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Title: Anarchy and its Heroes Author: Cesare Lombroso Date: 1897 Language: en Topics: anti-anarchy, not-anarchist, punishment, Ravachol, Vaillant Source: Retrieved on December 28, 2011 from http://www.marxists.org/subject/anarchism/lombroso.htm Notes: Alexandre Bérard, Les mystiques de l’anarchie. Lyon, A.-H. Storck, 1897. Translated by Mitch Abidor
In nature the law of inertia dominates, and even more so in the human
world, which is misonéique, i.e., has a horror of the new. In politics,
every violent effort against the established order, against the old, is
punishable for it wounds the majority’s opinions and sentiments. Even if
it constitutes a necessity for an oppressed minority, judicially it is
an anti-social fact and consequently a crime, often a useless crime, for
it awakens a misonéistique reaction.
And it is here that the distinction appears between revolutions properly
speaking, which are slow, prepared, necessary effect, that are at the
very most rendered more rapid by some neurotic genius or some historical
accident, and revolts or seditions, which are the precipitous,
artificial incubation at exaggerated temperatures of embryos that due to
this fact are doomed to a certain death. Revolution is the historical
expression of evolution. Its movement is slow and gradual, another
guarantee of success.
Revolutions are more or less extended, general, and followed by an
entire people. Seditions respond to causes of little importance, often
local or personal. They are frequent among the least advanced peoples,
like in Saint-Dominique, in the small republics of the Middle Ages and
in those of South America. Criminals participate in them much more than
do honest people. Revolutions, on the contrary, rarely appear, and
always for serious causes and an elevated ideal; and passionate men,
i.e., criminals or geniuses more often take part than do criminals.
It follows from this that it is easy to understand that the anarchist
movement is composed for the most part (except for a very few
exceptions, like Reclus and Kropotkin) of criminals and madmen, and
sometimes of both together, for I have demonstrated that the most honest
men and the greatest geniuses, the flower of the nation, take part in
revolutions, while on the contrary in rebellions, where misonéisme is in
total opposition to the dominant idea, there only appear madmen and
criminals who are led by their morbid state to feel and to think
differently form everyone else and who, in order to arrive at their
ends, don’t feel the trouble that other men would feel while
accomplishing violent and criminal acts, such as regicide, arson, etc...
It suffices to take a look at the portraits I gave in my Crime Politique
to see how much the anarchists and the rebels who are the anarchists of
the past, present the perfect type of criminal, like Kammerer,
Steilmacher, Brady, Fitzharris.
Modern anarchists provide the occasion for the same observations. A
distinguished magistrate, M. Spingardi, who was kind enough to furnish
me with numerous materials for this article, said to me: “As far as I’m
concerned, I have never seen an anarchist who was not either crippled, a
hunchback or whose face wasn’t asymmetrical.” Ravachol and Prady
presented the perfect type of born criminal, not only in their faces,
but in their passion for evil, their absolute lack of ethical sense,
their hatred of the family, and their indifference to human life. And I
would like to observe that Pini and Kammerer were true brigands, like
Ravachol.
Is this any different with Vaillant?
In the first place I’d like to say that his physiognomy was not at all
that of a criminal, except perhaps for his too large and widely spaced
ears. But he was a hysteric.
He was of a gentle and timid character, and had a quite particular
characteristic: he was unable to look in the eye those people who were
either nervous or who have any kind of magnetic strength in their gaze.
In these cases Vaillant fell into a kind of ecstasy, from which he was
awakened with difficulty.
This is the essential character of hysteria (hypnotic sensibility).
The natural hatred of parties and the tendency of procurators to
exaggerate things depict him as a vulgar evildoer. he appears to me as
simply an unbalanced individual who gave a few signs of criminality in
his childhood and youth (the crime of fraud), but even more than a born
criminal, he was a true passionate fanatic, whose hatreds are explained
by heredity and misfortune.
As or heredity, his birth was owed to a half-guilty love and to
degenerate parents. He was born of a former liberated Zouave who had
seduced a young domestic. Both of them, heartless, abandoned him along
the way.
Another cause resides in his futile struggle against misfortune. As a
young man he was raised with difficulty, and was forced to resort to
being a cobbler to earn his living. From this point on he was a rebel.
After having been a cobbler he was in succession a furrier, a grocery
agent, a French teacher, a plaster worker, a metal worker. But his
dreamy, ecstatic temperament made him inapt for all serious labor. He
passed several months in the direst poverty.
At twelve he was placed as an apprentice confectioner. Impatient for his
freedom, the child fled and his mother, who had remarried, refused to
receive him.
The gendarmes arrested him on the road. They telegraphed his father, and
M. Vaillant responded:
I had the mother of said Auguste Vaillant as a mistress. She comported
herself poorly and I left her. She has since remarried, I believe. I ask
that you have him taken to her home.
Despite this, since he calls for me, I am sending twenty franc so that
he can return to his mother.
I do this as an act of charity and not one of recognition.
As for Vaillant’s mother, she answered:
It is impossible for me to receive the child. My husband would throw me
out of the house.
And it is thus that this unhappy child of fourteen wandered from city to
city, arrested here for having begged for a morsel of bread, condemned
there for having, on a day when he was dying of hunger, taken without
paying a meal that was worth 90 centimes.
He tried everything, without success. His boss in Choisy-le-Roi gave him
20 francs a week, for himself, his wife and his child. They lacked bread
almost every day.
The great mobility, the instability proper to hysterics, which he had
demonstrated in his various métiers, he also brought to his convictions.
Educated by priests he became a socialist, paying with his body,
organizing all the elements needed to form groups of the extreme
avant-garde.
Not being able to make his way or play a leading role among the
socialists, he became an anarchist and perhaps given time would have
become a monarchist. But above all he was vain. The graphologist who
examines his signature finds there vanity, pride, and energy as the
dominant characteristics. The large “T,” the rising writing, the
enormous initials are a striking proof of this. The directing, the
leading of a collection of individuals was his strongest tendency.
But at all times he was an exaggeratedly passionate altruist.
One of the things that have most profoundly surprised me is to have
found this characteristic in many anarchists even more criminal than
him. Everyone knows that he and Ravachol bragged of having spent the
fruit of their thefts on their companions or their cause. According to
what has been written to me about Chicago, Spies was venerated as a
saint by all of his comrades.
He only earned 19 francs a week, but he still gave two to a friend who
had fallen ill. He even helped a man who had outrageously offended him.
His companions said that if the revolution were ever to triumph it would
be necessary to put him in prison in order to prevent him from harming
the revolution through sentimentality...
In order to explain this...we must recall what occurs among hysterics
like Vaillant.
Hysteria, which is the sister of epilepsy, and which is in a like
fashion connected with the partial loss of affectivity, any times
demonstrated along with an exaggerated egoism, certain bursts of
excessive altruism, which is an outgrowth of moral madness and is
dependent upon it — and reveals to us the morbid phenomenon within the
warmest charity.
In speaking of hysterics Legrand du Saulle wrote that there are those of
them who while remaining in the world loudly espouse all the good works
of their parish, asking charity for the poor, working for orphans,
visiting the sick, giving alms, watching over the dead, ardently
soliciting the beneficence of others. Hysterics create charitable works
with as much ardor as the knights of industry launch a financial affair
with hyperbolic dividends...
Devotion has become a need for these sick individuals, an occasion for
necessary expenditure and, without any doubt, they pathologically play
the role of virtue, and everyone is taken in by this.
In principle I am not opposed to the death penalty when that penalty
guarantees the life of many people. Nevertheless, I think it would be
better not to apply it in the case of anarchists. If it is necessary to
suppress born criminals or criminals like Navaho, who hide behind the
anarchist mask, on the other hand we must avoid the application of the
death penalty to anarchists like Vaillant, among whom the tendency to
evil is cloaked in an altruistic form and who, even with their violent
thirst for the new, can render service to humanity.
In any event, the suppression of anarchists would have no practical
effect, for fanatics and neuropaths don’t retreat before punishment. On
the contrary, it is punishment that enflames their imagination and as we
saw after the attacks in Barcelona and Paris, the too-severe punishment
of anarchists was always followed by crimes even more violent and
dangerous.
An even more radical measure, especially in France, would be to cover
them in ridicule. Martyrs are venerated, but madmen never.
As for international agreements, of which much has been said, they are
worse than useless, for the anarchists have no center that can be
seized.
In order to demonstrate the uselessness of ferocious penalties it
suffices to see that even the death of Ravachol, who was a trueborn
criminal, completely unworthy of the pity of honest men, far from being
intimidating was followed by an apotheosis.
After his execution certain individuals discovered a supreme — anarchist
— logic in his diverse crimes. It was decided that he was a symbolic
assassin, tomb raider, dynamiter, guillotine.
The cult of Ravachol was born.
Even prior to this the anarchists had their martyrs: those hung in
Chicago, those garroted in Xeres, the Germans Reinsdorf and Kuchler,
executed with an axe. French revolutionaries needed, despite their
internationalism, a national martyr, executed by the guillotine.
And he was more than a martyr, he was Ravachol-Jesus as a party rhymer,
Paul Paillette wrote.
A photograph showing him standing with his crazed look, in the clogs of
a prisoner between two gendarmes was reproduced in thousand of copies.
Pamphlets to his glory were published: Ravachol Anarchiste, Ravachol et
Carnot in Hell, etc. we even have the hymn, La Ravachole.[1]
Just as we can’t pass definitive judgment during his life on a great
man, a generation can’t with certainty judge the falsity of an idea,
whatever it might be an, consequently, it doesn’t have the right to
inflict a penalty as radical as the death penalty on the partisans of
that idea. It is for this reason that I proposed for all political
criminals — apart born criminals — temporary punishments.
I don’t care to discuss briefly the prophylaxis of anarchist crime, but
I nevertheless would like to establish the following:
Just as we see cholera strike the poorest and most filthy quarters,
anarchy strikes in all places the least well governed. Its presence can
thus serve as an indicator that all is not for the best in countries
that suffer from it, just as wherever it appears cholera indicates that
there are improvements to be made in the domain of hygiene.
In the presence of anarchist crimes one should not forget that painful
exclamation of Vaillant’s that, though coming from an hysteric,
nevertheless deserves to be retained:
“For too long a time,” he said, “our voice is responded to with prison,
the rope or the fusillade, but don’t delude yourselves: the explosion of
my bomb is not only the cry of Vaillant in rebellion, but is the cry of
an entire class that calls for its rights and will soon join its acts to
its words.”
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[1] It has been objected that I wouldn’t show such mercy towards
anarchists if they had blown up my home. It is true that my home has not
yet blown up, but in my career as an alienist I have may times suffered
from the sometimes serious wounds caused by these madmen, and it has
never occurred to me either to suppress them or to correct them through
severe penalties.