Reflections on the Revolution in France

by

Edmund Burke

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Reflections on the Revolution in France makes teaching easy.

Reflections on the Revolution in France: Section 11 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
Burke believes that France’s “new monied interest” is allied with “the political Men of Letters,” who have long been planning “the destruction of the Christian religion.” They have used their own literary fame and “the medium of opinion” to try to monopolize “avenues to opinion” regarding religion. They have succeeded more by “intrigue” than by genuine wit. They claimed concern for the poor, while exaggerating their critique of the nobility and clergy, and allying themselves with “obnoxious wealth,” Burke claims.
Here, Burke criticizes the hypocrisy in the propagandistic efforts of France’s educated elite. They have mounted an intentional attack against religion, justifying this out of concern for those poor whom the Church has allegedly neglected. However, Burke charges this as being more about naked power and a desire to dismantle Christian structures—something that later events in the 1790s (brutal persecution of the clergy, brief state sanctioning of deism and atheism) will appear to bear out.
Themes
Nature, Tradition, and Wisdom Theme Icon
Revolution and Reform Theme Icon
Quotes
Burke questions why the properties of the clergy alone are being confiscated, and not those of financiers, bankers, wealthy nobles, and others. He believes the revolutionaries have been motivated by a “spirit of revenge” and not of justice. Eventually, the confiscated Church properties became the government’s sole resource. The government ensured full participation in their confiscation scheme by requiring all payments be made in a paper currency founded on the eventual sale of Church lands. However, it was later decided that these lands wouldn’t actually be sold, but would be “delivered to the highest bidder,” with the full payment not to be made for a dozen years, “held on the feudal tenure of zeal to the new establishment.”
Burke attacks the whole scheme of confiscation that the revolutionary government has enacted to try to drag France out of debt. He argues that its architects are being inconsistent by looking to the Church alone to fill its coffers. The entire plan has also been mishandled, with worthless paper money being issued even without the intended sale having been made.
Themes
Revolution and Reform Theme Icon
Burke argues that, once these various confiscations and tyrannies have been carried out, “shock[ing] the moral sentiments of all virtuous and sober minds,” France’s new “philosophic” leaders turn to denunciation of the old monarchical government—and anyone who disapproves of their own abuses is then denounced, in turn, as a partisan of the old system. They act as though no third option is possible.
Burke argues that there is a method behind the various stages of revolution. Once the people’s traditional sensibilities have been duly “shocked,” there is an effort to turn the people against the monarchy, further polarizing French society. Burke argues that a middle way is possible between revolution and mere traditionalism.
Themes
Nature, Tradition, and Wisdom Theme Icon
Revolution and Reform Theme Icon
Quotes
Burke says he’s unsure how to classify France’s current ruling class. Though it claims itself to be a pure democracy, it appears to be becoming “a mischievous and ignoble oligarchy.” In any case, Burke does not disapprove of any form of government on the basis of abstract principles alone. However, there is no historical precedent for a large-scale democracy, just ancient city-states. He is inclined to concur with Aristotle and other classical authors that a pure democracy is a degenerate form of a republic. The problem with such a form of government is that the majority will often oppress the minority far more harshly than a monarch would do.
Burke argues that the form of government that is taking shape in France has not really been tried before in history, which, in his view, renders its validity questionable. Even Aristotle, in his Nichomachean Ethics, saw pure democracy as a degradation of a more balanced republican structure. That is because an unchecked majority can easily become oppressive, falling into the same errors it criticizes, or worse ones, in the previous monarchy.
Themes
Revolution and Reform Theme Icon
Theory vs. Practicality Theme Icon
Get the entire Reflections on the Revolution in France LitChart as a printable PDF.
Reflections on the Revolution in France PDF
Burke questions whether the French monarchy was so bad that it was beyond the possibility of reform, that “the whole fabric should be at once pulled down, and the area cleared for the erection of a theoretic experimental edifice in its place.” He argues that France had a different opinion at the beginning of 1789, and that representatives to the states-general, though hardly ignorant of existing abuses, were then seeking reform, not revolution. He asserts that France was “a despotism rather in appearance than in reality.”
Burke questions whether all of this revolutionary upheaval was even necessary—he suggests once again that Frenchmen like Depont have not made a sufficient case for tearing everything down. In fact, he argues that most French people were more reform-minded than revolutionary within the past year.
Themes
Revolution and Reform Theme Icon
Quotes
To prove this statement, Burke argues that, as of 1780, France’s population was still increasing, and that, whatever the precise factors in this growth, France’s political institutions could not have been the world’s worst. As of 1785, its wealth was also growing. No “positively destructive government” could allow for such. And when France’s architectural beauties, infrastructure, fortifications, cultivation, and many other aspects are considered—to say nothing of her learned and literary achievements—then how can it be said that France’s government was so thoroughly corrupt “as to be utterly unfit for all reformation”? Burke thinks it unlikely that France will be improved by the Revolution, and that, in fact, it will take years for it to regain its previous stature in population and wealth.
Burke praises a whole catalogue of France’s distinctions and achievements, arguing that these prevailed until very recently, and that their existence, while not in itself an argument against revolution, suggests that the current destruction was over-hasty. His praise of existing institutions bolsters his argument that reform is generally a more measured, healthy, and respectful way of proceeding than revolution.
Themes
Nature, Tradition, and Wisdom Theme Icon
Revolution and Reform Theme Icon
Burke points out that Paris is currently burdened by high unemployment and mendicancy (begging), while “the leaders of the legislative clubs and coffee-houses are intoxicated with admiration” at themselves and look down on both their own poor and the rest of the world, taking comfort in being “a nation of philosophers.” Burke says that, while “virtuous poverty” with liberty is to be preferred to “wealthy servitude,” one should be sure that the “liberty” that accompanies such poverty was worth the price.
Burke cites statistics to show that Paris is currently in turmoil and that the Revolution hasn’t shown positive effects there yet. He implies that the elites ignore or justify all this on the basis of their superior new theories. He also suggests that the elites have sold out the common people for the sake of a counterfeit “liberty.”
Themes
Revolution and Reform Theme Icon
Theory vs. Practicality Theme Icon
Quotes