[Napoleon the Little by Victor Hugo]@TWC D-Link bookNapoleon the Little BOOK VIII 32/50
He believes in the adhesion of the poor, he believes in the good-will of kings, he believes in the fete of eagles, he believes in the harangues of the Council of State, he believes in the benedictions of the bishops, he believes in the oath that he has forced people to take, he believes in the 7,500,000 votes! He is talking now, feeling in the humour of Augustus, of granting amnesty to the proscribed.
Usurpation granting amnesty to right! treason to honour! cowardice to courage! crime to virtue! He is to that degree embruted by his success that he thinks this all very simple. Singular effect of intoxication! Optical illusion! In his eyes that thing of the 14th of January appears all golden and glorious and radiant, that constitution defiled with mud, stained with blood, laden with chains, dragged amid the hooting of Europe by the police, the Senate, the Corps Legislatif and the Council of State, all newly shod. He takes as a triumphal car, and would drive under the Arc de l'Etoile, that sledge, standing on which, hideous, with whip in hand, he parades the ensanguined corpse of the republic! CONCLUSION--PART SECOND FAITH AND AFFLICTION I Providence brings to maturity men, things, and events, by the single fact of universal life.
To cause the disappearance of an old world it is sufficient that civilization, ascending majestically towards its solstice, should shine upon old institutions, upon old prejudices, upon old laws, and upon old customs.
This radiation burns and devours the past.
Civilization enlightens, this is the visible fact; and at the same time it consumes, this is the mysterious fact.
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