|
Appeal
to the Princes to Bring About Social
Justice
by Claude Henri, Comte de
Saint-Simon
Princes, What is, in the eyes of God and
Christians, the nature and character of the power
which you exercise? What is the basis of the system
of social organization which you seek to establish?
What measures have you taken to ameliorate the
moral and physical existence of the poor classes?
You call yourselves Christians and still you found
your power upon physical force. You are still only
the successors of Caesar, and you forget that the
true Christians set as the ultimate end of their
work the complete annihilation of the power of the
sword, the power of Caesar, which by its is
essentially provisional. And this is the power
which you have undertaken to form as the basis of
social organization! According to you, the
initiative to perform all the general reforms which
the progress of enlightenment has been calling for
is left to this power exclusively. In order to
support this monstrous system you keep two million
people under arms. All the tribunals had to adopt
your principle and you have made the Catholic,
Protestant and Greek clergy profess loudly the
heresy that Caesar's power is the regulating power
of the Christian society.
While reminding the nations of the Christian
religion by the symbol of your union, while making
them enjoy a peace which, for them, is the first of
all goods, you have nevertheless not aroused their
gratitude toward yourselves. Your personal interest
dominates too much in the combinations which you
present as being of a general interest. The supreme
European power which lies in your hands is far from
being a Christian power, as it should have become.
Ever since you have acted, you have displayed the
character and the insignia of physical force, of
anti-Christian force.
All the measures of whatever importance which
you have taken since you united one with another in
the Holy Alliance, all these measures tend toward
worsening the lot of the poor classes, not only for
this actual generation, but even for the
generations to come. You have raised the taxes, you
raise them every year in order to cover the
increase of expenses brought about by your armies
of soldiers and by the luxury of your courts. The
class of subjects to which you grant special
protection is the aristocracy, a class which, like
you, founds its rights upon the sword. However,
your blamable conduct seems excusable from several
angles: that which has led you into error is the
approval received by your efforts to smash the
power of the modern Caesar. While fighting him, you
have acted in a very Christian manner, but so it
was only because in his hands the authority of
Caesar, which Napoleon has conquered, had much more
force than in yours where it has come only by
heritage. Your conduct has also another excuse: It
should have been the task of the clergymen to stop
you at the edge of the abyss; instead they
precipitated themselves into it, together with
you.
Excerpted from The Work of
St. Simon
|
At
Amazon Books

Memoirs
Duc De Saint-Simon, 1691-1709 (Lost
Treasures)
Henri
Saint Simon 1760-1825: Selected Writings on
Science, Industry and Social Organization
The
political thought of Saint-Simon
The
Doctrine of Saint-Simon: An Exposition; First Year,
1828-1829 (Studies in the Libertarian and Utopian
Tradition)
|