Intimate journals | ||
LXXXVI
Princes and generations. It is equally unjust to attribute
to reigning princes the merits or the vices of
those whom they actually govern.
These merits and these vices are almost always, as
statistics and logic can prove, attributable to the
influence of the preceding government. Louis XIV
inherits from the men of Louis XIII: glory. Napoleon
I inherits from the men of the Republic: glory.
Louis-Philippe inherits from the men of Charles X:
glory. Napoleon inherits from the men of Louis-Philippe:
dishonour.
It is always the preceding government which is
responsible for the morals of its successor, in so far as
a government can be responsible for anything.
The sudden cutting short of a reign by circumstance
prevents this law from being quite exact as
regards time. One cannot mark exactly where an
influence ends, but this influence will survive
throughout the whole generation which has undergone
it in youth.
Intimate journals | ||