Clerambault eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 296 pages of information about Clerambault.

Clerambault eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 296 pages of information about Clerambault.

Clerambault furnished them with fresh arguments by a new article, where his aversion to war seemed incidentally to condemn revolution as well.  Poets are proverbially bad politicians.

It was a reply to “The Appeal to the Dead,” that Barres, like an owl perched on a cypress in a graveyard, had wailed forth.

TO THE LIVING

Death rules the world.  You that are living, rise and shake off the yoke!  It is not enough that the nations are destroyed.  They are bidden to glorify Death, to march towards it with songs; they are expected to admire their own sacrifice ... to call it the “most glorious, the most enviable fate” ... but how untrue this is!  Life is the great, the holy thing, and love of life is the first of virtues.  The men of today have it no longer; this war has shown that, and even worse.  It has proved that during the last fifteen years, many have hoped for these horrible upheavals—­you cannot deny it!  No man loves life who has no better use for it than to throw it into the jaws of Death.  Life is a burden to many—­to you rich of the middle-class, reactionary conservatives, whose moral dyspepsia takes away your appetite, everything tastes flat and bitter.  Everything bores you.  It is a heavy burden also to you proletarians, poor, unhappy, discouraged by your hard lot.  In the dull obscurity of your lives, hopeless of any change for the better,—­Oh, Ye of little faith!—­your only chance of escape seems to be through an act of violence which lifts you out of the mire for one moment at least, even if it be the last.  Anarchists and revolutionists who have preserved something of the primitive animal energy rely on these qualities to liberate themselves in this way; they are the strong.  But the mass of the people are too weary to take the initiative, and that is why they eagerly welcome the sharp blade of war which pierces through to the core of the nations.  They give themselves up to it, darkly, voluptuously.  It is the only moment of their dim lives when they can feel the breath of the infinite within them,—­and this moment is their annihilation....

Is this a way to make the best of life?...  Which we can only maintain, it would seem, by renouncing it; and for the sake of what carnivorous gods?...  Country, Revolution ... who grind millions of men in their bloody jaws.

What glory can be found in death and destruction?  It is Life that we need, and you do not know it, for you are not worthy.  You have never felt the blessing of the living hour, the joy that circulates in the light.  Half-dead souls, you would have us all die with you, and when we stretch out our hands to save you, our sick brothers, you seek to drag us down with you into the pit.

I do not lay the blame on you, poor unfortunates, but on your masters, our leaders of the hour, our intellectual and political heads, masters of gold, iron, blood, and thought!...  You who rule the nations, who move armies; you who have formed this generation by your newspapers, your books, your schools and your churches, and who have made docile sheep of the free souls of men!...  All this enslaving education, whether lay or Christian, though it dwells with an unhealthy joy on military glory and its beatitude, still shows its utter hollowness, for both Church and State bait their hook with Death....

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Clerambault from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.