[Napoleon the Little by Victor Hugo]@TWC D-Link book
Napoleon the Little

BOOK VIII
46/50

But reflect, if you can.

Had the Lower Empire the compass, the electric battery, the printing press, the newspaper, the locomotive, the electric telegraph?
So many wings to bear man aloft, which the Lower Empire did not possess! The nineteenth century soars, where the Lower Empire crawled.
Are you aware of this?
What! Shall we see once more the Empress Zoe, Roman Argyrio, Nicephorus Logothetes, Michael Calafates?
Nonsense! Do you imagine that Providence repeats itself so tamely?
Do you believe that God keeps repeating himself?
Let us have faith! Let us speak with decision! Self-irony is the beginning of baseness.

It is by speaking with decision that we become good, that we become great.

Yes, the enfranchisement of intellects, and the consequent enfranchisement of nations, this was the sublime task that the nineteenth century was performing in conjunction with France; for the twofold providential work of the time and of men, of maturation and of action, was blended in the common labour, and the great epoch had for its true home the great nation.
O my country! it is at this moment, when I see you bleeding, inanimate, your head hanging, your eyes closed, your mouth open, and no words issuing therefrom, the marks of the whip upon your shoulders, the nails of the executioner's shoes imprinted upon your body, naked and ashamed, and like a thing deprived of life, an object of hatred, of derision, alas! it is at this moment, my country, that the heart of the exile overflows with love and respect for you! You lie there motionless.

The minions of despotism and oppression laugh, and enjoy the haughty illusion that you are no longer to be feared.


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