazzling mysteries of night, to discover, across thousands
+and thousands of leagues, the groups and the evolutions of the
+celestial worlds, and say, "We have not discovered God at the end of
+our telescopes! The existence of God does not concern us; it is no
+affair of ours!"--Madmen! They do not suspect that the knowledge and
+adoration of God are, at bottom, the only business of the creature;
+and that all these distances, these globes, these numbers, these
+mysteries of the living being, this dissected mechanism of the dead,
+these compositions and decompositions of combined elements, these
+hosts of stars, and these eternal evolutions of suns around the divine
+hand which guides them, have no other reason for existence, for
+movement, and for duration, than to compel the acknowledgment, fear,
+admiration, and adoration of God, by that supreme sense, that sense
+superior to all other senses, that sense imponderable and impalpable,
+invisible yet beholding all things,--that sense which we call
+_intelligence_!
+
+Alas! it is not that God has denied this sense to these men of
+figures, of science, and calculation; but they have blinded
+themselves, they have cultivated the other senses so much, that they
+have weakened this. They have believed too much in matter, and so they
+have lost the eye of the spirit. These men, we are told, have made
+great progress in experimental science, but they have made good, evil,
+to the People, by saying to them, "We, who are so high, we cannot see
+God!--blind men! what do you see, then?"
+
+
+
+
+IX.
+
+
+Besides these men, there is still another class,--inventors of another
+science, which they call "_Political Economy_." This is the class of
+_Economists_. I do not, indeed, speak of all of them: there are among
+them some who are as spiritual as Fenelon, and these are, perhaps, at
+this day, the greater number. I speak only of those who, considering
+this world alone, have been driven, voluntarily or involuntarily, to
+Atheism in another way. Leaving the eternal and fastidious metaphysical
+and religions disputes in which the theologians of past centuries
+wasted the time, the good sense, and the blood of men, to honor their
+pretended God by immolating to Him the enemies of their faith, these
+_false economists_ have said to governments and people, "Leave all
+this; there is only one science which is good for any thing: it is the
+science of Wealth. All else is vanity and vexation of spirit." This is
+the famous cry, the cry of a materialistic society:--"_Grow rich!_" The
+economists of this school, now highly enlightened, legitimate children
+of the materialists of the Eighteenth Century, see in humanity, only
+matter and the things that belong to matter; in men, only consumers and
+producers; in the social functions, only labor of the hands:--to labor,
+to sow, to reap, to hew, to build, to forge, to weave, to barter, to
+exchange, to sell, to buy, to acquire, to beget,--this is, according to
+these disciples of Malthus, the whole of man! These are the Lycurguses
+and the Moseses, the legislators of a trading People: the moral,
+intellectual, spiritual, religious man does not exist for them. They
+love liberty, not because it ennobles human nature; exercises free
+will, the most sublime of man's vital functions; cultivates his highest
+faculty,--conscience; purifies religion, the fundamental idea of
+mankind, from the superstitions that debase and dishonor it; sanctifies
+human society, by leading it to the knowledge and worship of God;--they
+love it because it abolishes Custom House duties! All legislation, all
+civilization, all religion, is reduced by them to a well-balanced
+account! _To have_ and _to owe_, these are the only two words in their
+language! What matter to them the spirit, the soul, virtue,
+sentiment?--What the moral and consoling beliefs, the divine hopes, the
+supernatural certainties, revealed or proved, or the immortal destiny,
+of man?--What the present intellectual life, and the future immaterial
+life of these harvests of human generations, which God sows that they
+may bear fruit in his name, may adore his grandeur,--which Death cuts
+down to bear them, ripe in faith and virtue, up to Heaven? All this can
+neither be bought nor sold; all this has neither stated price nor net
+revenue; all this is not current on the Exchange,--therefore it is
+nothing!
+
+Thus these men count for nothing the forms of worship and the forms of
+government. They are neither followers of Brama, of Confucius, of
+Mahomet, of Plato, or of Rousseau; neither absolute monarchists,
+constitutional royalists, nor republicans. They are of the politics,
+and of the religion, in which they can manufacture most, buy and sell
+easiest, trade the best, multiply fastest! Their civilization is
+traffic; their God is the dollar! This sect, useful in administering
+intelligently the affairs of commerce, has been a shadow over
+intellectual civilization; for it has forgotten heavenly things, and,
+in forgetting them, has contributed to make the People also forget
+them.
+
+
+
+
+X.
+
+
+But that People which forgets God, forgets itself. What right has it
+to be a People, if it have not its origin and hope in Him? How can the
+men of any nation expect tyrants to remember and respect its destiny,
+if they themselves debase this destiny to that of a machine with ten
+fingers, destined to weave the greatest possible number of yards of
+cloth in seventy years, to people as many hundred acres as possible
+with creatures as much to be pitied and as miserable as themselves,
+and to serve, from generation to generation, as human manure for the
+land, to fertilize the soil of their birth, their life, and their
+graves? How can the moral spiritualism of a People long resist such
+theories? Where can they find God in this workshop of matter?
+
+
+
+
+XI.
+
+
+But even this is nothing. The French Revolution came in 1789. It came
+to put an end to a double philosophy,--the spiritual philosophy of
+Rousseau's school, founded in reason and religion, the material
+philosophy of the school of Helvetius, Diderot, and their disciples,
+atheistic and cynical. The thought of the first of these philosophies
+was religious at bottom. It consisted merely in freeing the luminous
+idea of God from the shadows by which ignorance, intolerance, the
+inquisition of temporal dynasties and times of barbarism had falsified
+it,--in freeing this idea, debased as it was,--obscured, and enchained
+to thrones,--so as to restore reason to its liberty, to inquiry, to
+the free conscience of every worship and of every soul; to revive it
+in the eyes of the People, by leading them to the broad light of day,
+the evidence of nature, the dignity and efficacy of free worship.
+
+But, for this, it was necessary to dispossess the Middle Ages of their
+temporal power, of their _mort-main_ possessions, of their civil
+jurisdictions, of their exclusive privileges, of their legal
+intolerance against all other divine thoughts, and all other individual
+or national faith, all other forms of adoration and worship than what
+were imposed by the exclusive and established religion. To rally the
+people to this work, a work legitimate in itself, a work which the
+abuses of a crafty priesthood had made necessary, seven times, and
+whose accomplishment they had seven times partially and gradually
+undertaken, since the time of Charlemagne,--the philosophers of the
+second school, the irreligious school, the atheistic school, of Diderot
+and Helvetius, drove the masses from stupidity even to impiety, and the
+demagogues of '93 forced them from impiety to Atheism, and from Atheism
+to blood. Demagogues, those poisoners of liberty, corrupt every
+revolution in which they mingle; they defile every thing that they
+touch; they dishonor every truth which they profess, by polluting or
+perverting it. The age and philosophy, Heaven and earth, desire what
+we too desire,--freedom of conscience, voluntary worship,--liberty of
+the human mind in matters of faith,--the fraternity of altars,
+invoking, each in its own language, that God whom the whole earth is
+spelling out, and who reveals, from age to age, still another letter of
+His divine name.
+
+Instead of this, Atheists and demagogues united to persecute religion,
+to revenge themselves for the old persecutions of the priesthood. They
+profaned the temples, violated conscience, blasphemed the God of the
+faithful, parodied the ceremonies, cast to the winds the pious symbols
+of worship, and persecuted the ministers of religion.
+
+In the name of the Revolution, and under the menace of terror, they
+dragged the People to these Saturnalia. They corrupted the eyes, the
+hands, the minds, the souls of the populace. These violences to the
+altar were cast back on the religious idea itself. The People, seeing
+the temple fall, believed that Heaven itself crumbled; and that,
+following the profaned image of a vanishing worship, God himself would
+vanish from the world, with conscience, the supernatural law, the
+unwritten moral law, the soul and the immortality of the human race!
+
+When the ignorant People no longer saw God between them and
+annihilation, they plunged into the boundless and bottomless abyss of
+Atheism, they lost their divine sense, they became brutal as the
+animal, who sees in the earth only a pasture ground, instead of the
+footstool of Jehovah.
+
+But these irreligious abominations, and these Saturnalia of Atheism,
+however much injury they inflicted on the religious spirit of the
+People, did not effect so much, perhaps, as the reign which followed
+this anarchy, the reign of Bonaparte, the so-called restorer of
+worship. And how?
+
+
+
+
+XII.
+
+
+The Republic had passed its paroxysm of fever, of demagoguical
+madness, of persecution. The Directory had finally concentrated and
+regulated the republican power. This government was composed of men,
+naturally moderate and tolerant, or made so by the experience and the
+lassitude of anarchy; the moderate principles of the Revolution of
+1789, and of the constituted Assembly, regained their level, thanks to
+a natural reaction, limited by good sense, as happens after every
+revolution that overshoots its mark. The priests officiated, without
+obstacle, in the temples restored by the municipalities to the
+faithful, religion was entirely free, even favored by public respect,
+and by that care for good morals which all serious governments feel.
+Faith, taking refuge in men's consciences, was, moreover, more sincere
+and more active, because it was neither constrained, nor favored, nor
+altered, nor profaned by the hand of government.
+
+This was, perhaps, the moment when there was the most religion in
+France,--for this was the moment when, after having had its martyrs,
+the religious sentiment had a life in itself, and owed nothing to the
+partial and interested protection of the powers of the State. For, the
+less the State imposes upon you a God of its own fashion, or its own
+choice, the more does your conscience rise, and the more does it
+attach itself to the God of your own reason, or your own faith!
+
+Bonaparte, whose genius was entirely military, but who, in affairs of
+moral, civil, and religious government, made it a matter of policy to
+contradict and extinguish all the truths of the Revolution, hastened
+to change all this. He wished to parody Charlemagne.
+
+Charlemagne had been the philosopher and revolutionary organizer of
+his time; Charlemagne had bound together the spiritual and temporal,
+crowning the Pontiff that he might be crowned by him in turn.
+Bonaparte desired a State religion, an agreement in which religion and
+the empire should mutually engage and mutually check each other; a
+Pope to subdue, to caress, to drive away, to recall, to persecute, by
+turns; a coronation by the hand of an enslaved Church; then a Church
+to chastise, when it did not obey;--in one word, all that shameful and
+scandalous _simony_ of ancient times, when the temporal power played,
+in the sight of the nations, with the idea and name of God, in a
+manner as contemptuous as it was odious.
+
+The People, who saw clearly through this intrigue of an indifferent
+sovereign,--an Atheist at Toulon, a crafty politician at Marengo, a
+Mussulman in Egypt, a persecutor at Rome, an oppressor at Savona, a
+schismatic at Fontainbleau, a saint at Notre Dame de Paris,--protector
+of religion and profaner of consciences by turns,--felt their belief
+shaken anew. They asked themselves, "What then is God for us, poor
+souls, since God is such an instrument of power for great men, and
+such a police machine for governments?" Scorn threw them back into
+Atheism. This was natural.
+
+
+
+
+XIII.
+
+
+This system was continued, with more sincerity on the part of
+government, under the dynasty of the Restoration. But the interested
+favors of the Court, for the higher clergy of a particular worship,
+irritated the minds of the populace against the priesthood.
+
+The more it lavished power and human dignities upon priestly
+superiors, the more the mind of the People turned from the religious
+sentiment. Each favor of royal authority to the privileged Church cast
+thousands of souls into Atheism.
+
+The Revolution of July suppressed the religion of the State: it was a
+progress towards the religion of conscience. But it favored the
+religion of the majority; it still leaned towards the supremacy of
+numbers in matters of faith. However, from the moment the State
+religion was suppressed, the religion of conscience gained ground in
+men's hearts. From 1830 to this day, every intelligent observer gladly
+acknowledges an immense progress in the religious sentiment in
+France.--Why? Because the suppression of the official religion of the
+State was a progress in the liberty of conscience, and all progress in
+liberty of conscience is a progress of human thought toward the idea
+of God. Go farther still, and complete liberty will destroy Atheism in
+the People!
+
+But the evil done was immense. The cynicism of Diderot, materialism,
+scepticism, revolutionary impiety, the false and hypocritical piety
+of the empire, the concordat, the restoration of an imperial religion,
+and of an official and dynastic God by Napoleon, the tendency of the
+two Bourbon reigns to reconstruct a political church, everlastingly
+endowed with a monopoly of goods and of souls,--and, finally, the
+industrialism of the reign of Louis Philippe, turning every thought to
+trade, to manual labor, to worldly wealth, and making gold the true
+and only God of the century;--all this has borne its fruits.
+
+Look at these fruits at the present day, and say, if practical Atheism
+does not devour the souls of this People. But let us proceed.
+
+
+
+
+XIV.
+
+
+For eighteen years, new sects, or, rather, posthumous sects, have
+disputed for the soul of the People, under the names of Fourierism, of
+Pantheism, of Communism, of Industrialism, of Economism, and, finally,
+of Terrorism. Look at them, listen to them, read them, analyze them,
+sift them, handle them; and say, if, with the exception of a vague
+deifying of every thing,--that is to say, of nothing, by the
+Fourierites,--there is a single one of these philosophical, social, or
+political sects, which is not founded on the most evident practical
+Atheism; which has not matter for a God; material enjoyments for
+morality; exclusive satisfaction of the senses for an end; purely
+sensual gratifications for a paradise; this world for the sole scene
+of existence; the body for the only condition of being; the
+prolonging of life a few more years for its only hope; a sharpening of
+the senses to material appetites for a perspective; death for the end
+of all things; after death, an assimilation with the dust of the earth
+for a future; annihilation for justice, for reward, and for
+immortality!
+
+No, there has not been since 1830, there has not been since the
+Revolution, there is not at this moment, one of these schools of
+pretended apostles, prophets of the future, and saviors of the
+present, which is not Materialism in action. It is the deadly seed of
+the century of Helvetius, producing its poisons in the dregs of
+another century. It is man, deprived of his spiritual and immortal
+sense, reduced to a solid measure of organized matter, and seeking,
+not virtue, that key to his future destiny, in his soul; but, in his
+senses, mere enjoyment, that end of the brute, who only believes in
+what he can eat and drink.
+
+
+
+
+XV.
+
+
+Analyze with me, if you are not overwhelmed with humiliation, the five
+or six Revelations of the latter days; and ask yourselves, as I have
+often asked myself, while listening to them, if these revealers of
+pretended human felicity do indeed address themselves to men, or to
+herds of fatted cattle! And are they astonished that the intellectual
+world resists them? Do they complain that the ignorant are their only
+disciples? Are they indignant that the ideas they attempt to spread,
+creep, like fetid mists, along the abysses of society, and excite,
+instead of enthusiasm, only the fanaticism of hunger and thirst? I
+can well believe it! What People is there who would become fanatics,
+only for their own destruction; renounce their moral nature, their
+divine souls, their immortal destinies, only for a morsel of more
+savory bread upon their table, for a larger portion of earth under
+their feet? No! no! enthusiasm soars aloft, it does not fall to earth.
+Bear me up to Heaven, if you wish to dazzle my eyes; promise me
+immortality, if you would offer to my soul a motive worthy of its
+nature, an aim worthy of its efforts, a price worthy of its virtue!
+But what do your systems of atheistic society show us in perspective?
+What do they promise us in compensation for our griefs? What do they
+give us in exchange for our souls? You know,--we will not speak of it.
+
+But, indeed, if these sects survive the month which sees and which
+produces them; and, if these questions which they debate, and these
+systems which they bring before the astonished People, are destined to
+serve as enigmas to posterity; what will the future say of us? It will
+only explain the Materialism, Atheism, and brutality of the doctrines
+and sects by which we have been disturbed for ten or twelve years, as
+the nightmare of a starving People, whose dreams have, for an object,
+only a frantic satisfaction of the senses. All these philosophies, or
+all these deliriums, are the deliriums or philosophies of the stomach!
+"All this epoch," future historians will say, "the French must have
+been a nation distressed by a terrible famine, to have forgotten, in
+so total an eclipse of the intellectual nature, the great and immortal
+ideas which have alone inspired even these, the human race, and
+rendered the revolutions of the People worthy of the regard of
+posterity, and of the blood of man. The Eighteenth Century must have
+been a time when avaricious Nature shut up her bosom, and the earth
+brought forth neither fruit nor harvests, that this great intellectual
+People, formerly called the French People, should have forgotten their
+souls for a morsel of bread, their immortality for an income, and
+their God for a dollar! Let us turn away our eyes and weep over that
+age."
+
+
+
+
+XVI.
+
+
+See where we were when the Republic arose: happy was it that the
+People had at bottom more of the true sentiment of God than these
+masters and heads of sects. For, what would have become of us, if, in
+that total eclipse of government, of armed force, and of law, which
+followed the 24th of February, the People, masters of all, of the
+fortunes and lives of the citizens, of Heaven and earth, had been a
+People of Materialists, of Terrorists, and of Atheists? The Revolution
+would have been a pillage, the Republic a scaffold, the dynasty of the
+People a deluge of blood. But there was no such thing. God was there.
+He revealed Himself in the multitude; Materialism disappeared in
+enthusiasm, which always exhibits the divinity of the human heart.
+
+We heard but one cry,--"Honor to God! Respect for the altars! Liberty
+to their ministers! Self-denial, harmony, protection to the weak,
+inviolability of property, assistance to the miserable!" Yes,--on the
+first day, and during the whole time that the People was alone and
+burning with excitement, it was religious! It was not until after the
+cooling of this enthusiasm that the materialistic sects, who waited
+their opportunity afar off, and who now torment the People, dared to
+offer their sensual symbols, and to set up Capital and Interest, the
+organization of labor, the increase of wages, and equality of
+conditions in this human manger, as the sole Divinities,--dared to
+infuse envy against the happy, the breath of hatred as the only
+consolation to the hearts of the miserable, lightning vengeance
+against the wrongs of Providence, imprecations against society,
+blasphemies against the existence of God, the enjoyments and
+bestialities of the corporeal nature, purchased by complete
+forgetfulness of the moral nature, and enjoyed in a debauch of ideas,
+and in a deification of matter.
+
+This cannot last; the People will not allow themselves to be changed
+into hogs by the Circes of Atheism. Their souls will flash indignation
+against their transformers. A day will come when they will see that
+they are impoverished under the pretext of being enriched; that, when
+they are robbed of their souls and of God, both their titles to
+liberty are stolen from them. Atheism and Republicanism are two words
+which exclude each other. Absolutism may thrive without a God, for it
+needs only slaves. Republicanism cannot exist without a God, for it
+must have citizens. And what is it that makes citizens? Two
+things,--the sentiment of their rights, and the sentiment of their
+duties as a republican People. Where are your rights, if you have not
+a common Father in Heaven? Where are your duties, if you have not a
+Judge between your brothers and you? Republicanism draws you in both
+these ways to God.
+
+
+
+
+XVII.
+
+
+Thus, look at every free People, from the mountains of Helvetia to the
+forests of America; see even the free British nation, where the
+Aristocracy is only the head of liberty, where the Aristocracy and
+Democracy mutually respect each other, and balance each other by an
+exchange of kindnesses and services which sanctify society while
+fortifying it. Atheism has fled before liberty: in proportion as
+despotism has receded, the divine idea has advanced in the souls of
+men. Liberty lives by morality. What is morality without a God? What
+is a law without a lawgiver?
+
+I know well, and I shall give you the reason hereafter; I know well,
+and I mourn to think of it, that, even up to the present time, the
+French People have been the least religious People in Europe.
+
+Is this because the intelligence of France has not that force, and
+that severity, which are needed to carry long enough and far enough
+the idea of God,--the greatest idea of the human soul;--that idea, as
+it comes from all the evidences of nature, and all the depths of
+reflection, being the most powerful and the most grave of human
+intelligence,--and the intelligence of France being the most
+superficial, the most light, and the least reflecting of the European
+races?
+
+Is it because our governments have always been charged with thinking,
+believing, and praying, for us?
+
+Is it that they have always given us gods of the Court, worship
+according to Etiquette, and religions of State, instead of letting us
+form, make, and practise our faith for ourselves, by reason, by
+free-will, by voluntary piety, by association, by tradition, by the
+sympathies of the community, of worship, and of the family?
+
+Is it because we are, and always have been, a military People, a
+nation of soldiers and adventurers, led by kings, heroes, ambitious
+men, from battle-field to battle-field, making conquests and not
+keeping them, ravaging, dazzling, charming, and corrupting Europe, and
+bearing the manners, vices, bravado, lightness, and impiety of the
+camp into the homes of the People?
+
+I do not know; but it is certain that the nation has an immense
+progress to make in serious thought, if it wishes to maintain its
+liberty. If we look at the comparative character, in matters of
+religious sentiment, of the great nations of Europe, America, and even
+Asia, the advantage is not on our side. While the great men of other
+nations live and die upon the scene of history, looking towards
+heaven, our great men seem to live and die in entire forgetfulness of
+the only idea for which life or death is worth any thing; they live
+and die looking at the spectators, or, at most, towards posterity.
+
+Thus, even at the present time, while we have had the greatest men,
+other nations have had the greatest citizens. It is great citizens
+that a Republic needs!
+
+
+
+
+XVIII.
+
+
+Open the history of America, the history of England, and the history
+of France; read the great lives, the great deaths, the great
+sufferings, the sublime words, when the ruling passion of life reveals
+itself in the last moments of the dying,--and compare them!
+
+Washington and Franklin fought, spoke, suffered; rose and fell, in
+their political life, from popularity to ingratitude, from glory to
+bitter scorn of their citizens,--always in the name of God, for whom
+they acted; and the liberator of America died, committing to the
+Divine protection, first, the liberty of his People,--and, afterwards,
+his own soul to His indulgent judgment.
+
+Strafford, dying for the constitution of his country, wrote to Charles
+I., to entreat his consent to his punishment, that he might spare
+trouble to the State: "Put not your trust," wrote he, after this
+consent was obtained, "put not your trust in princes, or in the son
+of man, because salvation is not in them, but from on high." While
+walking to the scaffold, he stopped under the windows of his friend,
+the Bishop of London; he raised his head towards him, and asked, in a
+loud voice, the assistance of his prayers in the terrible moment to
+which he had come. The primate, bowed with age, and bathed in tears,
+gave, in a stifled voice, his tender benedictions to his unhappy
+friend, and fell, without consciousness, into the arms of his
+attendants. Strafford continued his way, sustained by the Divine
+force, descending from this invocation upon him: he spoke with
+resignation to the People assembled to see him die. "I fear only one
+thing," said he, "and that is, that this effusion of innocent blood is
+a bad presage for the liberty of my country!" (Alas! why did not the
+Convention recall these words among us, in '93?) Stafford
+continued:--"Now," said he, "I draw near my end. One blow will make my
+wife a widow, my children orphans, deprive my poor servants of an
+affectionate master, and separate me from my dear brother, and my
+friends. May God be all of these!" He disrobed himself, and placed his
+head on the block. "I give thanks," said he, "to my heavenly Master
+for helping me to await this blow without fear; for not permitting me
+to be cast down for a single instant by terror. I repose my head as
+willingly on this block as I ever laid it down to sleep." This is
+faith in Patriotism! See Charles I., in his turn,--that model of a
+kingly death. At the moment that he was to receive the blow of the
+axe, the edge of which he had coolly examined and touched, he raised
+his head, and addressed the clergyman who was present:--"Remember!"
+said he; as if he had said, "Remember to advise my sons never to
+revenge their father!"
+
+Sidney, the young martyr of a patriotism, guilty, because too hasty,
+died to expiate the dream of the freedom of his country. He said to
+the jailer, "May my blood purify my soul! I rejoice that I die
+innocent toward the king, but a victim resigned to the King of Heaven,
+to whom we owe all life."
+
+The republicans of Cromwell sought only the way of God, even in the
+blood of battles. Their politics is nothing but faith; their
+government, a prayer; their death, a holy hymn;--they sang, like the
+Templars, on their funeral-pile. We see, we feel, we hear God, above
+all, in these revolutions, in these great popular movements, and in
+the souls of the great citizens of these nations.
+
+But recross the Atlantic, traverse the Channel, approach our own
+time, open our annals; and listen to the great political actors in the
+drama of our liberty. It would seem as if God was hidden from the
+souls of men; as if his name had never been written in the language.
+History will have the air of being atheistic, while recounting to
+posterity these _annihilations_, rather than _deaths_, of the
+celebrated men of the greatest years of France. The victims alone have
+a God; the tribunes and lictors have none.
+
+See Mirabeau on his death-bed. "Crown me with flowers," said he,
+"intoxicate me with perfumes, let me die with the sound of delicious
+music." Not one word of God, or of his soul! A sensual philosopher, he
+asks of death only a supreme sensualism; he desires to give a last
+pleasure even to agony.
+
+Look at Madam Roland, that strong woman of the Revolution,--upon the
+car that carries her to death. She looks with scorn upon the stupid
+People, who kill their prophets and their sibyls. Not one glance to
+Heaven; only an exclamation for the earth she leaves:--"O, Liberty!"
+
+Approach the prison door of the Girondines: their last night is a
+banquet, and their last hymn is the _Marseillaise_!
+
+Follow Camille Desmoulins to punishment:--a cold and indecent
+pleasantry at the tribunal; one long imprecation on the road to the
+guillotine;--those are the last thoughts of this dying man, about to
+appear on high!
+
+Listen to Danton, upon the platform of the scaffold, one step from God
+and immortality:--"I have enjoyed much; let me go to sleep," he
+says;--then, to the executioner, "You will show my head to the
+People; it is worth while!" Annihilation for a confession of faith;
+vanity for his last sigh: such is the Frenchman of these latter days!
+
+What do you think of the religious sentiment of a free People, whose
+great characters seem to walk thus in procession to annihilation; and
+die, without even death, that terrible minister, recalling to their
+minds the fear or the promises of God?
+
+Thus the Republic,--which had no future,--reared by these men, and
+mere parties, was quickly overthrown in blood. Liberty, achieved by so
+much heroism and genius, did not find in France a conscience to
+shelter it, a God to avenge it, a People to defend it, against that
+other Atheism called Glory! All was finished by a soldier, and by the
+apostacy of republicans travestied into courtiers! And what could you
+expect? Republican Atheism has no reason to be heroic. If it is
+terrified, it yields. Would one buy it, it sells itself; it would be
+most foolish to sacrifice itself. Who would mourn for it?--the People
+are ungrateful, and God does not exist.
+
+Thus end atheistic revolutions!
+
+
+
+
+XIX.
+
+
+If you wish that this revolution should not have the same end, beware
+of abject Materialism, degrading Sensualism, gross Socialism, of
+besotted Communism; of all these doctrines of flesh and blood, of meat
+and drink, of hunger and thirst, of wages and traffic, which these
+corruptors of the soul of the People preach to you, exclusively, as
+the sole thought, the sole hope, as the only duty, and only end of
+man! They will soon make you slaves of ease, serfs of your desires.
+
+Are you willing to have inscribed on the tomb of our French race, as
+on that of the _Sybarites_, this epitaph: "This People ate and drank
+well, while they browsed upon the earth?" No! You desire that History
+should write thus: "This People worshipped well, served God and
+humanity well,--in thought, in philosophy, in religion, in literature,
+in arts, in arms, in labor, in liberty, in their Aristocracies, in
+their Democracies, in their Monarchies, and their Republics! This
+nation was the spiritual laborer, the conqueror of truth; the disciple
+of the highest God, in all the ways of civilization,--and, to approach
+nearer to him, it invented the Republic, that government of duties and
+of rights, that rule of spiritualism, which finds in _ideas_ its only
+sovereignty."
+
+Seek God, then. This is your nature and your grandeur. And do not
+seek Him in these Materialisms! For God is not below,--he is on high!
+
+ LAMARTINE,
+
+ _Representative of the People_.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note
+
+This text uses some variant spelling--for example, partizan,
+demagoguical, apostacy, corruptors. This has been preserved as
+printed.
+
+The ellipsis in this text uses asterisks rather than dots.
+
+On page 62, the semicolon following 'rose' has been moved to follow
+'suffered'--"... fought, spoke, suffered; rose and fell ..."
+
+A repetition of the book title has been deleted.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Atheism Among the People, by Alphonse de Lamartine
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