The French Revolution eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,095 pages of information about The French Revolution.

The French Revolution eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,095 pages of information about The French Revolution.
to Berlin, and utmost Petersburg in the frozen North!  Great Burke has raised his great voice long ago; eloquently demonstrating that the end of an Epoch is come, to all appearance the end of Civilised Time.  Him many answer:  Camille Desmoulins, Clootz Speaker of Mankind, Paine the rebellious Needleman, and honourable Gallic Vindicators in that country and in this:  but the great Burke remains unanswerable; ’The Age of Chivalry is gone,’ and could not but go, having now produced the still more indomitable Age of Hunger.  Altars enough, of the Dubois-Rohan sort, changing to the Gobel-and-Talleyrand sort, are faring by rapid transmutation to, shall we say, the right Proprietor of them?  French Game and French Game-Preservers did alight on the Cliffs of Dover, with cries of distress.  Who will say that the end of much is not come?  A set of mortals has risen, who believe that Truth is not a printed Speculation, but a practical Fact; that Freedom and Brotherhood are possible in this Earth, supposed always to be Belial’s, which ’the Supreme Quack’ was to inherit!  Who will say that Church, State, Throne, Altar are not in danger; that the sacred Strong-box itself, last Palladium of effete Humanity, may not be blasphemously blown upon, and its padlocks undone?

The poor Constituent Assembly might act with what delicacy and diplomacy it would; declare that it abjured meddling with its neighbours, foreign conquest, and so forth; but from the first this thing was to be predicted:  that old Europe and new France could not subsist together.  A Glorious Revolution, oversetting State-Prisons and Feudalism; publishing, with outburst of Federative Cannon, in face of all the Earth, that Appearance is not Reality, how shall it subsist amid Governments which, if Appearance is not Reality, are—­one knows not what?  In death feud, and internecine wrestle and battle, it shall subsist with them; not otherwise.

Rights of Man, printed on Cotton Handkerchiefs, in various dialects of human speech, pass over to the Frankfort Fair. (Toulongeon, i. 256.) What say we, Frankfort Fair?  They have crossed Euphrates and the fabulous Hydaspes; wafted themselves beyond the Ural, Altai, Himmalayah:  struck off from wood stereotypes, in angular Picture-writing, they are jabbered and jingled of in China and Japan.  Where will it stop?  Kien-Lung smells mischief; not the remotest Dalai-Lama shall now knead his dough-pills in peace.—­Hateful to us; as is the Night!  Bestir yourselves, ye Defenders of Order!  They do bestir themselves:  all Kings and Kinglets, with their spiritual temporal array, are astir; their brows clouded with menace.  Diplomatic emissaries fly swift; Conventions, privy Conclaves assemble; and wise wigs wag, taking what counsel they can.

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The French Revolution from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.