that all roads are free and open to all to rise to
everything; that personal merit and toil have an infinitely
greater share than was ever formerly allowed to them
in the fortunes of men. The third estate of
the old regimen exists no more; it disappeared in
its victory over privilege and absolute power; it has
for heirs the middle classes, as they are now called;
but these classes, whilst inheriting the conquests
of the old third estate, hold them on new conditions
also, as legitimate as binding. To secure their
own interests, as well as to discharge their public
duty, they are bound to be at once conservative and
liberal; they must, on the one hand, enlist and rally
beneath their flag the old, once privileged superioritics,
which have survived the fall of the old regimen, and,
on the other hand, fully recognize the continual upward
movement which is fermenting in the whole body of
the nation. That, in its relations with the aristocratic
classes, the third estate of the old regimen should
have been and for a long time remained uneasy, disposed
to take umbrage, jealous and even envious, is no more
than natural; it had its rights to urge and its conquests
to gain; nowadays its conquests have been won, the
rights are recognized, proclaimed, and exercised;
the middle classes have no longer any legitimate ground
for uneasiness or envy; they can rest with full confidence
in their own dignity and their own strength; they have
undergone all the necessary trials, and passed all
the necessary tests. In respect of the lower
orders, and the democracy properly so called, the
position of the middle classes is no less favorable;
they have no fixed line of separation; for who can
say where the middle classes begin and where they
end? In the name of the principles of common
rights and general liberty they were formed; and by
the working of the same principles they are being
constantly recruited, and are incessantly drawing
new vigor from the sources whence they sprang.
To maintain common rights and free movement upwards
against the retrograde tendencies of privilege and
absolute power, on the one hand, and on the other
against the insensate and destructive pretensions of
levellers and anarchists, is now the double business
of the middle classes; and it is at the same time,
for themselves, the sure way of preserving preponderance
in the state, in the name of general interests, of
which those classes are the most real and most efficient
representatives.
On reaching, in our history, the period at which Philip the Handsome, by giving admission amongst the states-general to the “burghers of the good towns,” substituted the third estate for the communes, and the united action of the three great classes of Frenchmen for their local struggles, we did well to halt a while, in order clearly to mark the position and part of the new actor in the great drama of national life. We will now return to the real business of the drama, that is, to the history of France, which became, in the fourteenth century, more complex, more tragic, and more grand than it had ever yet been.