Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Note on the Introduction
- Introduction
- Chronology
- Bibliography
- Note on the text
- Considerations on France
- 1 Of Revolutions
- 2 Reflections on the Ways of Providence in the French Revolution
- 3 On the Violent Destruction of the Human Species
- 4 Can the French Republic Last?
- 5 The French Revolution Considered in its Antireligious Character
- 6 On Divine Influence in Political Constitutions
- 7 Evidence of the Incapacity of the Present French Government
- 8 Of the Old French Constitution
- 9 How Will the Counter-Revolution Happen if it Comes?
- 10 On the Supposed Dangers of a Counter-Revolution
- 11 From a History of the French Revolution by David Hume
- Postscript
- Index
- Cambridge texts in the history of political thought
4 - Can the French Republic Last?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Note on the Introduction
- Introduction
- Chronology
- Bibliography
- Note on the text
- Considerations on France
- 1 Of Revolutions
- 2 Reflections on the Ways of Providence in the French Revolution
- 3 On the Violent Destruction of the Human Species
- 4 Can the French Republic Last?
- 5 The French Revolution Considered in its Antireligious Character
- 6 On Divine Influence in Political Constitutions
- 7 Evidence of the Incapacity of the Present French Government
- 8 Of the Old French Constitution
- 9 How Will the Counter-Revolution Happen if it Comes?
- 10 On the Supposed Dangers of a Counter-Revolution
- 11 From a History of the French Revolution by David Hume
- Postscript
- Index
- Cambridge texts in the history of political thought
Summary
It would be better to ask whether the Republic can exist. The assumption is made, but too hastily, and the preliminary question seems quite justified, for nature and history together prove that a large indivisible republic is an impossibility. A small number of republicans closed up within the walls of a city can undoubtedly have millions of subjects; this was the case with Rome. But a large and free nation cannot exist under a republican government. The thing is so clear in itself that theory could dispense with experience; but here experience, which decides every question in politics as in physics, is perfectly in accord with theory.
What could have been said to the French to get them to believe in a republic of twenty-four million people? Two things only: (1) nothing prevents us from doing something that has never been seen before; (2) the discovery of the representative system makes possible for us what was impossible for our predecessors. Let us examine the strength of these two arguments.
If we are told that a die thrown a billion times had never turned up anything but five numbers – 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 – could we believe that there was a 6 on one of the faces? NO, undoubtedly; and it would be as obvious to us as if we had seen it that one of the faces is blank or that one of the numbers is repeated.
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- Maistre: Considerations on France , pp. 32 - 40Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994