Display title | Les Misérables (novel)/Source/Volume 2/Book 7/Chapter 2 |
Default sort key | Les Misérables (novel)/Source/Volume 2/Book 7/Chapter 2 |
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Date of page creation | 11:24, 9 October 2019 |
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Article description: (description ) This attribute controls the content of the description and og:description elements. | From the point of view of history, of reason, and of truth, monasticism is condemned. Monasteries, when they abound in a nation, are clogs in its circulation, cumbrous establishments, centres of idleness where centres of labor should exist. Monastic communities are to the great social community what the mistletoe is to the oak, what the wart is to the human body. Their prosperity and their fatness mean the impoverishment of the country. The monastic regime, good at the beginning of civilization, useful in the reduction of the brutal by the spiritual, is bad when peoples have reached their manhood. Moreover, when it becomes relaxed, and when it enters into its period of disorder, it becomes bad for the very reasons which rendered it salutary in its period of purity, because it still continues to set the example. |