PROUDHON Pierre-Joseph (1809-1865) écrivain et théoricien politique

Lot 257
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Result : 1 318EUR
PROUDHON Pierre-Joseph (1809-1865) écrivain et théoricien politique
L.A.S. "P.-J. Proudhon", Paris October 10, 1862, to his friend and publisher A. LEBÈGUE, director of the Advertising Office in Brussels; 3 pages and a quarter in-8, address (small hole by break of stamp). Beautiful letter on his departure from Belgium. . "You keep telling me that I deserted the post, and that I did not face the enemy; and, on this pretext, you claim to apologize for not having wanted to admit in The Office my third article. You know the proverb: he who counts without his host, counts twice. You have understood in your own way the conduct that I had to take [...] You would have wanted a denial, a protest, a refutation of the error or bad faith of the newspapers: whereas I did not want to go down to a justification, but to put my adversaries in the hot seat again"... But since the Office did not insert its third letter, what could it do? He left Brussels the day after the aborted demonstration on the 16th, with the intention of observing things from a distance and preparing his move. "After such a ruckus, I thought that, even when the whole of Belgium would do me justice, I could not but feel embarrassed with everyone, either bourgeois, people or government" . It is in these provisions that he composed his third article, again on the Italian question and Belgian politics. This gave him the opportunity to "develop my thoughts on federation, against the unitary democracy of Paris and Brussels. What have you come to talk to me about desertion, when I insist more forcefully than before on my thought, falling, it is true, with shortened arms on the enemy"? Basically, Lebègue feared that by developing his thoughts against the annexation of Belgium, Proudhon would engage in a discussion that would upset either the government or the country, and that is why he closed his door to him. "I would have preferred complete frankness on your part, rather than all these convoluted defeats".
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