The Village Rector by Balzac, Honoré de - XVI

(download Open eBook Format)

The Village Rector

XVI

CON­CERNS ONE OF THE BLUN­DERS OF THE NINE­TEENTH CEN­TU­RY

The fol­low­ing day an ex­press, sent from Limo­ges by Mon­sieur Gros­setete to Madame Graslin, brought her the fol­low­ing let­ter:--

To Madame Graslin:

My dear Child,--It was dif­fi­cult to find hors­es, but I hope you are sat­is­fied with those I sent you. If you want work or draft hors­es, you must look else­where. In any case, how­ev­er, I ad­vise you to do your till­ing and trans­porta­tion with ox­en. All the coun­tries where agri­cul­ture is car­ried on with hors­es lose cap­ital when the horse is past work; where­as cat­tle al­ways re­turn a prof­it to those who use them.

I ap­prove in ev­ery way of your en­ter­prise, my child; you will thus em­ploy the pas­sion­ate ac­tiv­ity of your soul, which was turn­ing against your­self and thus in­jur­ing you.

Your sec­ond re­quest, name­ly, for a man ca­pa­ble of un­der­stand­ing and sec­ond­ing your projects, re­quires me to find you a _rara avis_ such as we sel­dom raise in the provinces, where, if we do raise them, we nev­er keep them. The ed­uca­tion of that high prod­uct is too slow and too risky a spec­ula­tion for coun­try folks.

Be­sides, men of in­tel­lect alarm us; we call them “orig­inals.” The men be­long­ing to the sci­en­tif­ic cat­ego­ry from which you will have to ob­tain your co-​op­er­ator do not flour­ish here, and I was on the point of writ­ing to you that I de­spaired of ful­fill­ing your com­mis­sion. You want a po­et, a man of ideas,--in short, what we should here call a fool, and all our fools go to Paris. I have spo­ken of your plans to the young men em­ployed in land sur­vey­ing, to con­trac­tors on the canals, and mak­ers of the em­bank­ments, and none of them see any “ad­van­tage” in what you pro­pose.

But sud­den­ly, as good luck would have it, chance has thrown in my way the very man you want; a young man to whom I be­lieve I ren­der a ser­vice in nam­ing him to you. You will see by his let­ter, here­with en­closed, that deeds of benef­icence ought not to be done hap-​haz­ard. Noth­ing needs more re­flec­tion than a good ac­tion. We nev­er know whether that which seems best at one mo­ment may not prove an evil lat­er. The ex­er­cise of benef­icence, as I have lived to dis­cov­er, is to usurp the role of Des­tiny.

As she read that sen­tence Madame Graslin let fall the let­ter and was thought­ful for sev­er­al min­utes.

“My God!” she said at last, “when wilt thou cease to strike me down on all sides?”

Then she took up the let­ter and con­tin­ued read­ing it:

Ger­ard seems to me to have a cool head and an ar­dent heart; that's the sort of man you want. Paris is just now a hotbed of new doc­trines; I should be de­light­ed to have the lad re­moved from the traps which am­bi­tious minds are set­ting for the gen­er­ous youth of France. While I do not al­to­geth­er ap­prove of the nar­row and stu­pe­fy­ing life of the provinces, nei­ther do I like the pas­sion­ate life of Paris, with its ar­dor of ref­or­ma­tion, which is driv­ing youth in­to so many un­known ways. You alone know my opin­ions; to my mind the moral world re­volves up­on its own ax­is, like the ma­te­ri­al world. My poor pro­tege de­mands (as you will see from his let­ter) things im­pos­si­ble. No pow­er can re­sist am­bi­tions so vi­olent, so im­pe­ri­ous, so ab­so­lute, as those of to-​day. I am in fa­vor of low lev­els and slow­ness in po­lit­ical change; I dis­like these so­cial over­turns to which am­bi­tious minds sub­ject us.

To you I con­fide these prin­ci­ples of a monar­chi­cal and prej­udiced old man, be­cause you are dis­creet. Here I hold my tongue in the midst of wor­thy peo­ple, who the more they fail the more they be­lieve in progress; but I suf­fer deeply at the ir­repara­ble evils al­ready in­flict­ed on our dear coun­try.

I have replied to the en­closed let­ter, telling my young man that a wor­thy task awaits him. He will go to see you, and though his let­ter will en­able you to judge of him, you had bet­ter study him still fur­ther be­fore com­mit­ting your­self,--though you wom­en un­der­stand many things from the mere look of a man. How­ev­er, all the men whom you em­ploy, even the most in­signif­icant, ought to be thor­ough­ly sat­is­fac­to­ry to you. If you don't like him don't take him; but if he suits you, my dear child, I beg you to cure him of his ill-​dis­guised am­bi­tion. Make him take to a peace­ful, hap­py, ru­ral life, where true benef­icence is per­pet­ual­ly ex­er­cised; where the ca­pac­ities of great and strong souls find con­tin­ual ex­er­cise, and they them­selves dis­cov­er dai­ly fresh sources of ad­mi­ra­tion in the works of Na­ture, and in re­al ame­lio­ra­tions, re­al progress, an oc­cu­pa­tion wor­thy of any man.

I am not obliv­ious of the fact that great ideas give birth to great ac­tions; but as those ideas are nec­es­sar­ily few and far be­tween, I think it may be said that usu­al­ly things are more use­ful than ideas. He who fer­til­izes a cor­ner of the earth, who brings to per­fec­tion a fruit-​tree, who makes a turf on a thank­less soil, is far more use­ful in his gen­er­ation than he who seeks new the­ories for hu­man­ity. How, I ask you, has New­ton's sci­ence changed the con­di­tion of the coun­try dis­tricts? Oh! my dear, I have al­ways loved you; but to-​day I, who ful­ly un­der­stand what you are about to at­tempt, I adore you.

No one at Limo­ges for­gets you; we all ad­mire your grand res­olu­tion to ben­efit Mon­teg­nac. Be a lit­tle grate­ful to us for hav­ing soul enough to ad­mire a no­ble ac­tion, and do not for­get that the first of your ad­mir­ers is al­so your first friend.

F. Gros­setete.

The en­closed let­ter was as fol­lows:--

To Mon­sieur Gros­setete:

Mon­sieur,--You have been to me a fa­ther when you might have been on­ly a mere pro­tec­tor, and there­fore I ven­ture to make you a rather sad con­fi­dence. It is to you alone, you who have made me what I am, that I can tell my trou­bles.

I am af­flict­ed with a ter­ri­ble mal­ady, a cru­el moral mal­ady. In my soul are feel­ings and in my mind con­vic­tions which make me ut­ter­ly un­fit for what the State and so­ci­ety de­mand of me. This may seem to you in­grat­itude; it is on­ly the state­ment of a con­di­tion. When I was twelve years old you, my gen­er­ous god-​fa­ther, saw in me, the son of a mere work­man, an ap­ti­tude for the ex­act sci­ences and a pre­co­cious de­sire to rise in life. You fa­vored my im­pulse to­ward bet­ter things when my nat­ural fate was to stay a car­pen­ter like my fa­ther, who, poor man, did not live long enough to en­joy my ad­vance­ment. In­deed, mon­sieur, you did a good thing, and there is nev­er a day that I do not bless you for it. It may be that I am now to blame; but whether I am right or wrong it is very cer­tain that I suf­fer. In mak­ing my com­plaint to you I feel that I take you as my judge like God Him­self. Will you lis­ten to my sto­ry and grant me your in­dul­gence?

Be­tween six­teen and eigh­teen years of age I gave my­self to the study of the ex­act sci­ences with an ar­dor, you re­mem­ber, that made me ill. My fu­ture de­pend­ed on my ad­mis­sion to the Ecole Poly­tech­nique. At that time my stud­ies over­worked my brain, and I came near dy­ing; I stud­ied night and day; I did more than the na­ture of my or­gans per­mit­ted. I want­ed to pass such sat­is­fy­ing ex­am­ina­tions that my place in the Ecole would be not on­ly se­cure, but suf­fi­cient­ly ad­vanced to re­lease me from the cost of my sup­port, which I did not want you to pay any longer.

I tri­umphed! I trem­ble to-​day as I think of the fright­ful con­scrip­tion (if I may so call it) of brains de­liv­ered over year­ly to the State by fam­ily am­bi­tion. By in­sist­ing on these se­vere stud­ies at the mo­ment when a youth at­tains his var­ious forms of growth, the au­thor­ities pro­duce se­cret evils and kill by mid­night study many pre­cious fac­ul­ties which lat­er would have de­vel­oped both strength and grandeur. The laws of na­ture are re­lent­less; they do not yield in any par­tic­ular to the en­ter­pris­es or the wish­es of so­ci­ety. In the moral or­der as in the nat­ural or­der all abus­es must be paid for; fruits forced in a hot-​house are pro­duced at the tree's ex­pense and of­ten at the sac­ri­fice of the good­ness of its prod­uct. La Quin­tinie killed the or­ange-​trees to give Louis XIV. a bunch of flow­ers ev­ery day at all sea­sons. So it is with in­tel­lects. The strain up­on ado­les­cent brains dis­counts their fu­ture.

That which is chiefly want­ing to our epoch is leg­isla­tive ge­nius. Eu­rope has had no true leg­is­la­tors since Je­sus Christ, who, not hav­ing giv­en to the world a po­lit­ical code, left his work in­com­plete. Be­fore es­tab­lish­ing great schools of spe­cial­ists and reg­ulat­ing the method of re­cruit­ing for them, where were the great thinkers who could bear in mind the re­la­tion of such in­sti­tu­tions to hu­man pow­ers, bal­anc­ing ad­van­tages and in­juries, and study­ing the past for the laws of the fu­ture? What in­quiry has been made as to the con­di­tion of ex­cep­tion­al men, who, by some fa­tal chance, knew hu­man sci­ences be­fore their time? Has the rar­ity of such cas­es been reck­oned--the re­sult ex­am­ined? Has any en­quiry been made as to the means by which such men were en­abled to en­dure the per­pet­ual strain of thought? How many, like Pas­cal, died pre­ma­ture­ly, worn-​out by knowl­edge? Have statis­tics been gath­ered as to the age at which those men who lived the longest be­gan their stud­ies? Who has ev­er known, does any one know now, the in­te­ri­or con­struc­tion of brains which have been able to sus­tain a pre­ma­ture bur­den of hu­man knowl­edge? Who sus­pects that this ques­tion be­longs, above all, to the phys­iol­ogy of man?

For my part, I now be­lieve the true gen­er­al law is to re­main a long time in the veg­eta­tive con­di­tion of ado­les­cence; and that those ex­cep­tions where strength of or­gans is pro­duced dur­ing ado­les­cence re­sult usu­al­ly in the short­en­ing of life. Thus the man of ge­nius who is able to bear up un­der the pre­co­cious ex­er­cise of his fac­ul­ties is an ex­cep­tion to an ex­cep­tion.

If I am right, if what I say ac­cords with so­cial facts and med­ical ob­ser­va­tions, then the sys­tem prac­tised in France in her tech­ni­cal schools is a fa­tal im­pair­ment and mu­ti­la­tion (in the style of La Quin­tinie) prac­tised up­on the no­blest flow­er of youth in each gen­er­ation.

But it is bet­ter to con­tin­ue my his­to­ry, and add my doubts as the facts de­vel­op them­selves.

When I en­tered the Ecole Poly­tech­nique, I worked hard­er than ev­er and with even more ar­dor, in or­der to leave it as tri­umphant­ly as I had en­tered it. From nine­teen to twen­ty-​one I de­vel­oped ev­ery ap­ti­tude and strength­ened ev­ery fac­ul­ty by con­stant prac­tice. Those two years were the crown and com­ple­tion of the first three, dur­ing which I had on­ly pre­pared my­self to do well. There­fore my pride was great when I won the right to choose the ca­reer that pleased me most,--ei­ther mil­itary or naval en­gi­neer­ing, ar­tillery, or staff du­ty, or the civ­il en­gi­neer­ing of min­ing, and _ponts et chaussees_.[*] By your ad­vice, I chose the lat­ter.

[*] De­part­ment of the gov­ern­ment in­clud­ing ev­ery­thing con­nect­ed with the mak­ing and re­pair­ing of roads, bridges, canals, etc.

But where I tri­umphed how many oth­ers fail! Do you know that from year to year the State in­creas­es the sci­en­tif­ic re­quire­ments of the Ecole? the stud­ies are more se­vere, more ex­act­ing year­ly. The prepara­to­ry stud­ies which tried me so much were noth­ing to the in­tense work of the school it­self, which has for its ob­ject to put the whole of phys­ical sci­ence, math­emat­ics, as­tron­omy, chem­istry, and all their nomen­cla­tures in­to the minds of young men of nine­teen to twen­ty-​one years of age. The State, which seems in France to wish to sub­sti­tute it­self in many ways for the pa­ter­nal au­thor­ity, has nei­ther bow­els of com­pas­sion nor fa­ther­hood; it makes its ex­per­iments _in an­ima vili_. Nev­er does it in­quire in­to the hor­ri­ble statis­tics of the suf­fer­ing it caus­es. Does it know the num­ber of brain fevers among its pupils dur­ing the last thir­ty-​six years; or the de­spair and the moral de­struc­tion which dec­imate its youth? I am point­ing out to you this painful side of the State ed­uca­tion, for it is one of the an­te­ri­or con­tin­gents of the ac­tu­al re­sult.

You know that schol­ars whose con­cep­tions are slow, or who are tem­porar­ily dis­abled from ex­cess of men­tal work, are al­lowed to re­main at the Ecole three years in­stead of two; they then be­come the ob­ject of sus­pi­cions lit­tle fa­vor­able to their ca­pac­ity. This of­ten com­pels young men, who might lat­er show su­pe­ri­or ca­pac­ity, to leave the school with­out be­ing em­ployed, sim­ply be­cause they could not meet the fi­nal ex­am­ina­tion with the full sci­en­tif­ic knowl­edge re­quired. They are called “dried fruits”; Napoleon made sub-​lieu­tenants of them. To-​day the “dried fruits” con­sti­tute an enor­mous loss of cap­ital to fam­ilies and of time to in­di­vid­uals.

How­ev­er, as I say, I tri­umphed. At twen­ty-​one years of age I knew the math­emat­ical sci­ences up to the point to which so many men of ge­nius have brought them, and I was im­pa­tient to dis­tin­guish my­self by car­ry­ing them fur­ther. This de­sire is so nat­ural that al­most ev­ery pupil leav­ing the Ecole fix­es his eyes on that moral sun called Fame. The first thought of all is to be­come an­oth­er New­ton, or Laplace, or Vauban. Such are the ef­forts that France de­mands of the young men who leave her cel­ebrat­ed school.

Now let us see the fate of these men culled with so much care from each gen­er­ation. At one-​and-​twen­ty we dream of life, and ex­pect mar­vels of it. I en­tered the Ecole des Ponts et Chaussees; I was a pupil-​en­gi­neer. I stud­ied the sci­ence of con­struc­tion, and how ar­dent­ly! I am sure you re­mem­ber that. I left the school in 1827, be­ing then twen­ty-​four years of age, still on­ly a can­di­date as en­gi­neer, and the gov­ern­ment paid me one hun­dred and fifty francs a month; the com­mon­est book-​keep­er in Paris earns that by the time he is eigh­teen, giv­ing lit­tle more than four hours a day to his work.

By a most un­usu­al piece of luck, per­haps be­cause of the dis­tinc­tion my de­vot­ed stud­ies won for me, I was made, in 1828, when I was twen­ty-​five years old, en­gi­neer-​in-​or­di­nary. I was sent, as you know, to a sub-​pre­fec­ture, with a salary of twen­ty-​five hun­dred francs. The ques­tion of mon­ey is noth­ing. Cer­tain­ly my fate has been more bril­liant than the son of a car­pen­ter might ex­pect; but where will you find a gro­cer's boy, who, if thrown in­to a shop at six­teen, will not in ten years be on the high-​road to an in­de­pen­dent prop­er­ty?

I learned then to what these ter­ri­ble ef­forts of men­tal pow­er, these gi­gan­tic ex­er­tions de­mand­ed by the State were to lead. The State now em­ployed me to count and mea­sure pave­ments and heaps of stones on the road­ways; I had to keep in or­der, re­pair, and some­times con­struct cul­verts, one-​arched bridges, reg­ulate drift-​ways, clean and some­times open ditch­es, lay out bounds, and an­swer ques­tions about the plant­ing and felling of trees. Such are the prin­ci­pal and some­times the on­ly oc­cu­pa­tions of or­di­nary en­gi­neers, to­geth­er with a lit­tle lev­el­ling which the gov­ern­ment obliges us to do our­selves, though any of our chain-​bear­ers with their lim­it­ed ex­pe­ri­ence can do it bet­ter than we with all our sci­ence.

There are near­ly four hun­dred en­gi­neers-​in-​or­di­nary and pupil en­gi­neers; and as there are not more than a hun­dred or so of en­gi­neers-​in-​chief, on­ly a lim­it­ed num­ber of the sub-​en­gi­neers can hope to rise. Be­sides, above the grade of en­gi­neer-​in-​chief, there is no ab­sorbent class; for we can­not count as a means of ab­sorp­tion the ten or fif­teen places of in­spec­tor-​gen­er­als or di­vi­sion­ar­ies,--posts that are al­most as use­less in our corps as colonels are in the ar­tillery, where the bat­tery is the es­sen­tial thing. The en­gi­neer-​in-​or­di­nary, like the cap­tain of ar­tillery, knows the whole sci­ence. He ought not to have any one over him ex­cept an ad­min­is­tra­tive head to whom no more than eighty-​six en­gi­neers should re­port,--for one en­gi­neer, with two as­sis­tants is enough for a de­part­ment.

The present hi­er­ar­chy in these bod­ies re­sults in the sub­or­di­na­tion of ac­tive en­er­get­ic ca­pac­ities to the worn-​out ca­pac­ities of old men, who, think­ing they know best, al­ter or nul­li­fy the plans sub­mit­ted by their sub­or­di­nates,--per­haps with the sole aim of mak­ing their ex­is­tence felt; for that seems to me the on­ly in­flu­ence ex­er­cised over the pub­lic works of France by the Coun­cil-​gen­er­al of the _Ponts et Chaussees_.

Sup­pose, how­ev­er, that I be­come, be­tween thir­ty and forty years of age, an en­gi­neer of the first-​class and an en­gi­neer-​in-​chief be­fore I am fifty. Alas! I see my fu­ture; it is writ­ten be­fore my eyes. Here is a fore­cast of it:--

My present en­gi­neer-​in-​chief is six­ty years old; he is­sued with hon­ors, as I did, from the fa­mous Ecole; he has turned gray do­ing in two de­part­ments what I am do­ing now, and he has be­come the most or­di­nary man it is pos­si­ble to imag­ine; he has fall­en from the height to which he had re­al­ly risen; far worse, he is no longer on the lev­el of sci­en­tif­ic knowl­edge; sci­ence has pro­gressed, he has stayed where he was. The man who came forth ready for life at twen­ty-​two years of age, with ev­ery sign of su­pe­ri­or­ity, has noth­ing left to-​day but the rep­uta­tion of it. In the be­gin­ning, with his mind spe­cial­ly turned to the ex­act sci­ences and math­emat­ics by his ed­uca­tion, he ne­glect­ed ev­ery­thing that was not his spe­cial­ty; and you can hard­ly imag­ine his present dul­ness in all oth­er branch­es of hu­man knowl­edge. I hard­ly dare con­fide even to you the se­crets of his in­ca­pac­ity shel­tered by the fact that he was ed­ucat­ed at the Ecole Poly­tech­nique. With that la­bel at­tached to him and on the faith of that pres­tige, no one dreams of doubt­ing his abil­ity. To you alone do I dare re­veal the fact that the dulling of all his tal­ents has led him to spend a mil­lion on a sin­gle mat­ter which ought not to have cost the ad­min­is­tra­tion more than two hun­dred thou­sand francs. I wished to protest, and was about to in­form the pre­fect; but an en­gi­neer I know very well re­mind­ed me of one of our com­rades who was hat­ed by the ad­min­is­tra­tion for do­ing that very thing. “How would you like,” he said to me, “when you get to be en­gi­neer-​in-​chief to have your er­rors dragged forth by your sub­or­di­nate? Be­fore long your en­gi­neer-​in-​chief will be made a di­vi­sion­al in­spec­tor. As soon as any one of us com­mits a se­ri­ous blun­der, as he has done, the ad­min­is­tra­tion (which can't al­low it­self to ap­pear in the wrong) will qui­et­ly re­tire him from ac­tive du­ty by mak­ing him in­spec­tor.”

That's how the re­ward of mer­it de­volves on in­ca­pac­ity. All France knew of the dis­as­ter which hap­pened in the heart of Paris to the first sus­pen­sion bridge built by an en­gi­neer, a mem­ber of the Acade­my of Sci­ences; a melan­choly col­lapse caused by blun­ders such as none of the an­cient en­gi­neers--the man who cut the canal at Bri­are in Hen­ri IV.'s time, or the monk who built the Pont Roy­al --would have made; but our ad­min­is­tra­tion con­soled its en­gi­neer for his blun­der by mak­ing him a mem­ber of the Coun­cil-​gen­er­al.

Are the tech­ni­cal schools vast man­ufac­to­ries of in­ca­pables? That sub­ject re­quires care­ful in­ves­ti­ga­tion. If I am right they need re­form­ing, at any rate in their method of pro­ceed­ing,--for I am not, of course, doubt­ing the util­ity of such schools. On­ly, when we look back in­to the past we see that France in for­mer days nev­er want­ed for the great tal­ents nec­es­sary to the State; but now she prefers to hatch out tal­ent ge­omet­ri­cal­ly, af­ter the the­ory of Mon­ge. Did Vauban ev­er go to any oth­er Ecole than that great school we call vo­ca­tion? Who was Ri­quet's tu­tor? When great ge­nius­es arise above the so­cial mass, im­pelled by vo­ca­tion, they are near­ly al­ways round­ed in­to com­plete­ness; the man is then not mere­ly a spe­cial­ist, he has the gift of uni­ver­sal­ity. Do you think that an en­gi­neer from the Ecole Poly­tech­nique could ev­er cre­ate one of those mir­acles of ar­chi­tec­ture such as Leonar­do da Vin­ci knew how to build,--me­chani­cian, ar­chi­tect, painter, in­ven­tor of hy­draulics, in­de­fati­ga­ble con­struc­tor of canals that he was?

Trained from their ear­li­est years to the bald­ness of ax­iom and for­mu­la, the youths who leave the Ecole have lost the sense of el­egance and or­na­ment; a col­umn seems to them use­less; they re­turn to the point where art be­gins, and cling to the use­ful.

But all this is noth­ing in com­par­ison to the re­al mal­ady which is un­der­min­ing me. I feel an aw­ful trans­for­ma­tion go­ing on with­in me; I am con­scious that my pow­ers and my fac­ul­ties, for­mer­ly un­nat­ural­ly taxed, are giv­ing way. I am let­ting the pro­sa­ic in­flu­ence of my life get hold of me. I who, by the very na­ture of my ef­forts, looked to do some great thing, I am face to face with none but pet­ty ones; I mea­sure stones, I in­spect roads, I have not enough to re­al­ly oc­cu­py me for two hours in my day. I see my col­leagues mar­ry, and fall in­to a sit­ua­tion con­trary to the spir­it of mod­ern so­ci­ety. I want­ed to be use­ful to my coun­try. Is my am­bi­tion an un­rea­son­able one? The coun­try asked me to put forth all my pow­ers; it told me to be­come a rep­re­sen­ta­tive of sci­ence; yet here I am with fold­ed arms in the depths of the provinces. I am not even al­lowed to leave the lo­cal­ity in which I am penned, to ex­er­cise my fac­ul­ties in plan­ning use­ful en­ter­pris­es. A hid­den but very re­al dis­fa­vor is the cer­tain re­ward of any one of us who yields to an in­spi­ra­tion and goes be­yond the spe­cial ser­vice laid down for him.

No, the fa­vor a su­pe­ri­or man has to hope for in that case is that his tal­ent and his pre­sump­tion may not be no­ticed, and that his project may be buried in the archives of the ad­min­is­tra­tion. What think you will be the re­ward of Vi­cat, the one among us who has brought about the on­ly re­al progress in the prac­ti­cal sci­ence of con­struc­tion? The Coun­cil-​gen­er­al of the _Ponts et Chaussees_, com­posed in part of men worn-​out by long and some­times hon­or­able ser­vice, but whose on­ly re­main­ing force is for nega­tion, and who set aside ev­ery­thing they no longer com­pre­hend, is the ex­tin­guish­er used to snuff out the projects of au­da­cious spir­its. This Coun­cil seems to have been cre­at­ed to par­alyze the arm of that glo­ri­ous youth of France, which asks on­ly to work and to be use­ful to its coun­try.

Mon­strous things are done in Paris. The fu­ture of a province de­pends on the mere sig­na­ture of men who (through in­trigues I have no time to ex­plain to you) of­ten stop the ex­ecu­tion of use­ful and much-​need­ed work; in fact, the best plans are of­ten those which of­fer most to the cu­pid­ity of com­mer­cial com­pa­nies or spec­ula­tors.

An­oth­er five years and I shall no longer be my­self; my am­bi­tion will be quenched, my de­sire to use the fac­ul­ties my coun­try or­dered me to ex­er­cise gone for­ev­er; the fac­ul­ties them­selves are rust­ing out in the mis­er­able cor­ner of the world in which I veg­etate. Tak­ing my chances at their best, the fu­ture seems to me a poor thing. I have just tak­en ad­van­tage of a fur­lough to come to Paris; I mean to change my pro­fes­sion and find some oth­er way to put my en­er­gy, my knowl­edge, and my ac­tiv­ity to use. I shall send in my res­ig­na­tion and go to some oth­er coun­try, where men of my spe­cial ca­pac­ity are want­ed.

If I find I can­not do this, then I shall throw my­self in­to the strug­gle of the new doc­trines, which cer­tain­ly seem cal­cu­lat­ed to pro­duce great changes in the present so­cial or­der by ju­di­cious­ly guid­ing the work­ing-​class­es. What are we now but work­ers with­out work, tools on the shelves of a shop? We are trained and or­ga­nized as if to move the world, and noth­ing is giv­en us to do. I feel with­in me some great thing, which is de­creas­ing dai­ly, and will soon van­ish; I tell you so with math­emat­ical frank­ness. Be­fore mak­ing the change I want your ad­vice; I look up­on my­self as your child, and I will nev­er take any im­por­tant step with­out con­sult­ing you, for your ex­pe­ri­ence is equal to your kind­ness.

I know very well that the State, af­ter ob­tain­ing a class of trained men, can­not un­der­take for them alone great pub­lic works; there are not three hun­dred bridges need­ed a year in all France; the State can no more build great build­ings for the fame of its en­gi­neers than it can de­clare war mere­ly to win bat­tles and bring to the front great gen­er­als; but, then, as men of ge­nius have nev­er failed to present them­selves when the oc­ca­sion called for them, spring­ing from the crowd like Vauban, can there be any greater proof of the use­less­ness of the present in­sti­tu­tion? Can't they see that when they have stim­ulat­ed a man of tal­ent by all those prepa­ra­tions he will make a fierce strug­gle be­fore he al­lows him­self to be­come a nonen­ti­ty? Is this good pol­icy on the part of the State? On the con­trary, is not the State light­ing the fire of ar­dent am­bi­tions, which must find fu­el some­where.

Among the six hun­dred young men whom they put forth ev­ery year there are ex­cep­tions,--men who re­sist what may be called their de­mon­eti­za­tion. I know some my­self, and if I could tell you their strug­gles with men and things when armed with use­ful projects and con­cep­tions which might bring life and pros­per­ity to the half-​dead provinces where the State has sent them, you would feel that a man of pow­er, a man of tal­ent, a man whose na­ture is a mir­acle, is a hun­dred­fold more un­for­tu­nate and more to be pitied than the man whose low­er na­ture lets him sub­mit to the shrink­age of his fac­ul­ties.

I have made up my mind, there­fore, that I would rather di­rect some com­mer­cial or in­dus­tri­al en­ter­prise, and live on small means while try­ing to solve some of the great prob­lems still un­known to in­dus­try and to so­ci­ety, than re­main at my present post.

You will tell me, per­haps, that noth­ing hin­ders me from em­ploy­ing the leisure that I cer­tain­ly have in us­ing my in­tel­lec­tu­al pow­ers and seek­ing in the still­ness of this com­mon­place life the so­lu­tion of some prob­lem use­ful to hu­man­ity. Ah! mon­sieur, don't you know the in­flu­ence of the provinces,--the re­lax­ing ef­fect of a life just busy enough to waste time on fu­tile la­bor, and not enough to use the rich re­sources our ed­uca­tion has giv­en us? Don't think me, my dear pro­tec­tor, eat­en up by the de­sire to make a for­tune, nor even by an in­sen­sate de­sire for fame. I am too much of a cal­cu­la­tor not to know the noth­ing­ness of glo­ry. Nei­ther do I want to mar­ry; see­ing the fate now be­fore me, I think my ex­is­tence a melan­choly gift to of­fer any wom­an. As for mon­ey, though I re­gard it as one of the most pow­er­ful means giv­en to so­cial man to act with, it is, af­ter all, but a means.

I place my whole de­sire and hap­pi­ness on the hope of be­ing use­ful to my coun­try. My great­est plea­sure would be to work in some sit­ua­tion suit­ed to my fac­ul­ties. If in your re­gion, or in the cir­cle of your ac­quain­tances, you should hear of any en­ter­prise that need­ed the ca­pac­ities you know me to pos­sess, think of me; I will wait six months for your an­swer be­fore tak­ing any step.

What I have writ­ten here, dear sir and friend, oth­ers think. I have seen many of my class­mates or old­er grad­uates caught like me in the toils of some spe­cial­ty,--ge­ograph­ical en­gi­neers, cap­tain-​pro­fes­sors, cap­tains of en­gi­neers, who will re­main cap­tains all their lives, and now bit­ter­ly re­gret they did not en­ter ac­tive ser­vice with the army. Re­flect­ing on these mis­er­able re­sults, I ask my­self the fol­low­ing ques­tions, and I would like your opin­ion on them, as­sur­ing you that they are the fruit of long med­ita­tion, clar­ified in the fires of suf­fer­ing:--

What is the re­al ob­ject of the State? Does it tru­ly seek to ob­tain fine ca­pac­ities? The sys­tem now pur­sued di­rect­ly de­feats that end; it has crat­ed the most thor­ough medi­ocrities that any gov­ern­ment hos­tile to su­pe­ri­or­ity could de­sire. Does it wish to give a ca­reer to its choice minds? As a mat­ter of fact, it af­fords them the mean­est op­por­tu­ni­ties; there is not a man who has is­sued from the Ecoles who does not bit­ter­ly re­gret, when he gets to be fifty or six­ty years of age, that he ev­er fell in­to the trap set for him by the promis­es of the State. Does it seek to ob­tain men of ge­nius? What man of ge­nius, what great tal­ent have the schools pro­duced since 1790? If it had not been for Napoleon would Cachin, the man of ge­nius to whom France owes Cher­bourg, have ex­ist­ed? Im­pe­ri­al despo­tism brought him for­ward; the con­sti­tu­tion­al regime would have smoth­ered him. How many men from the Ecoles are to be found in the Acade­my of Sci­ences? Pos­si­bly two or three. The man of ge­nius de­vel­ops al­ways out­side of the tech­ni­cal schools. In the sci­ences which those schools teach ge­nius obeys on­ly its own laws; it will not de­vel­op ex­cept un­der con­di­tions which man can­not con­trol; nei­ther the State nor the sci­ence of mankind, an­thro­pol­ogy, un­der­stands them. Ri­quet, Per­ronet, Leonar­do da Vin­ci, Cachin, Pal­la­dio, Brunelleschi, Michel-​An­ge­lo, Bra­mante, Vauban, Vi­cat, de­rive their ge­nius from caus­es un­ob­served and prepara­to­ry, which we call chance,--the pet word of fools. Nev­er, with or with­out schools, are mighty work­men such as these want­ing to their epoch.

Now comes the ques­tion, Does the State gain through these in­sti­tu­tions the bet­ter do­ing of its works of pub­lic util­ity, or the cheap­er do­ing of them? As for that, I an­swer that pri­vate en­ter­pris­es of a like kind get on very well with­out the help of our en­gi­neers; and next, the gov­ern­ment works are the most ex­trav­agant in the world, and the ad­di­tion­al cost of the vast ad­min­is­tra­tive staff of the _Ponts et Chaussees_ is im­mense. In all oth­er coun­tries, in Ger­many, Eng­land, Italy, where in­sti­tu­tions like ours do not ex­ist, works of this char­ac­ter are bet­ter done and far less cost­ly than in France. Those three na­tions are re­mark­able for new and use­ful in­ven­tions in this line. I know it is the fash­ion to say, in speak­ing of our Ecoles, that all Eu­rope en­vies them; but for the last fif­teen years Eu­rope, which close­ly ob­serves us, has not es­tab­lished oth­ers like them. Eng­land, that clever cal­cu­la­tor, has bet­ter schools among her work­ing pop­ula­tion, from which come prac­ti­cal men who show their ge­nius the mo­ment they rise from prac­tice to the­ory. Stephen­son and MacAdam did not come from schools like ours.

But what is the good of talk­ing? When a few young and able en­gi­neers, full of ar­dor, solve, at the out­set of their ca­reer, the prob­lem of main­tain­ing the roads of France, which need some hun­dred mil­lions spent up­on them ev­ery quar­ter of a cen­tu­ry (and which are now in a pitiable state), they gain noth­ing by mak­ing known in re­ports and mem­oran­da their in­tel­li­gent knowl­edge; it is im­me­di­ate­ly en­gulfed in the archives of the gen­er­al Di­rec­tion,-- that Parisian cen­tre where ev­ery­thing en­ters and noth­ing is­sues; where old men are jeal­ous of young ones, and all the posts of man­age­ment are used to shelve old of­fi­cers or men who have blun­dered.

This is why, with a body of sci­en­tif­ic men spread all over the face of France and con­sti­tut­ing a part of the ad­min­is­tra­tion,--a body which ought to en­light­en ev­ery re­gion on the sub­ject of its re­sources,--this is why we are still dis­cussing the prac­ti­ca­bil­ity of rail­roads while oth­er coun­tries are mak­ing theirs. If ev­er France was to show the ex­cel­lence of her in­sti­tu­tion of tech­ni­cal schools, it should have been in this mag­nif­icent phase of pub­lic works, which is des­tined to change the face of States and na­tions, to dou­ble hu­man life, and mod­ify the laws of space and time. Bel­gium, the Unit­ed States of Amer­ica, Eng­land, none of whom have an Ecole Poly­tech­nique, will be hon­ey­combed with rail­roads when French en­gi­neers are still sur­vey­ing ours, and self­ish in­ter­ests, hid­den be­hind all projects, are hin­der­ing their ex­ecu­tion.

Thus I say that as for the State, it de­rives no ben­efit from its tech­ni­cal schools; as for the in­di­vid­ual pupil of those schools, his earn­ings are poor, his am­bi­tion crushed, and his life a cru­el de­cep­tion. Most as­sured­ly the pow­ers he has dis­played be­tween six­teen and twen­ty-​six years of age would, if he had been cast up­on his own re­sources, have brought him more fame and more wealth than the gov­ern­ment in whom he trust­ed will ev­er give him. As a com­mer­cial man, a learned man, a mil­itary man, this choice in­tel­lect would have worked in a vast cen­tre where his pre­cious fac­ul­ties and his ar­dent am­bi­tion would not be id­iot­ical­ly and pre­ma­ture­ly re­pressed.

Where, then, is progress? Man and State are both kept back­ward by this sys­tem. Does not the ex­pe­ri­ence of a whole gen­er­ation de­mand a re­form in the prac­ti­cal work­ing of these in­sti­tu­tions? The du­ty of culling from all France dur­ing each gen­er­ation the choice minds des­tined to be­come the learned and the sci­en­tif­ic of the na­tion is a sa­cred of­fice, the priests of which, the ar­biters of so many fates, should be trained by spe­cial study. Math­emat­ical knowl­edge is per­haps less nec­es­sary to them than phys­io­log­ical knowl­edge. And do you not think that they need a lit­tle of that sec­ond-​sight which is the witchcraft of great men? As it is, the ex­am­in­ers are for­mer pro­fes­sors, hon­or­able men grown old in har­ness, who lim­it their work to se­lect­ing the best themes. They are un­able to do what is re­al­ly de­mand­ed of them; and yet their func­tions are the no­blest in the State and de­mand ex­traor­di­nary men.

Do not think, dear sir and friend, that I blame on­ly the Ecole it­self; no, I blame the sys­tem by which it is re­cruit­ed. This sys­tem is the _con­cours_, com­pe­ti­tion,--a mod­ern in­ven­tion, es­sen­tial­ly bad; bad not on­ly in sci­ence, but wher­ev­er it is em­ployed, in arts, in all se­lec­tions of men, of projects, of things. If it is a re­proach to our great Ecoles that they have not pro­duced men su­pe­ri­or to oth­er ed­uca­tion­al es­tab­lish­ments, it is still more shame­ful that the _grand prix_ of the In­sti­tute has not as yet fur­nished a sin­gle great painter, great mu­si­cian, great ar­chi­tect, great sculp­tor; just as the suf­frage for the last twen­ty years has not elect­ed out of its tide of medi­ocrities a sin­gle great states­man. My ob­ser­va­tion makes me de­tect, as I think, an er­ror which vi­ti­ates in France both ed­uca­tion and pol­itics. It is a cru­el er­ror, and it rests on the fol­low­ing prin­ci­ple, which or­ga­niz­ers have mis­con­ceived:--

_Noth­ing, ei­ther in ex­pe­ri­ence or in the na­ture of things, can give a cer­tain­ty that the in­tel­lec­tu­al qual­ities of the adult youth will be those of the ma­ture man._

At this mo­ment I am in­ti­mate with a num­ber of dis­tin­guished men who con­cern them­selves with all the moral mal­adies which are now af­flict­ing France. They see, as I do, that our high­est ed­uca­tion is man­ufac­tur­ing tem­po­rary ca­pac­ities,--tem­po­rary be­cause they are with­out ex­er­cise and with­out fu­ture; that such ed­uca­tion is with­out prof­it to the State be­cause it is de­void of the vig­or of be­lief and feel­ing. Our whole sys­tem of pub­lic ed­uca­tion needs over­haul­ing, and the work should be presid­ed over by some man of great knowl­edge, pow­er­ful will, and gift­ed with that leg­isla­tive ge­nius which has nev­er been met with among mod­erns, ex­cept per­haps in Jean-​Jacques Rousseau.

Pos­si­bly our su­per­flu­ous num­bers might be em­ployed in giv­ing el­emen­tary in­struc­tion so much need­ed by the peo­ple. The de­plorable amount of crime and mis­de­meanors shows a so­cial dis­ease di­rect­ly aris­ing from the half-​ed­uca­tion giv­en the mass­es, which tends to the de­struc­tion of so­cial ties by mak­ing the peo­ple re­flect just enough to desert the re­li­gious be­liefs which are fa­vor­able to so­cial or­der, and not enough to lift them to the the­ory of obe­di­ence and du­ty, which is the high­est reach of the new tran­scen­den­tal phi­los­ophy. But as it is im­pos­si­ble to make a whole na­tion study Kant, there­fore I say fixed be­liefs and habits are safer for the mass­es than shal­low stud­ies and rea­son­ing.

If I had my life to be­gin over again, per­haps I would en­ter a sem­inary and be­come a sim­ple vil­lage priest, or the teach­er of a coun­try dis­trict. But I am too far ad­vanced in my pro­fes­sion now to be a mere pri­ma­ry in­struc­tor; I can, if I leave my present post, act in a wider range than that of a school or a coun­try parish. The Saint-​Si­mo­ni­ans, to whom I have been tempt­ed to al­ly my­self, want now to take a course in which I can­not fol­low them. Nev­er­the­less, in spite of their mis­takes, they have touched on many of the sore spots which are the fruits of our present leg­is­la­tion, and which the State will on­ly doc­tor by in­suf­fi­cient pal­lia­tives,--mere­ly de­lay­ing in France the moral and po­lit­ical cri­sis that must come.

Adieu, dear Mon­sieur Gros­setete; ac­cept the as­sur­ance of my re­spect­ful at­tach­ment, which, notwith­stand­ing all these ob­ser­va­tions, can on­ly in­crease.

Gre­goire Ger­ard.

Ac­cord­ing to his old habit as a banker, Gros­setete had jot­ted down his re­ply on the back of the let­ter it­self, head­ing it with the sacra­men­tal word, _An­swered_.

It is use­less, my dear Ger­ard, to dis­cuss the ob­ser­va­tions made in your let­ter, be­cause by a trick of chance (I use the term which is, as you say, the pet word of fools) I have a pro­pos­al to make to you which may re­sult in with­draw­ing you from the sit­ua­tion you find so bad. Madame Graslin, the own­er of the forests of Mon­teg­nac and of a bar­ren plateau ex­tend­ing from the base of a chain of moun­tains on which are the forests, wish­es to im­prove this vast do­main, to clear her tim­ber prop­er­ly, and cul­ti­vate the stony plain.

To put this project in­to ex­ecu­tion she needs a man of your sci­en­tif­ic knowl­edge and ar­dor, and one who has al­so your dis­in­ter­est­ed de­vo­tion and your ideas of prac­ti­cal util­ity. It will be lit­tle mon­ey and much work! a great re­sult from small means! a whole re­gion to be changed fun­da­men­tal­ly! bar­ren places to be made to gush with plen­ty! Isn't that pre­cise­ly what you want,--you who are dream­ing of con­struct­ing a po­em? From the tone of sin­cer­ity which per­vades your let­ter, I do not hes­itate to bid you come and see me at Limo­ges. But, my good friend, don't send in your res­ig­na­tion yet; get leave of ab­sence on­ly, and tell your ad­min­is­tra­tion that you are go­ing to study ques­tions con­nect­ed with your pro­fes­sion out­side of the gov­ern­ment works. In this way, you will not lose your rights, and you will have time to judge for your­self whether the project con­ceived by the rec­tor of Mon­teg­nac and ap­proved by Madame Graslin is fea­si­ble.

I will ex­plain to you by word of mouth the ad­van­tages you will find in case this great scheme can be car­ried out. Re­ly on the friend­ship of

Yours, etc, T. Gros­setete.

Madame Graslin replied to Gros­setete in few words: “Thank you, my friend; I shall ex­pect your _pro­tege_.” She showed the let­ter to the rec­tor, say­ing,--

“One more wound­ed man for the hos­pi­tal.”

The rec­tor read the let­ter, reread it, made two or three turns on the ter­race silent­ly; then he gave it back to Madame Graslin, say­ing,--

“A fine soul, and a su­pe­ri­or man. He says the schools in­vent­ed by the ge­nius of the Rev­olu­tion man­ufac­ture in­ca­pac­ities. For my part, I say they man­ufac­ture un­be­liev­ers; for if Mon­sieur Ger­ard is not an athe­ist, he is a protes­tant.”

“We will ask him,” she said, struck by an an­swer.