[What is Property? by P. J. Proudhon]@TWC D-Link bookWhat is Property? PART SECOND 152/323
Nevertheless, the new social organization did not meet with the same end in all places.
In Lombardy, for example, where the people rapidly growing rich through commerce and industry soon conquered the authorities, even to the exclusion of the nobles,--first, the nobility became poor and degraded, and were forced, in order to live and maintain their credit, to gain admission to the guilds; then, the ordinary subalternization of property leading to inequality of fortunes, to wealth and poverty, to jealousies and hatreds, the cities passed rapidly from the rankest democracy under the yoke of a few ambitious leaders.
Such was the fate of most of the Lombardic cities,--Genoa, Florence, Bologna, Milan, Pisa, &c, .-- which afterwards changed rulers frequently, but which have never since risen in favor of liberty.
The people can easily escape from the tyranny of despots, but they do not know how to throw off the effects of their own despotism; just as we avoid the assassin's steel, while we succumb to a constitutional malady.
As soon as a nation becomes proprietor, either it must perish, or a foreign invasion must force it again to begin its evolutionary round.
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