Amongst the novel objects that attracted my attention
during my stay in the United States, nothing struck me more forcibly than the
general equality of conditions. I readily discovered the prodigious influence
which this primary fact exercises on the whole course of society, by giving a
certain direction to public opinion, and a certain tenor to the laws; by
imparting new maxims to the governing powers, and peculiar habits to the
governed. I speedily perceived that the influence of this fact extends far beyond
the political character and the laws of the country, and that it has no less
empire over civil society than over the Government; it creates opinions,
engenders sentiments, suggests the ordinary practices of life, and modifies
whatever it does not produce. The more I advanced in the study of American
society, the more I perceived that the equality of conditions is the
fundamental fact from which all others seem to be derived, and the central
point at which all my observations constantly terminated.
I then turned my thoughts to our own hemisphere, where I
imagined that I discerned something analogous to the spectacle which the New
World presented to me. I observed that the equality of conditions is daily
progressing towards those extreme limits which it seems to have reached in the
United States, and that the democracy which governs the American communities
appears to be rapidly rising into power in Europe. I hence conceived the idea
of the book which is now before the reader.
It is evident to all alike that a great democratic
revolution is going on amongst us; but there are two opinions as to its nature
and consequences. To some it appears to be a novel accident, which as such may
still be checked; to others it seems irresistible, because it is the most uniform,
the most ancient, and the most permanent tendency which is to be found in
history. Let us recollect the situation of France seven hundred years ago, when
the territory was divided amongst a small number of families, who were the
owners of the soil and the rulers of the inhabitants; the right of governing
descended with the family inheritance from generation to generation; force was
the only means by which man could act on man, and landed property was the sole
source of power. Soon, however, the political power of the clergy was founded,
and began to exert itself: the clergy opened its ranks to all classes, to the
poor and the rich, the villein and the lord; equality penetrated into the
Government through the Church, and the being who as a serf must have vegetated
in perpetual bondage took his place as a priest in the midst of nobles, and not
infrequently above the heads of kings.
The different relations of men became more complicated
and more numerous as society gradually became more stable and more civilized.
Thence the want of civil laws was felt; and the order of legal functionaries
soon rose from the obscurity of the tribunals and their dusty chambers, to
appear at the court of the monarch, by the side of the feudal barons in their
ermine and their mail. Whilst the kings were ruining themselves by their great
enterprises, and the nobles exhausting their resources by private wars, the
lower orders were enriching themselves by commerce. The influence of money
began to be perceptible in State affairs. The transactions of business opened a
new road to power, and the financier rose to a station of political influence
in which he was at once flattered and despised. Gradually the spread of mental
acquirements, and the increasing taste for literature and art, opened chances
of success to talent; science became a means of government, intelligence led to
social power, and the man of letters took a part in the affairs of the State.
The value attached to the privileges of birth decreased in the exact proportion
in which new paths were struck out to advancement. In the eleventh century
nobility was beyond all price; in the thirteenth it might be purchased; it was
conferred for the first time in 1270; and equality was thus introduced into the
Government by the aristocracy itself.
In the course of these seven hundred years it sometimes
happened that in order to resist the authority of the Crown, or to diminish the
power of their rivals, the nobles granted a certain share of political rights
to the people. Or, more frequently, the king permitted the lower orders to
enjoy a degree of power, with the intention of repressing the aristocracy. In
France the kings have always been the most active and the most constant of
levellers. When they were strong and ambitious they spared no pains to raise
the people to the level of the nobles; when they were temperate or weak they
allowed the people to rise above themselves. Some assisted the democracy by
their talents, others by their vices. Louis XI and Louis XIV reduced every rank
beneath the throne to the same subjection; Louis XV descended, himself and all
his Court, into the dust.
As soon as land was held on any other than a feudal
tenure, and personal property began in its turn to confer influence and power,
every improvement which was introduced in commerce or manufacture was a fresh
element of the equality of conditions. Henceforward every new discovery, every
new want which it engendered, and every new desire which craved satisfaction,
was a step towards the universal level. The taste for luxury, the love of war,
the sway of fashion, and the most superficial as well as the deepest passions
of the human heart, co-operated to enrich the poor and to impoverish the rich.
From the time when the exercise of the intellect became
the source of strength and of wealth, it is impossible not to consider every
addition to science, every fresh truth, and every new idea as a germ of power
placed within the reach of the people. Poetry, eloquence, and memory, the grace
of wit, the glow of imagination, the depth of thought, and all the gifts which
are bestowed by Providence with an equal hand, turned to the advantage of the
democracy; and even when they were in the possession of its adversaries they
still served its cause by throwing into relief the natural greatness of man;
its conquests spread, therefore, with those of civilization and knowledge, and
literature became an arsenal where the poorest and the weakest could always
find weapons to their hand.
In perusing the pages of our history, we shall scarcely
meet with a single great event, in the lapse of seven hundred years, which has
not turned to the advantage of equality. The Crusades and the wars of the
English decimated the nobles and divided their possessions; the erection of
communities introduced an element of democratic liberty into the bosom of
feudal monarchy; the invention of fire-arms equalized the villein and the noble
on the field of battle; printing opened the same resources to the minds of all
classes; the post was organized so as to bring the same information to the door
of the poor man's cottage and to the gate of the palace; and Protestantism
proclaimed that all men are alike able to find the road to heaven. The
discovery of America offered a thousand new paths to fortune, and placed riches
and power within the reach of the adventurous and the obscure. If we examine
what has happened in France at intervals of fifty years, beginning with the
eleventh century, we shall invariably perceive that a twofold revolution has
taken place in the state of society. The noble has gone down on the social
ladder, and the roturier has gone up; the one descends as the other rises.
Every half century brings them nearer to each other, and they will very shortly
meet.
Nor is this phenomenon at all peculiar to France.
Whithersoever we turn our eyes we shall witness the same continual revolution
throughout the whole of Christendom. The various occurrences of national
existence have everywhere turned to the advantage of democracy; all men have
aided it by their exertions: those who have intentionally labored in its cause,
and those who have served it unwittingly; those who have fought for it and
those who have declared themselves its opponents, have all been driven along in
the same track, have all labored to one end, some ignorantly and some
unwillingly; all have been blind instruments in the hands of God.
The gradual development of the equality of conditions is
therefore a providential fact, and it possesses all the characteristics of a
divine decree: it is universal, it is durable, it constantly eludes all human
interference, and all events as well as all men contribute to its progress.
Would it, then, be wise to imagine that a social impulse which dates from so
far back can be checked by the efforts of a generation? Is it credible that the
democracy which has annihilated the feudal system and vanquished kings will
respect the citizen and the capitalist? Will it stop now that it has grown so
strong and its adversaries so weak? None can say which way we are going, for
all terms of comparison are wanting: the equality of conditions is more
complete in the Christian countries of the present day than it has been at any
time or in any part of the world; so that the extent of what already exists
prevents us from foreseeing what may be yet to come.
The whole book which is here offered to the public has
been written under the impression of a kind of religious dread produced in the
author's mind by the contemplation of so irresistible a revolution, which has
advanced for centuries in spite of such amazing obstacles, and which is still
proceeding in the midst of the ruins it has made. It is not necessary that God
himself should speak in order to disclose to us the unquestionable signs of His
will; we can discern them in the habitual course of nature, and in the
invariable tendency of events: I know, without a special revelation, that the
planets move in the orbits traced by the Creator's finger. If the men of our
time were led by attentive observation and by sincere reflection to acknowledge
that the gradual and progressive development of social equality is at once the
past and future of their history, this solitary truth would confer the sacred
character of a Divine decree upon the change. To attempt to check democracy
would be in that case to resist the will of God; and the nations would then be
constrained to make the best of the social lot awarded to them by Providence.
The Christian nations of our age seem to me to present a
most alarming spectacle; the impulse which is bearing them along is so strong
that it cannot be stopped, but it is not yet so rapid that it cannot be guided:
their fate is in their hands; yet a little while and it may be so no longer.
The first duty which is at this time imposed upon those who direct our affairs
is to educate the democracy; to warm its faith, if that be possible; to purify
its morals; to direct its energies; to substitute a knowledge of business for
its inexperience, and an acquaintance with its true interests for its blind propensities;
to adapt its government to time and place, and to modify it in compliance with
the occurrences and the actors of the age. A new science of politics is
indispensable to a new world. This, however, is what we think of least;
launched in the middle of a rapid stream, we obstinately fix our eyes on the
ruins which may still be described upon the shore we have left, whilst the
current sweeps us along, and drives us backwards towards the gulf.
In no country in Europe has the great social revolution
which I have been describing made such rapid progress as in France; but it has
always been borne on by chance. The heads of the State have never had any
forethought for its exigencies, and its victories have been obtained without
their consent or without their knowledge. The most powerful, the most
intelligent, and the most moral classes of the nation have never attempted to
connect themselves with it in order to guide it. The people has consequently
been abandoned to its wild propensities, and it has grown up like those
outcasts who receive their education in the public streets, and who are
unacquainted with aught but the vices and wretchedness of society. The
existence of a democracy was seemingly unknown, when on a sudden it took
possession of the supreme power. Everything was then submitted to its caprices;
it was worshipped as the idol of strength; until, when it was enfeebled by its
own excesses, the legislator conceived the rash project of annihilating its
power, instead of instructing it and correcting its vices; no attempt was made
to fit it to govern, but all were bent on excluding it from the government.
The consequence of this has been that the democratic
revolution has been effected only in the material parts of society, without
that concomitant change in laws, ideas, customs, and manners which was
necessary to render such a revolution beneficial. We have gotten a democracy,
but without the conditions which lessen its vices and render its natural
advantages more prominent; and although we already perceive the evils it
brings, we are ignorant of the benefits it may confer.
While the power of the Crown, supported by the
aristocracy, peaceably governed the nations of Europe, society possessed, in
the midst of its wretchedness, several different advantages which can now
scarcely be appreciated or conceived. The power of a part of his subjects was
an insurmountable barrier to the tyranny of the prince; and the monarch, who
felt the almost divine character which he enjoyed in the eyes of the multitude,
derived a motive for the just use of his power from the respect which he
inspired. High as they were placed above the people, the nobles could not but
take that calm and benevolent interest in its fate which the shepherd feels
towards his flock; and without acknowledging the poor as their equals, they
watched over the destiny of those whose welfare Providence had entrusted to
their care. The people never having conceived the idea of a social condition
different from its own, and entertaining no expectation of ever ranking with
its chiefs, received benefits from them without discussing their rights. It
grew attached to them when they were clement and just, and it submitted without
resistance or servility to their exactions, as to the inevitable visitations of
the arm of God. Custom, and the manners of the time, had moreover created a
species of law in the midst of violence, and established certain limits to
oppression. As the noble never suspected that anyone would attempt to deprive
him of the privileges which he believed to be legitimate, and as the serf
looked upon his own inferiority as a consequence of the immutable order of
nature, it is easy to imagine that a mutual exchange of good-will took place
between two classes so differently gifted by fate. Inequality and wretchedness
were then to be found in society; but the souls of neither rank of men were
degraded. Men are not corrupted by the exercise of power or debased by the
habit of obedience, but by the exercise of a power which they believe to be
illegal and by obedience to a rule which they consider to be usurped and
oppressive. On one side was wealth, strength, and leisure, accompanied by the
refinements of luxury, the elegance of taste, the pleasures of wit, and the
religion of art. On the other was labor and a rude ignorance; but in the midst
of this coarse and ignorant multitude it was not uncommon to meet with
energetic passions, generous sentiments, profound religious convictions, and
independent virtues. The body of a State thus organized might boast of its
stability, its power, and, above all, of its glory.
But the scene is now changed, and gradually the two ranks
mingle; the divisions which once severed mankind are lowered, property is
divided, power is held in common, the light of intelligence spreads, and the
capacities of all classes are equally cultivated; the State becomes democratic,
and the empire of democracy is slowly and peaceably introduced into the
institutions and the manners of the nation. I can conceive a society in which
all men would profess an equal attachment and respect for the laws of which
they are the common authors; in which the authority of the State would be
respected as necessary, though not as divine; and the loyalty of the subject to
its chief magistrate would not be a passion, but a quiet and rational
persuasion. Every individual being in the possession of rights which he is sure
to retain, a kind of manly reliance and reciprocal courtesy would arise between
all classes, alike removed from pride and meanness. The people, well acquainted
with its true interests, would allow that in order to profit by the advantages
of society it is necessary to satisfy its demands. In this state of things the
voluntary association of the citizens might supply the individual exertions of the
nobles, and the community would be alike protected from anarchy and from
oppression.
I admit that, in a democratic State thus constituted,
society will not be stationary; but the impulses of the social body may be
regulated and directed forwards; if there be less splendor than in the halls of
an aristocracy, the contrast of misery will be less frequent also; the
pleasures of enjoyment may be less excessive, but those of comfort will be more
general; the sciences may be less perfectly cultivated, but ignorance will be
less common; the impetuosity of the feelings will be repressed, and the habits
of the nation softened; there will be more vices and fewer crimes. In the
absence of enthusiasm and of an ardent faith, great sacrifices may be obtained
from the members of a commonwealth by an appeal to their understandings and
their experience; each individual will feel the same necessity for uniting with
his fellow-citizens to protect his own weakness; and as he knows that if they
are to assist he must co-operate, he will readily perceive that his personal
interest is identified with the interest of the community. The nation, taken as
a whole, will be less brilliant, less glorious, and perhaps less strong; but
the majority of the citizens will enjoy a greater degree of prosperity, and the
people will remain quiet, not because it despairs of amelioration, but because
it is conscious of the advantages of its condition. If all the consequences of
this state of things were not good or useful, society would at least have
appropriated all such as were useful and good; and having once and for ever
renounced the social advantages of aristocracy, mankind would enter into
possession of all the benefits which democracy can afford.
But here it may be asked what we have adopted in the
place of those institutions, those ideas, and those customs of our forefathers
which we have abandoned. The spell of royalty is broken, but it has not been
succeeded by the majesty of the laws; the people has learned to despise all
authority, but fear now extorts a larger tribute of obedience than that which
was formerly paid by reverence and by love.
I perceive that we have destroyed those independent
beings which were able to cope with tyranny single-handed; but it is the
Government that has inherited the privileges of which families, corporations,
and individuals have been deprived; the weakness of the whole community has
therefore succeeded that influence of a small body of citizens, which, if it
was sometimes oppressive, was often conservative. The division of property has
lessened the distance which separated the rich from the poor; but it would seem
that the nearer they draw to each other, the greater is their mutual hatred,
and the more vehement the envy and the dread with which they resist each
other's claims to power; the notion of Right is alike insensible to both
classes, and Force affords to both the only argument for the present, and the
only guarantee for the future. The poor man retains the prejudices of his
forefathers without their faith, and their ignorance without their virtues; he
has adopted the doctrine of self-interest as the rule of his actions, without
understanding the science which controls it, and his egotism is no less blind
than his devotedness was formerly. If society is tranquil, it is not because it
relies upon its strength and its well-being, but because it knows its weakness
and its infirmities; a single effort may cost it its life; everybody feels the
evil, but no one has courage or energy enough to seek the cure; the desires,
the regret, the sorrows, and the joys of the time produce nothing that is
visible or permanent, like the passions of old men which terminate in
impotence.
We have, then, abandoned whatever advantages the old
state of things afforded, without receiving any compensation from our present
condition; we have destroyed an aristocracy, and we seem inclined to survey its
ruins with complacency, and to fix our abode in the midst of them.
The phenomena which the intellectual world presents are
not less deplorable. The democracy of France, checked in its course or
abandoned to its lawless passions, has overthrown whatever crossed its path,
and has shaken all that it has not destroyed. Its empire on society has not
been gradually introduced or peaceably established, but it has constantly
advanced in the midst of disorder and the agitation of a conflict. In the heat
of the struggle each partisan is hurried beyond the limits of his opinions by
the opinions and the excesses of his opponents, until he loses sight of the end
of his exertions, and holds a language which disguises his real sentiments or
secret instincts. Hence arises the strange confusion which we are witnessing. I
cannot recall to my mind a passage in history more worthy of sorrow and of pity
than the scenes which are happening under our eyes; it is as if the natural
bond which unites the opinions of man to his tastes and his actions to his
principles was now broken; the sympathy which has always been acknowledged
between the feelings and the ideas of mankind appears to be dissolved, and all
the laws of moral analogy to be abolished.
Zealous Christians may be found amongst us whose minds
are nurtured in the love and knowledge of a future life, and who readily
espouse the cause of human liberty as the source of all moral greatness.
Christianity, which has declared that all men are equal in the sight of God,
will not refuse to acknowledge that all citizens are equal in the eye of the
law. But, by a singular concourse of events, religion is entangled in those
institutions which democracy assails, and it is not unfrequently brought to
reject the equality it loves, and to curse that cause of liberty as a foe which
it might hallow by its alliance.
By the side of these religious men I discern others whose
looks are turned to the earth more than to Heaven; they are the partisans of
liberty, not only as the source of the noblest virtues, but more especially as
the root of all solid advantages; and they sincerely desire to extend its sway,
and to impart its blessings to mankind. It is natural that they should hasten
to invoke the assistance of religion, for they must know that liberty cannot be
established without morality, nor morality without faith; but they have seen
religion in the ranks of their adversaries, and they inquire no further; some
of them attack it openly, and the remainder are afraid to defend it.
In former ages slavery has been advocated by the venal
and slavish-minded, whilst the independent and the warm-hearted were struggling
without hope to save the liberties of mankind. But men of high and generous
characters are now to be met with, whose opinions are at variance with their
inclinations, and who praise that servility which they have themselves never
known. Others, on the contrary, speak in the name of liberty, as if they were
able to feel its sanctity and its majesty, and loudly claim for humanity those
rights which they have always disowned. There are virtuous and peaceful individuals
whose pure morality, quiet habits, affluence, and talents fit them to be the
leaders of the surrounding population; their love of their country is sincere,
and they are prepared to make the greatest sacrifices to its welfare, but they
confound the abuses of civilization with its benefits, and the idea of evil is
inseparable in their minds from that of novelty.
Not far from this class is another party, whose object is
to materialize mankind, to hit upon what is expedient without heeding what is
just, to acquire knowledge without faith, and prosperity apart from virtue;
assuming the title of the champions of modern civilization, and placing
themselves in a station which they usurp with insolence, and from which they
are driven by their own unworthiness. Where are we then? The religionists are
the enemies of liberty, and the friends of liberty attack religion; the
high-minded and the noble advocate subjection, and the meanest and most servile
minds preach independence; honest and enlightened citizens are opposed to all
progress, whilst men without patriotism and without principles are the apostles
of civilization and of intelligence. Has such been the fate of the centuries
which have preceded our own? and has man always inhabited a world like the
present, where nothing is linked together, where virtue is without genius, and
genius without honor; where the love of order is confounded with a taste for
oppression, and the holy rites of freedom with a contempt of law; where the
light thrown by conscience on human actions is dim, and where nothing seems to
be any longer forbidden or allowed, honorable or shameful, false or true? I
cannot, however, believe that the Creator made man to leave him in an endless
struggle with the intellectual miseries which surround us: God destines a
calmer and a more certain future to the communities of Europe; I am
unacquainted with His designs, but I shall not cease to believe in them because
I cannot fathom them, and I had rather mistrust my own capacity than His
justice.
There is a country in the world where the great
revolution which I am speaking of seems nearly to have reached its natural
limits; it has been effected with ease and simplicity, say rather that this
country has attained the consequences of the democratic revolution which we are
undergoing without having experienced the revolution itself. The emigrants who
fixed themselves on the shores of America in the beginning of the seventeenth
century severed the democratic principle from all the principles which
repressed it in the old communities of Europe, and transplanted it unalloyed to
the New World. It has there been allowed to spread in perfect freedom, and to
put forth its consequences in the laws by influencing the manners of the
country.
It appears to me beyond a doubt that sooner or later we
shall arrive, like the Americans, at an almost complete equality of conditions.
But I do not conclude from this that we shall ever be necessarily led to draw
the same political consequences which the Americans have derived from a similar
social organization. I am far from supposing that they have chosen the only
form of government which a democracy may adopt; but the identity of the
efficient cause of laws and manners in the two countries is sufficient to
account for the immense interest we have in becoming acquainted with its
effects in each of them.
It is not, then, merely to satisfy a legitimate curiosity
that I have examined America; my wish has been to find instruction by which we
may ourselves profit. Whoever should imagine that I have intended to write a
panegyric will perceive that such was not my design; nor has it been my object
to advocate any form of government in particular, for I am of opinion that
absolute excellence is rarely to be found in any legislation; I have not even
affected to discuss whether the social revolution, which I believe to be
irresistible, is advantageous or prejudicial to mankind; I have acknowledged
this revolution as a fact already accomplished or on the eve of its
accomplishment; and I have selected the nation, from amongst those which have
undergone it, in which its development has been the most peaceful and the most
complete, in order to discern its natural consequences, and, if it be possible,
to distinguish the means by which it may be rendered profitable. I confess that
in America I saw more than America; I sought the image of democracy itself,
with its inclinations, its character, its prejudices, and its passions, in
order to learn what we have to fear or to hope from its progress.
In the first part of this work I have attempted to show
the tendency given to the laws by the democracy of America, which is abandoned
almost without restraint to its instinctive propensities, and to exhibit the
course it prescribes to the Government and the influence it exercises on
affairs. I have sought to discover the evils and the advantages which it
produces. I have examined the precautions used by the Americans to direct it,
as well as those which they have not adopted, and I have undertaken to point
out the causes which enable it to govern society. I do not know whether I have
succeeded in making known what I saw in America, but I am certain that such has
been my sincere desire, and that I have never, knowingly, moulded facts to
ideas, instead of ideas to facts.
Whenever a point could be established by the aid of
written documents, I have had recourse to the original text, and to the most
authentic and approved works. I have cited my authorities in the notes, and
anyone may refer to them. Whenever an opinion, a political custom, or a remark
on the manners of the country was concerned, I endeavored to consult the most
enlightened men I met with. If the point in question was important or doubtful,
I was not satisfied with one testimony, but I formed my opinion on the evidence
of several witnesses. Here the reader must necessarily believe me upon my word.
I could frequently have quoted names which are either known to him, or which
deserve to be so, in proof of what I advance; but I have carefully abstained
from this practice. A stranger frequently hears important truths at the
fire-side of his host, which the latter would perhaps conceal from the ear of
friendship; he consoles himself with his guest for the silence to which he is
restricted, and the shortness of the traveller's stay takes away all fear of
his indiscretion. I carefully noted every conversation of this nature as soon
as it occurred, but these notes will never leave my writing-case; I had rather
injure the success of my statements than add my name to the list of those
strangers who repay the generous hospitality they have received by subsequent
chagrin and annoyance.
I am aware that, notwithstanding my care, nothing will be
easier than to criticise this book, if anyone ever chooses to criticise it. Those
readers who may examine it closely will discover the fundamental idea which
connects the several parts together. But the diversity of the subjects I have
had to treat is exceedingly great, and it will not be difficult to oppose an
isolated fact to the body of facts which I quote, or an isolated idea to the
body of ideas I put forth. I hope to be read in the spirit which has guided my
labors, and that my book may be judged by the general impression it leaves, as
I have formed my own judgment not on any single reason, but upon the mass of
evidence. It must not be forgotten that the author who wishes to be understood
is obliged to push all his ideas to their utmost theoretical consequences, and
often to the verge of what is false or impracticable; for if it be necessary
sometimes to quit the rules of logic in active life, such is not the case in
discourse, and a man finds that almost as many difficulties spring from
inconsistency of language as usually arise from inconsistency of conduct.
I conclude by pointing out myself what many readers will
consider the principal defect of the work. This book is written to favor no
particular views, and in composing it I have entertained no designs of serving
or attacking any party; I have undertaken not to see differently, but to look
further than parties, and whilst they are busied for the morrow I have turned
my thoughts to the Future.
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