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woman。 If the parents have any special ability; their children will
probably inherit it; at least in part; and over and above; will have
it developed in them by an education worthy of their parents and
themselves。 If man werewhat he is nota healthy and normal
species; a permanent hereditary caste might go on intermarrying; and
so perpetuate itself。 But the same moral reason which would make
such a caste dangerousindeed; fatal to the liberty and development
of mankind; makes it happily impossible。 Crimes and follies are
certain; after a few generations; to weaken the powers of any human
caste; and unless it supplements its own weakness by mingling again
with the common stock of humanity; it must sink under that weakness;
as the ancient noblesse sank by its own vice。 Of course there were
exceptions。 The French Revolution brought those exceptions out into
strong light; and like every day of judgment; divided between the
good and the evil。 But it lies not in exceptions to save a caste;
or an institution; and a few Richelieus; Liancourts; Rochefoucaulds;
Noailles; Lafayettes were but the storks among the cranes involved
in the wholesale doom due not to each individual; but to a system
and a class。
Profligacy; pride; idlenessthese are the vices which we have to
lay to the charge of the Teutonic Nobility of the Ancien Regime in
France especially; and (though in a less degree perhaps) over the
whole continent of Europe。 But below them; and perhaps the cause of
them all; lay another and deeper vicegodlessnessatheism。
I do not mean merely want of religion; doctrinal unbelief。 I mean
want of belief in duty; in responsibility。 Want of belief that
there was a living God governing the universe; who had set them
their work; and would judge them according to their work。 And
therefore; want of belief; yea; utter unconsciousness; that they
were set in their places to make the masses below them better men;
to impart to them their own civilisation; to raise them to their own
level。 They would have shrunk from that which I just now defined as
the true duty of an aristocracy; just because it would have seemed
to them madness to abolish themselves。 But the process of abolition
went on; nevertheless; only now from without instead of from within。
So it must always be; in such a case。 If a ruling class will not
try to raise the masses to their own level; the masses will try to
drag them down to theirs。 That sense of justice which allowed
privileges; when they were as strictly official privileges as the
salary of a judge; or the immunity of a member of the House of
Commons; when they were earned; as in the Middle Age; by severe
education; earnest labour; and life and death responsibility in
peace and war; will demand the abolition of those privileges; when
no work is done in return for them; with a voice which must be
heard; for it is the voice of truth and justice。
But with that righteous voice will mingle another; most wicked; and
yet; alas! most flattering to poor humanitythe voice of envy;
simple and undisguised; of envy; which moralists hold to be one of
the basest of human passions; which can never be justified; however
hateful or unworthy be the envied man。 And when a whole people; or
even a majority thereof; shall be possessed by that; what is there
that they will not do?
Some are surprised and puzzled when they find; in the French
Revolution of 1793; the noblest and the foulest characters labouring
in concert; and side by sideoften; too; paradoxical as it may
seem; united in the same personage。 The explanation is simple。
Justice inspired the one; the other was the child of simple envy。
But this passion of envy; if it becomes permanent and popular; may
avenge itself; like all other sins。 A nation may say to itself;
〃Provided we have no superiors to fall our pride; we are content。
Liberty is a slight matter; provided we have equality。 Let us be
slaves; provided we are all slaves alike。〃 It may destroy every
standard of humanity above its own mean average; it may forget that
the old ruling class; in spite of all its defects and crimes; did at
least pretend to represent something higher than man's necessary
wants; plus the greed of amassing money; never meeting (at least in
the country districts) any one wiser or more refined than an
official or a priest drawn from the peasant class; it may lose the
belief that any standard higher than that is needed; and; all but
forgetting the very existence of civilisation; sink contented into a
dead level of intellectual mediocrity and moral barbarism; crying;
〃Let us eat and drink; for to…morrow we die。〃
A nation in such a temper will surely be taken at its word。 Where
the carcase is; there the eagles will be gathered together; and
there will not be wanting to such nationsas there were not wanting
in old Greece and Romedespots who will give them all they want;
and more; and say to them: 〃Yes; you shall eat and drink; and yet
you shall not die。 For I; while I take care of your mortal bodies;
will see that care is taken of your immortal souls。〃
For there are those who have discovered; with the kings of the Holy
Alliance; that infidelity and scepticism are political mistakes; not
so much because they promote vice; as because they promote (or are
supposed to promote) free thought; who see that religion (no matter
of what quality) is a most valuable assistant to the duties of a
minister of police。 They will quote in their own behalf
Montesquieu's opinion that religion is a column necessary to sustain
the social edifice; they will quote; too; that sound and true saying
of De Tocqueville's: {1} 〃If the first American who might be met;
either in his own country; or abroad; were to be stopped and asked
whether he considered religion useful to the stability of the laws
and the good order of society; he would answer; without hesitation;
that no civilised society; but more especially none in a state of
freedom; can exist without religion。 Respect for religion is; in
his eyes; the greatest guarantee of the stability of the State; and
of the safety of the community。 Those who are ignorant of the
science of government; know that fact at least。〃
M。 de Tocqueville; when he wrote these words; was lamenting that in
France; 〃freedom was forsaken;〃 〃a thing for which it is said that
no one any longer cares in France。〃 He did not; it seems to me;
perceive that; as in America the best guarantee of freedom is the
reverence for a religion or religions; which are free themselves;
and which teach men to be free; so in other countries the best
guarantee of slavery is; reverence for religions which are not free;
and which teach men to be slaves。
But what M。 de Tocqueville did not see; there are others who will
see; who will say: 〃If religion be the pillar of political and
social order; there is an order which is best supported by a
religion which is adverse to free