CHAPTER IV: The Metamorphoses of the Revolutionary Process
As
can be seen from the analysis in the preceding chapter, the revolutionary
process is the development by stages of certain disorderly tendencies of
Western and Christian man and of the errors to which they have given rise.
In
each stage, these tendencies and errors have a particular characteristic. The
Revolution, therefore, metamorphoses in the course of history.
The
metamorphoses observed in the great general lines of the Revolution recur on a
smaller scale within each of its great episodes.
Hence, the spirit of the French Revolution, in its first phase, used an
aristocratic and even ecclesiastical mask and language. It frequented the court
and sat at the table of the royal council. Later, it became bourgeois and
worked for a bloodless abolition of the monarchy and nobility and for a veiled
and pacific suppression of the Catholic Church. As soon as it could, it became
Jacobin and inebriated itself with blood in the Terror.
But
the excesses committed by the Jacobin faction stirred up reactions. The
Revolution turned back, going through the same stages in reverse. From Jacobin
it became bourgeois in the Directory. With Napoleon, it extended its hand to
the Church and opened its doors to the exiled nobility. Finally, it cheered the
returning Bourbons. Although the French Revolution ended, the revolutionary
process did not end. It erupted again with the fall of Charles X and the rise
of Louis Philippe, and thus through successive metamorphoses, taking advantage
of its successes and even its failures, it reached its present state of
paroxysm.
The
Revolution, then, uses its metamorphoses not only to advance but also to carry
out the tactical retreats that have so frequently been necessary.
This
movement, always alive, has at times feigned death. This is one of its most
interesting metamorphoses. On the surface, the situation of a certain country
looks entirely tranquil. The counter-revolutionary reaction slackens and dozes.
But in the depths of the religious, cultural, social, or economic life, the
revolutionary ferment is continuously spreading. Then, at the end of this
apparent interval, there is an unexpected upheaval, often more severe than the
previous ones.
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