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Title: Ravachol
Author: Octave Mirbeau
Language: en
Topics: propaganda of the deed, Ravachol
Source: Retrieved on May 15, 2012 from http://www.spunk.org/library/fiction/mirbeau/sp001687.html
Notes: Translated and introduced by Robert Helms.

Octave Mirbeau

Ravachol

Francois-Claudius Koeningstein (Oct. 14, 1859 — July 11, 1892), known to

posterity as Ravachol, was born to Dutch and French parents at

Saint-Chamond, near St. Etienne in Eastern France. He was angered by two

actions taken by the French government on May 1, 1891. One was at

Fourmies, where the newly designed Lebels machine gun was used against a

peaceful May Day rally at which women and children were carrying flowers

and palms. Casualties there numbered 14 dead and 40 wounded. The other

incident was at Clichy, where police attacked a six-man anarchist labor

rally. The workers defended themselves with pistol-shots and were

subsequently given long terms at hard labor.

Ravachol took retribution for the Clichy defendants by bombing the homes

of the presiding judge (Mar. 11, 1892) and the prosecutor (Mar. 27,

1892). During the same month he bombed the Lobau Barracks in Paris in

response to the Army’s slaughter of innocents at Fourmies. These three

attentats caused extensive property damage, but no deaths. Ravachol was

pointed out to police by a waiter in a restaurant, and then on the night

before his trial began on April 25, the restaurant was bombed, killing

its owner. A long cycle of vendetta between the anarchists and the

government was to follow.

Ravachol’s first trial resulted in a sentence of life at forced labor.

Octave Mirbeau’s article appeared the following week in L’Endehors, 52

(May 1,1892), giving one of the most balanced anarchist views of

Ravachol’s terrorist activity. Two months later, though, he was

extradited to Montbrison in his native region and condemned to death for

the killings of an old hermit and a certain landlady he once knew.

Before his death Ravachol denied having committed these murders, but he

admitted to some burglaries and grave-robbings. He was beheaded at

Montbrison and buried there. Today, Ravachol is an important cult hero

among French anarchists.

His head escapes the guillotine!

The jurors who have dared to do this, who covered their ears to the

barking clamors of death, — were they afraid? Were they afraid to kill a

man whose mysterious vengeance won’t entirely die with him? Or indeed,

beyond the act itself, the awesome horror of which was being howled at

them, did they hear the voice of that forward-looking idea, the dominant

idea that specifically characterizes this act and ennobles it? I don’t

know. One never knows what can happen in the conscience of a juror, or

what ultimate compulsion he obeys, when dishing out life and death.

The jurors didn’t tremble as much as the press that sneered at them,

abused them, and damned them. The press wanted blood. Just like the

crude middle class, whose blind instincts they reflect, and whose

threatened privileges they defend, the journalists are afraid. And fear

is a savage thing. For to give itself the illusion of a fierce courage,

fear likes to apply rouge to its pale features. They believe, also, that

the sound of the legal blade, and the sound of mutilated flesh bouncing

on that infamous plank, can drown out the sound of the grinding teeth,

the racing pulses, and the voices which grow bolder and angrier every

day, boiling up from the hellish underbelly of society. The press is

mistaken. There are certain corpses that walk again, and certain voices

that won’t be stifled. And the void is filled with terrible enigmas.

I am horrified by the bloodshed, the ruins, and the death; I love life,

and all life is sacred to me. This is why I’m going to ask for the

anarchist ideal which no form of government can create: love, beauty,

and peace between men. Ravachol doesn’t frighten me. He is as transient

as the terror he inspires. He is the thunder clap that is followed by

the glory of the sun and the calm sky.

Beyond the somber task at hand smiles the admirable Kropotkin’s dream of

universal harmony.

Besides, our society has no right to complain, since it has given birth

to Ravachol: it sowed misery, and reaped revolution.

This is just.

And this begs the question...

Who is it — throughout this endless procession of tortures which has

been the history of the human race — who is it that sheds the blood,

always the same, relentlessly, without any pause for the sake of mercy?

Governments, religions, industries, forced labor camps, all of these are

drenched in blood. The murder is weary of their laws, their prayers, and

their progress. Again just recently, there were the frenzied butchers

who turned Paris into a slaughterhouse as the Commune perished. There

were pointless massacres, such as at Fourmies where the bodies of

innocent women and little kids tried out the ballistic virtues of the

Lebels machine gun for the first time. And there are always the mines in

which fifty, a hundred, or five hundred poor devils are suffocated,

swallowed in a single moment of horrible destruction, their charred

bodies never to see daylight again. And there are also the horrid

conquests of distant countries where happy races, unknown and peaceful,

groan under the boot of that robber of continents, that filthy rapist of

forest communities and virgin lands, the western slave trader.

Each footstep taken in this society bristles with privileges, and is

marked with a bloodstain; each turn of the government machinery grinds

the tumbling, gasping flesh of the poor; and tears are running from

everywhere in the impenetrable night of suffering. Facing these endless

murders and continuous tortures, what’s the meaning of society, this

crumbling wall, this collapsing staircase?

We live in ugly times. The misery has never been worse, because it’s

never been more obvious, and it’s never stood closer to the spectacle of

wasted riches and the promised land of well-being from which it is

relentlessly turned away. Never has the law, which protects only the

banks, pressed so hard upon the tortured shoulders of the poor.

Capitalism is insatiable, and the wage system compounds the evils of

ancient slavery. The shops are packed full of clothing, and there are

those who go about completely naked; the indifferent rich are puking up

food, while others perish from hunger in their doorways. No cry is

heeded: whenever a single, louder complaint penetrates the din of sad

murmurs, the Lebels is loaded and the troops are mobilized.

And that’s not all.

A population does not live solely on its stomach. It also has a life of

the mind. Its intellectual joys are just as necessary as its physical

joys. It has a right to beauty just as it has a right to bread. Indeed,

those who could give it its higher pleasures, those who could introduce

to the people this vital beauty are treated like public enemies, hunted

down as criminals, hounded for being anarchists and beaten like beggars.

They are reduced to a solitary life. An enormous barrier separates them

from the crowd, by whom they are regarded as repulsive spectacles, and

over whom there is spread the enormous, sordid, impenetrable veil of

triumphant stupidity. We are witnessing an incredible social moment: at

this time, while abundant with great thinkers, the public taste has

never been so degraded, nor has ignorance ever enjoyed such base

pleasures. Surely, if the hour in which we live is hideous, it is

formidable as well: it’s the hour of popular awakening. And this hour is

full of uncertainty. The patience of the downtrodden and the

dispossessed has lasted long enough. They want to live, they want to

enjoy, they want their share of all the happiness and sunshine. Whatever

the rulers do, reacting to their worst fears, they will not forestall

the inevitable course of events. We’re touching upon a decisive moment

in human history. The old world is collapsing under the weight of its

own crimes, and is itself lighting the fuse of the bomb that will blast

it all away. This bomb will be all the more terrible because it will

contain neither gunpowder nor dynamite. It’ll contain compassion and an

idea; two forces against which nothing can be done.