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Title: Parliamentary Isolation
Author: Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
Date: 1849
Language: en
Topics: Parliament, isolation, representation, democracy
Source: Retrieved on 21st May 2021 from https://libcom.org/library/anarchist-reader-george-woodcock
Notes: From Les Confessions d’un Revolutionnaire, 1849. Translated by George Woodcock.

Pierre-Joseph Proudhon

Parliamentary Isolation

I entered the National Assembly with the timidity of a child, with the

ardour of a neophyte. Assiduous, from nine o’clock in the morning, at

the meetings of bureaux and committees, I did not quit the Assembly

until the evening, and then I was exhausted with fatigue and disgust. As

soon as I set foot in the parliamentary Sinai, I ceased to be in touch

with the masses; because I was absorbed by my legislative work, I

entirely lost sight of the current of events. I knew nothing, either of

the situation of the national workshops, or the policy of the

government, or of the intrigues that were growing up in the heart of the

Assembly. One must have lived in that isolator which is called a

National Assembly to realize how the men who are most completely

ignorant of the state of the country are almost always those who

represent it ... Most of my colleagues of the left and the extreme left

were in the same perplexity of mind, the same ignorance of daily facts.

One spoke of the national workshops only with a kind of terror, for fear

of the people is the sickness of all those who belong to authority; the

people, for those in power, are the enemy.