[Child of a Century by Alfred de Musset]@TWC D-Link bookChild of a Century CHAPTER II 7/21
The Pope had travelled three hundred leagues to bless him in the name of God and to crown him with the diadem; but Napoleon had taken it from his hands. Thus everything trembled in that dismal forest of old Europe; then silence succeeded. It is said that when you meet a mad dog, if you keep quietly on your way without turning, the dog will merely follow you a short distance growling and showing his teeth; but if you allow yourself to be frightened into a movement of terror, if you but make a sudden step, he will leap at your throat and devour you; that when the first bite has been taken there is no escaping him. In European history it has often happened that a sovereign has made such a movement of terror and his people have devoured him; but if one had done it, all had not done it at the same time--that is to say, one king had disappeared, but not all royal majesty.
Before the sword of Napoleon majesty made this movement, this gesture which ruins everything, not only majesty but religion, nobility, all power both human and divine. Napoleon dead, human and divine power were reestablished, but belief in them no longer existed.
A terrible danger lurks in the knowledge of what is possible, for the mind always goes farther.
It is one thing to say: "That may be" and another thing to say: "That has been;" it is the first bite of the dog. The fall of Napoleon was the last flicker of the lamp of despotism; it destroyed and it parodied kings as Voltaire the Holy Scripture.
And after him was heard a great noise: it was the stone of St.Helena which had just fallen on the ancient world.
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