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what is property-第2章

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tic and decided; indicates with precision and delicate distinction all the links in the chain of his argument。  He is devoted entirely to you; to his business and yours; while writing to you; and never to anything else。  All the letters of his which I have seen are serious: not one is commonplace。

〃But at the same time he is not at all artistic or affected; he does not CONSTRUCT his letters; he does not revise them; he spends no time in reading them over; we have a first draught; excellent and clear; a jet from the fountain…head; but that is all。  The new arguments; which he discovers in support of his ideas and which opposition suggests to him; are an agreeable surprise; and shed a light which we should vainly search for even in his works。  His correspondence differs essentially from his books; in that it gives you no uneasiness; it places you in the very heart of the man; explains him to you; and leaves you with an impression of moral esteem and almost of intellectual security。  We feel his sincerity。  I know of no one to whom he can be more fitly compared in this respect than George Sand; whose correspondence is large; and at the same time full of sincerity。  His role and his nature correspond。  If he is writing to a young man who unbosoms himself to him in sceptical anxiety; to a young woman who asks him to decide delicate questions of conduct for her; his letter takes the form of a short moral essay; of a father…confessor's advice。  Has he perchance attended the theatre (a rare thing for him) to witness one of Ponsart's comedies; or a drama of Charles Edmond's; he feels bound to give an account of his impressions to the friend to whom he is indebted for this pleasure; and his letter becomes a literary and philosophical criticism; full of sense; and like no other。  His familiarity is suited to his correspondent; he affects no rudeness。  The terms of civility or affection which he employs towards his correspondents are sober; measured; appropriate to each; and honest in their simplicity and cordiality。  When he speaks of morals and the family; he seems at times like the patriarchs of the Bible。  His command of language is complete; and he never fails to avail himself of it。  Now and then a coarse word; a few personalities; too bitter and quite unjust or injurious; will have to be suppressed in printing; time; however; as it passes away; permits many things and renders them inoffensive。  Am I right in saying that Proudhon's correspondence; always substantial; will one day be the most accessible and attractive portion of his works?〃


Almost the whole of Proudhon's real biography is included in his correspondence。  Up to 1837; the date of the first letter which we have been able to collect; his life; narrated by Sainte Beuve; from whom we make numerous extracts; may be summed up in a few pages。

Pierre Joseph Proudhon was born on the 15th of January; 1809; in a suburb of Besancon; called Mouillere。  His father and mother were employed in the great brewery belonging to M。 Renaud。  His father; though a cousin of the jurist Proudhon; the celebrated professor in the faculty of Dijon; was a journeyman brewer。  His mother; a genuine peasant; was a common servant。  She was an orderly person of great good sense; and; as they who knew her say; a superior woman of HEROIC character;to use the expression of the venerable M。 Weiss; the librarian at Besancon。  She it was especially that Proudhon resembled: she and his grandfather Tournesi; the soldier peasant of whom his mother told him; and whose courageous deeds he has described in his work on 〃Justice。〃  Proudhon; who always felt a great veneration for his mother Catharine; gave her name to the elder of his daughters。  In 1814; when Besancon was blockaded; Mouillere; which stood in front of the walls of the town; was destroyed in the defence of the place; and Proudhon's father established a cooper's shop in a suburb of Battant; called Vignerons。  Very honest; but simple…minded and short…sighted; this cooper; the father of five children; of whom Pierre Joseph was the eldest; passed his life in poverty。  At eight years of age; Proudhon either made himself useful in the house; or tended the cattle out of doors。  No one should fail to read that beautiful and precious page of his work on 〃Justice;〃 in which he describes the rural sports which he enjoyed when a neatherd。  At the age of twelve; he was a cellar… boy in an inn。  This; however; did not prevent him from studying。

His mother was greatly aided by M。 Renaud; the former owner of the brewery; who had at that time retired from business; and was engaged in the education of his children。

Proudhon entered school as a day…scholar in the sixth class。  He was necessarily irregular in his attendance; domestic cares and restraints sometimes kept him from his classes。  He succeeded nevertheless in his studies; he showed great perseverance。  His family were so poor that they could not afford to furnish him with books; he was obliged to borrow them from his comrades; and copy the text of his lessons。  He has himself told us that he was obliged to leave his wooden shoes outside the door; that he might not disturb the classes with his noise; and that; having no hat; he went to school bareheaded。  One day; towards the close of his studies; on returning from the distribution of the prizes; loaded with crowns; he found nothing to eat in the house。


〃In his eagerness for labor and his thirst for knowledge; Proudhon;〃 says Sainte Beuve; 〃was not content with the instruction of his teachers。  From his twelfth to his fourteenth year; he was a constant frequenter of the town library。  One curiosity led to another; and he called for book after book; sometimes eight or ten at one sitting。  The learned librarian; the friend and almost the brother of Charles Nodier; M。 Weiss; approached him one day; and said; smiling; ‘But; my little friend; what do you wish to do with all these books?'  The child raised his head; eyed his questioner; and replied:  ‘What's that to you?'  And the good M。 Weiss remembers it to this day。〃


Forced to earn his living; Proudhon could not continue his studies。  He entered a printing…office in Besancon as a proof… reader。  Becoming; soon after; a compositor; he made a tour of France in this capacity。  At Toulon; where he found himself without money and without work; he had a scene with the mayor; which he describes in his work on 〃Justice。〃

Sainte Beuve says that; after his tour of France; his service book being filled with good certificates; Proudhon was promoted to the position of foreman。  But he does not tell us; for the reason that he had no knowledge of a letter written by Fallot; of which we never heard until six months since; that the printer at that time contemplated quitting his trade in order to become a teacher。

Towards 1829; Fallot; who was a little older than Proudhon; and who; after having obtained the Suard pension in 1832; died in his twenty…ninth year; while filling the position of assistant librarian at the Institute; was charged; Protestant though he was; with the revisal of a 〃Life of the Saints;〃 which was published at Besancon。  The book was in Latin; and Fallot added some notes which also were in Latin。


〃But;〃 says Sainte Beuve; 〃it happened that some errors escaped his attention; which Proudhon; then proof…reader in the printing office; did not fail to point out to him。  Surprised at finding so good a Latin scholar in a workshop; he desired to make his acquaintance; and soon there sprung up between them a most earnest and intimate friendship: a friendship of the intellect and of the heart。〃

Addressed to a printer between twenty…two and twenty… three years of age; and predicting in formal terms his future fame; Fallot's letter seems to us so interesting that we do not hesitate to reproduce it entire。

                                〃PARIS; December 5; 1831。

〃MY DEAR PROUDHON;YOU have a right to be surprised at; and even dissatisfied with; my long delay in replying to your kind letter; I will tell you the cause of it。  It became necessary to forward an account of your ideas to M。 J。 de Gray; to hear his objections; to reply to them; and to await his definitive response; which rea
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