<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class='transnote'>
<h3>Transcriber's Note</h3>
<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected in
this text. For a complete list, please see <SPAN href="#tnote">the bottom of
this document</SPAN>.</p>
<p>A Table of Contents has been added.</p>
</div>
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<h3>THE WORKS OF ANATOLE FRANCE<br/> IN AN ENGLISH TRANSLATION<br/> EDITED BY FREDERIC CHAPMAN</h3>
<h2>THE REVOLT OF THE ANGELS</h2>
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<h1>THE REVOLT<br/> OF THE ANGELS</h1>
<h4>BY ANATOLE FRANCE</h4>
<h3>A TRANSLATION BY<br/> MRS. WILFRID JACKSON</h3>
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<p class='center'>LONDON: JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD<br/>
NEW YORK: DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY<br/>
MCMXXIV</p>
<p class='frontend'>
Copyright, 1914,<br/>
by<br/>
<span class="smcap">Dodd, Mead and Company</span></p>
<p class='frontend'>PRINTED IN U. S. A.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p class='toc'>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_I"><b>CHAPTER I</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_II"><b>CHAPTER II</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_III"><b>CHAPTER III</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IV"><b>CHAPTER IV</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_V"><b>CHAPTER V</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VI"><b>CHAPTER VI</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VII"><b>CHAPTER VII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VIII"><b>CHAPTER VIII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IX"><b>CHAPTER IX</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_X"><b>CHAPTER X</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XI"><b>CHAPTER XI</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XII"><b>CHAPTER XII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIII"><b>CHAPTER XIII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIV"><b>CHAPTER XIV</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XV"><b>CHAPTER XV</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVI"><b>CHAPTER XVI</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVII"><b>CHAPTER XVII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVIII"><b>CHAPTER XVIII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIX"><b>CHAPTER XIX</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XX"><b>CHAPTER XX</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXI"><b>CHAPTER XXI</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXII"><b>CHAPTER XXII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXIII"><b>CHAPTER XXIII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXIV"><b>CHAPTER XXIV</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXV"><b>CHAPTER XXV</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXVI"><b>CHAPTER XXVI</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXVII"><b>CHAPTER XXVII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII"><b>CHAPTER XXVIII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXIX"><b>CHAPTER XXIX</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXX"><b>CHAPTER XXX</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXXI"><b>CHAPTER XXXI</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXXII"><b>CHAPTER XXXII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII"><b>CHAPTER XXXIII</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV"><b>CHAPTER XXXIV</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXXV"><b>CHAPTER XXXV</b></SPAN><br/></p>
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<h2>THE<br/> REVOLT OF THE ANGELS</h2>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span></p>
<h1>THE REVOLT OF THE ANGELS</h1>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></SPAN>CHAPTER I</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">containing in a few lines the history of a
french family from 1789 to the present
day</span></p>
</div>
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<p>ENEATH the shadow of St. Sulpice
the ancient mansion of the d'Esparvieu
family rears its austere three
stories between a moss-grown fore-court
and a garden hemmed in,
as the years have elapsed, by ever loftier and more
intrusive buildings, wherein, nevertheless, two tall
chestnut trees still lift their withered heads.</p>
<p>Here from 1825 to 1857 dwelt the great man of
the family, Alexandre Bussart d'Esparvieu, Vice-President
of the Council of State under the Government
of July, Member of the Academy of Moral
and Political Sciences, and author of an <i>Essay on
the Civil and Religious Institutions of Nations</i>, in
three octavo volumes, a work unfortunately left
incomplete.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
<p>This eminent theorist of a Liberal monarchy
left as heir to his name his fortune and his fame,
Fulgence-Adolphe Bussart d'Esparvieu, senator under
the Second Empire, who added largely to his
patrimony by buying land over which the Avenue
de l'Impératice was destined ultimately to pass,
and who made a remarkable speech in favour of
the temporal power of the popes.</p>
<p>Fulgence had three sons. The eldest, Marc-Alexandre,
entering the army, made a splendid
career for himself: he was a good speaker. The
second, Gaétan, showing no particular aptitude for
anything, lived mostly in the country, where he
hunted, bred horses, and devoted himself to music
and painting. The third son, René, destined from
his childhood for the law, resigned his deputyship
to avoid complicity in the Ferry decrees against
the religious orders; and later, perceiving the
revival under the presidency of Monsieur Fallières
of the days of Decius and Diocletian, put his knowledge
and zeal at the service of the persecuted
Church.</p>
<p>From the Concordat of 1801 down to the closing
years of the Second Empire all the d'Esparvieus
attended mass for the sake of example. Though
sceptics in their inmost hearts, they looked upon
religion as an instrument of government.</p>
<p>Mark and René were the first of their race to
show any sign of sincere devotion. The General,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span>
when still a colonel, had dedicated his regiment to
the Sacred Heart, and he practised his faith with
a fervour remarkable even in a soldier, though
we all know that piety, daughter of Heaven,
has marked out the hearts of the generals of the
Third Republic as her chosen dwelling-place on
earth.</p>
<p>Faith has its vicissitudes. Under the old order
the masses were believers, not so the aristocracy
or the educated middle class. Under the First
Empire the army from top to bottom was entirely
irreligious. To-day the masses believe nothing.
The middle classes wish to believe, and succeed
at times, as did Marc and René d'Esparvieu.
Their brother Gaétan, on the contrary, the country
gentleman, failed to attain to faith. He was an
agnostic, a term commonly employed by the modish
to avoid the odious one of freethinker. And he
openly declared himself an agnostic, contrary to
the admirable custom which deems it better to
withhold the avowal.</p>
<p>In the century in which we live there are so
many modes of belief and of unbelief that future
historians will have difficulty in finding their way
about. But are we any more successful in disentangling
the condition of religious beliefs in the
time of Symmachus or of Ambrose?</p>
<p>A fervent Christian, René d'Esparvieu was
deeply attached to the liberal ideas his ancestors<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span>
had transmitted to him as a sacred heritage. Compelled
to oppose a Jacobin and atheistical Republic,
he still called himself Republican. And it was in
the name of liberty that he demanded the independence
and sovereignty of the Church.</p>
<p>During the long debates on the Separation and
the quarrels over the Inventories, the synods of the
bishops and the assemblies of the faithful were
held in his house. While the most authoritatively
accredited leaders of the Catholic party: prelates,
generals, senators, deputies, journalists, were met
together in the big green drawing-room, and every
soul present turned towards Rome with a tender
submission or enforced obedience; while Monsieur
d'Esparvieu, his elbow on the marble chimney-piece,
opposed civil law to canon law, and
protested eloquently against the spoliation of the
Church of France, two faces of other days, immobile
and speechless, looked down on the modern
crowd; on the right of the fire-place, painted by
David, was Romain Bussart, a working-farmer at
Esparvieu in shirt-sleeves and drill trousers, with a
rough-and-ready air not untouched with cunning.
He had good reason to smile: the worthy man laid
the foundation of the family fortunes when he
bought Church lands. On the left, painted by
Gérard in full-dress bedizened with orders, was the
peasant's son, Baron Emile Bussart d'Esparvieu,
prefect under the Empire, Keeper of the Great<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span>
Seal under Charles X, who died in 1837, churchwarden
of his parish, with couplets from <i>La Pucelle</i>
on his lips.</p>
<p>René d'Esparvieu married in 1888 Marie-Antoinette
Coupelle, daughter of Baron Coupelle,
ironmaster at Blainville (Haute Loire). Madame
René d'Esparvieu had been president since 1903 of the
Society of Christian Mothers. These perfect spouses,
having married off their eldest daughter in 1908, had
three children still at home—a girl and two boys.</p>
<p>Léon, the younger, aged seven, had a room next to
his mother and his sister Berthe. Maurice, the elder,
lived in a little pavilion comprising two rooms
at the bottom of the garden. The young man thus
gained a freedom which enabled him to endure
family life. He was rather good-looking, smart
without too much pretence, and the faint smile
which merely raised one corner of his mouth did
not lack charm.</p>
<p>At twenty-five Maurice possessed the wisdom of
Ecclesiastes. Doubting whether a man hath any
profit of all his labour which he taketh under the sun
he never put himself out about anything. From
his earliest childhood this young hopeful's sole concern
with work had been considering how he might
best avoid it, and it was through his remaining
ignorant of the teaching of the <i>École de Droit</i> that
he became a doctor of law and a barrister at the
Court of Appeal.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He neither pleaded nor practised. He had no
knowledge and no desire to acquire any; wherein
he conformed to his genius whose engaging fragility
he forbore to overload; his instinct fortunately
telling him that it was better to understand little
than to misunderstand a lot.</p>
<p>As Monsieur l'Abbé Patouille expressed it, Maurice
had received from Heaven the benefits of a Christian
education. From his childhood piety was
shown to him in the example of his home, and
when on leaving college he was entered at the
<i>École de Droit</i>, he found the lore of the doctors, the
virtues of the confessors, and the constancy of the
nursing mothers of the Church assembled around
the paternal hearth. Admitted to social and political
life at the time of the great persecution of
the Church of France, Maurice did not fail to attend
every manifestation of youthful Catholicism; he
lent a hand with his parish barricades at the time
of the Inventories, and with his companions he
unharnessed the archbishop's horses when he was
driven out from his palace. He showed on all
these occasions a modified zeal; one never saw him
in the front ranks of the heroic band exciting soldiers
to a glorious disobedience or flinging mud and
curses at the agents of the law.</p>
<p>He did his duty, nothing more; and if he distinguished
himself on the occasion of the great
pilgrimage of 1911 among the stretcher-bearers<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>
at Lourdes, we have reason to fear it was but to
please Madame de la Verdelière, who admired
men of muscle. Abbé Patouille, a friend of
the family and deeply versed in the knowledge of
souls, knew that Maurice had only moderate
aspirations to martyrdom. He reproached him
with his lukewarmness, and pulled his ear, calling
him a bad lot. Anyway, Maurice remained a
believer.</p>
<p>Amid the distractions of youth his faith remained
intact, since he left it severely alone. He had never
examined a single tenet. Nor had he enquired a
whit more closely into the ideas of morality current
in the grade of society to which he belonged. He
took them just as they came. Thus in every situation
that arose he cut an eminently respectable
figure which he would have assuredly failed to do,
had he been given to meditating on the foundations
of morality. He was irritable and hot-tempered
and possessed of a sense of honour which he was at
great pains to cultivate. He was neither vain nor
ambitious. Like the majority of Frenchmen, he
disliked parting with his money. Women would
never have obtained anything from him had they
not known the way to make him give. He believed
he despised them; the truth was he adored them.
He indulged his appetites so naturally that he never
suspected that he had any. What people did not
know, himself least of all,—though the gleam that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
occasionally shone in his fine, light-brown eyes
might have furnished the hint—was that he had a
warm heart and was capable of friendship. For the
rest, he was, in the ordinary intercourse of life, no
very brilliant specimen.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span></p>
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