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How many small proprietors and manufacturers have not been ruined by large ones through chicanery; law…suits; and competition? Strategy; violence; and usury;such are the proprietor's methods of plundering the laborer。
Thus we see property; at all ages and in all its forms; oscillating by virtue of its principle between two opposite terms;extreme division and extreme accumulation。
Property; at its first term; is almost null。 Reduced to personal exploitation; it is property only potentially。 At its second term; it exists in its perfection; then it is truly property。
When property is widely distributed; society thrives; progresses; grows; and rises quickly to the zenith of its power。 Thus; the Jews; after leaving Babylon with Esdras and Nehemiah; soon became richer and more powerful than they had been under their kings。 Sparta was in a strong and prosperous condition during the two or three centuries which followed the death of Lycurgus。 The best days of Athens were those of the Persian war; Rome; whose inhabitants were divided from the beginning into two classes; the exploiters and the exploited;knew no such thing as peace。
When property is concentrated; society; abusing itself; polluted; so to speak; grows corrupt; wears itself outhow shall I express this horrible idea?plunges into long…continued and fatal luxury。
When feudalism was established; society had to die of the same disease which killed it under the Caesars;I mean accumulated property。 But humanity; created for an immortal destiny; is deathless; the revolutions which disturb it are purifying crises; invariably followed by more vigorous health。 In the fifth century; the invasion of the Barbarians partially restored the world to a state of natural equality。 In the twelfth century; a new spirit pervading all society gave the slave his rights; and through justice breathed new life into the heart of nations。 It has been said; and often repeated; that Christianity regenerated the world。 That is true; but it seems to me that there is a mistake in the date。 Christianity had no influence upon Roman society; when the Barbarians came; that society had disappeared。 For such is God's curse upon property; every political organization based upon the exploitation of man 。 shall perish: slave…labor is death to the race of tyrants。 The patrician families became extinct; as the feudal families did; and as all aristocracies must。
It was in the middle ages; when a reactionary movement was beginning to secretly undermine accumulated property; that the influence of Christianity was first exercised to its full extent。
The destruction of feudalism; the conversion of the serf into the commoner; the emancipation of the communes; and the admission of the Third Estate to political power; were deeds accomplished by Christianity exclusively。 I say Christianity; not ecclesiasticism; for the priests and bishops were themselves large proprietors; and as such often persecuted the villeins。 Without the Christianity of the middle ages; the existence of modern society could not be explained; and would not be possible。
The truth of this assertion is shown by the very facts which M。 Laboulaye quotes; although this author inclines to the opposite opinion。'1'
'1' M。 Guizot denies that Christianity alone is entitled to the glory of the abolition of slavery。 〃To this end;〃 he says; 〃many causes were necessary;the evolution of other ideas and other principles of civilization。〃 So general an assertion cannot be refuted。 Some of these ideas and causes should have been pointed out; that we might judge whether their source was not wholly Christian; or whether at least the Christian spirit had not penetrated and thus fructified them。 Most of the emancipation charters begin with these words: 〃For the love of God and the salvation of my soul。〃
Now; we did not commence to love God and to think of our salvation until after the promulgation of the Gospel。
1。 Slavery among the Romans。〃The Roman slave was; in the eyes of the law; only a thing;no more than an ox or a horse。 He had neither property; family; nor personality; he was defenceless against his master's cruelty; folly; or cupidity。 ‘Sell your oxen that are past use;' said Cato; ‘sell your calves; your lambs; your wool; your hides; your old ploughs; your old iron; your old slave; and your sick slave; and all that is of no use to you。' When no market could be found for the slaves that were worn out by sickness or old age; they were abandoned to starvation。 Claudius was the first defender of this shameful practice。〃
〃Discharge your old workman;〃 says the economist of the proprietary school; 〃turn off that sick domestic; that toothless and worn…out servant。 Put away the unserviceable beauty; to the hospital with the useless mouths!〃
〃The condition of these wretched beings improved but little under the emperors; and the best that can be said of the goodness of Antoninus is that he prohibited intolerable cruelty; as an ABUSE OF PROPERTY。 _Expedit enim reipublicae ne quis re re sua male utatur_; says Gaius。
〃As soon as the Church met in council; it launched an anathema against the masters who had exercised over their slaves this terrible right of life and death。 Were not the slaves; thanks to the right of sanctuary and to their poverty; the dearest proteges of religion? Constantine; who embodied in the laws the grand ideas of Christianity; valued the life of a slave as highly as that of a freeman; and declared the master; who had intentionally brought death upon his slave; guilty of murder。 Between this law and that of Antoninus there is a complete revolution in moral ideas: the slave was a thing; religion has made him a man。〃
Note the last words: 〃Between the law of the Gospel and that of Antoninus there is a complete revolution in moral ideas: the slave was a thing; religion has made him a man。〃 The moral revolution which transformed the slave into a citizen was effected; then; by Christianity before the Barbarians set foot upon the soil of the empire。 We have only to trace the progress of this MORAL revolution in the PERSONNEL of society。 〃But;〃 M。 Laboulaye rightly says; 〃it did not change the condition of men in a moment; any more than that of things; between slavery and liberty there was an abyss which could not be filled in a day; the transitional step was servitude。〃
Now; what was servitude? In what did it differ from Roman slavery; and whence came this difference? Let the same author answer。
2。 Of servitude。〃I see; in the lord's manor; slaves charged with domestic duties。 Some are employed in the personal service of the master; others are charged with household cares。 The women spin the wool; the men grind the grain; make the bread; or practise; in the interest of the seignior; what little they know of the industrial arts。 The master punishes them when he chooses; kills them with impunity; and sells them and theirs like so many cattle。 The slave has no personality; and consequently no _wehrgeld_'1' peculiar to himself: he is a thing。 The _wehrgeld_ belongs to the master as a compensation for the loss of his property。 Whether the slave is killed or stolen; the in