| Manifesto of the Enragés (1793) | |
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Freedom is but an empty illusion when one class of men
can starve another with impunity. Equality is but an empty illusion when
the rich, through monopolies, have the decision of life or death over
their own kind. The Republic is but an empty illusion when the
counterrevolution takes place daily because three-quarters of the
citizenry cannot afford the price of basic foodstuffs and no one sheds a
tear.
Stopping trade which is nothing short of highway robbery must be clearly distinguished from simple commerce. It will only be by placing the cost of food within reach of the sans-culottes that you will win them over to Revolution and its constitutional laws |
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SOURCE: Jacques Roux, Scripta
et acta, edited by Walter M. Markov (Berlin: Akademie-Verl., 1969), 140–46. Translated by Exploring the French Revolution project staff from original documents in French found in John Hardman, French Revolution Documents 1792–95, vol. 2 (New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1973), 136. |