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French socialism in the most general sense was more a matter of sensibility than of doctrine, partly because the country knew not one socialist doctrine but many. A united socialist or labor movement did not exist before the twentieth century. Beginning in the 1880s, the most forceful and visible section of the extreme Left was also the least organized: anarchism. Where socialists wanted to capture the state on behalf of the oppressed, anarchists sought not the capture of the state, but its abolition. True anarchists in a revolution, explained Jean Grave, one of their ideologues, should not stupidly proclaim a new government but shoot whoever tries to set one up. This sensible appreciation of how easily reformers turn into oppressors went along with distrust of all instruments of repression (army, police, bureaucracy, church, and schools), of private property, and of capital -- which could result only from the appropriation and accumulation of the value created by the work of others, that is, from theft. Most visibly, though, the anarchists were activists. Rejecting the patient preparation of revolution, let alone of elections and reforms by legal means, they argued that insurrectionist deeds were the most effective propaganda. Whatever its effectiveness, propaganda by deed evoked the sympathies of many and the attention of all. Convinced anarchists were few, and during most of the 1880s their propaganda remained on the verbal level.27 Because they criticized property, the police, and military service, sometimes in inflammatory terms, anarchists often appeared in court charged with advocating murder, arson, pillage, or desertion. None of this, however, aroused much interest until the bombs began to explode in a vicious crescendo of repression and revenge. May 1, 1891, had seen anarchist riots in Paris; those arrested had been roughed up by the police before being tried and sent to jail. In 1892 the homes of legal officials involved in that trial began to be blown up; and Paris lived in terror until the author of the explosions was denounced by a waiter before whom he had disparaged the government ("What do you care who governs you?") and the army ("a lot of idlers").28 François-Claudius Koeningstein, a thirty-three-year-old dye worker, smuggler, and counterfeiter, who called himself Ravachol, declared that he had wanted to "terrorize in order to call attention to us, the true defenders of the oppressed." As he went on trial in Paris, in April Condemned to die in April , Henry was executed in May 1894, while bombs were going off, it seemed, in hotels and restaurants throughout Paris. Fear turned folk back to religion: "We've never sold as much fish as this last Easter Week." On June 24, in Lyons, a twenty-one-year-old Italian, Santo Caserio, shouting "Vive Ia Révolution! Vive l'Anarchie!" stabbed President Carnot to death with a six-inch knife. Carnot had refused to pardon Ravachol, Vaillant, and Henry; now Caserio too would die, unpardoned, two months after his prey, last victim of this two-year frenzy.31 Was it the repressive laws and their execution that discouraged further bombings, or a waning of public sympathy? In February 1894, as the Seine Assizes tried an anarchist who had murdered a policeman, the press found reason to comment that the public was growing tired of such affairs.32 For one thing, trial evidence made it fairly clear that the terrorists were trying to work out their personal problems even more than those of society. Ravachol was a professional criminal; Vaillant an unmistakable ne'er-do-well who changed women as easily as jobs. The twenty-year-old cobbler Léon-Jules Léauthier, condemned to life at forced labor for trying to murder the Serbian Minister in Paris with a shoemaker's knife, blamed the social organization that pre vented him from consuming according to his needs; it turned out that he never lacked work but never delivered it on time or did slipshod and ill-finished work.33 More ominous, out-and-out rogues were adopting the language of principle to justify their crimes. One of the first to do this, in 1887, was Clément Duval, who robbed the apartment of a woman painter (Proust's friend Madeleine Lemaire), set fire to it to cover his traces, then stabbed to death a policeman who tried to arrest him. Duval proclaimed "the right of those who have nothing to take from those who have" and described his arson as the act of "a convict setting fire to his jail." As for his encounter with the policeman: "He arrested me in the name of the law; I struck him in the name of liberty." It turned out that one of Duval's fences, who was a member of the anarchist group "The Disinherited of Clichy," enjoyed an annual income of 1,600 francs from stocks and bonds.34 The trial records of the late 1880s and early 1890s abound in thieves and murderers claiming the right to repossess the property of others, by force if need be. One of the more appealing among these was a member of an anarchist gang caught expropriating one more bourgeois after a long series of robberies and break-ins. "Your name?" asked the judge. "I am the son of Nature."35 With hindsight we can see that the First World War brought down the frames of institutions, ways of life and mind, that had been long crumbling. But there was no knowing this before the nineteenth century ended, before the twentieth century faced the possibility of a worldwide war. After that war was over it became fashionable to refer to the years preceding it as the Belle Epoque, and to confuse that period with the fin de siècle, as if the two were one. Perhaps they were; the bad old times are always somebody's Belle Epoque. But the Belle Epoque, named when looking back across the corpses and the ruins, stands for the ten years or so before 1914. These also had their problems, but relatively they were robust years, sanguine and productive. The fin de siècle had preceded them: a time of economic and moral depression, a great deal less redolent of buoyancy or hope.
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"A Bomb at the Cafe Terminus," Petit Journal, 1894
"Arrest of Ravachol," Petit Journal, 1892
Dynamite in the Chamber, Petit Journal (1893)
Explosion in the Rue de Reuilly, Petit Journal (1894)
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