Revolution and the Republic by Jeremy Jennings
Author:Jeremy Jennings [Jennings, Jeremy]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Published: 2012-02-08T19:37:54+00:00
democratic institutions, and ‘centralization fell with absolute government’.237 Yet,
with the passing of the ‘vigorous generation’ that had begun the Revolution, the love
of liberty subsided amidst ‘anarchy and popular dictatorship’ and the taste for equality
prevailed. And so ‘from the very bowels of a nation that had just overthrown the
monarchy suddenly emerged a power more extensive, more detailed, and more
absolute than that exercised by any of our kings’.238 From this point onwards,
Tocqueville concluded, the French had limited themselves to ‘placing the head of
Liberty upon a servile body’.239
Contained within L’Ancien Régime et la Révolution was a passionate plea for
individual liberty as an end in itself. Yet this very same book served as an explana-
tion of the failure of liberty to secure a solid foundation and sustained existence in
France. Seen thus, the anomaly in Tocqueville’s account was the moment of
‘greatness’ and ‘virility’, the ‘time of immortal memory’ as he described it, when
the call for liberty, long submerged beneath despotism, all-too-briefly made its
voice heard above the clamour for vengeance. It was a moment that almost defied
explanation, such was the weight that Tocqueville attributed to the prevailing
tradition of centralization and its eradication of countervailing trends. This perhaps
explains the peculiar passage at the very end of the book where Tocqueville spoke of
the unique character of the French people. No nation was so full of contrasts, so
changeable, so routine-bound, and so capable of coming above or below the
‘common norms of humanity’. France alone, Tocqueville wrote, ‘could give birth
to a revolution so sudden, so radical, so impetuous in its course and yet so full of
reverses, contradictory facts and contrary examples’.240 But the reality, as he himself
acknowledged, was that, for all its frequent revival in new and unexpected forms,
the desire for liberty quickly succumbed before a love of equality that remained
234 Ibid. 232.
235 Ibid. 235.
236 Ibid. 243.
237 Ibid. 248.
238 Ibid.
239 Ibid.
240 Ibid. 250.
282
History, Revolution, and Terror
constant. Such, at least, was how it appeared to Tocqueville from deep within the
Second Empire of Napoleon III.
Tocqueville, like so many of his fellow historians, could not resist asserting the
unique and exceptional character of the Revolution. He was, on the other hand,
immune from the commonly held faith in the virtues of the people and plainly saw
little evidence of the Revolution as the dawn of a new religion of justice and
fraternity. Indeed, with the notable exception of the summer of 1789, Tocqueville
appears to have discerned few signs of political innovation among the momentous
events that shook France to her very foundations. However, Tocqueville was to be
by no means alone in stressing the theme of continuity. As we have seen, Quinet,
under the influence of Tocqueville, was to rework the idea in order to suggest that
the Revolution marked a revival of monarchical absolutism. Another person to
develop this theme was the diplomatic historian Albert Sorel. 241 ‘The fact is’, Sorel
wrote, almost three decades later, ‘that the Revolution did not, as has too often been
said, break the chain of French history.’242 Although probably the most remarkable
of episodes, it was nonetheless only ‘one episode’ in that history. Indeed, Sorel
ended the introduction to
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