
DEMOCRACY IN FRANCE.
D E M O C R A C Y I N F R A N C E.
CHAPTER I. WHAT IS THE SOURCE OF THE PREVALENT EVIL?
CHAPTER II. WHAT IS THE DUTY OF GOVERNMENT WITH RESPECT TO DEMOCRACY?
CHAPTER III. OF THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC.
CHAPTER IV. OF THE SOCIAL REPUBLIC.
CHAPTER V. WHAT ARE THE REAL AND ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF SOCIETY IN FRANCE?
CHAPTER VI. POLITICAL CONDITIONS OF SOCIAL PEACE IN FRANCE.
CHAPTER VII. MORAL CONDITIONS OF SOCIAL PEACE IN FRANCE.
CHAPTER VIII. CONCLUSION.
Set in the restless aftermath of the 1848 French upheaval, this mid‑nineteenth‑century treatise offers a first‑hand view from a former minister who watches his nation teeter between hope and disillusionment. The author surveys the turbulent legacy of the Revolution, invoking figures such as Mirabeau, Napoleon and Lafayette, and frames their collective melancholy as a symptom of a deeper malaise.
At the heart of the work lies a stark critique of the word “democracy” itself, portrayed as an idol that masks chaos and fuels perpetual social conflict. By dissecting the claims of monarchists, republicans, socialists and other factions, the writer argues that the very concept has been co‑opted as a universal talisman, obscuring the true foundations of liberty, security and prosperity. He contends that only by confronting this false worship can a stable social order emerge.
The prose is vigorous and polemical, blending historical narrative with philosophical argument. Listeners drawn to political theory, French history, or the origins of modern ideological battles will find a compelling, thought‑provoking exploration of how a single idea can shape, and sometimes destabilise, an entire nation.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (112K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
Release date
2018-07-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1787–1874
A major voice in 19th-century France, he moved between scholarship and high politics, writing influential histories while helping shape the July Monarchy. His career ended in the Revolution of 1848, but his books and speeches kept his name alive long after his fall from power.
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by François Guizot

by François Guizot

by François Guizot

by François Guizot

by François Guizot

by François Guizot