Charles-Maurice de TALLEYRAND (1754-1838)

Lot 374
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Charles-Maurice de TALLEYRAND (1754-1838)
Autograph manuscript, draft speech,[1821-1822]; 3.5 pages small in-4 with erasures and corrections. Reflections on the laws, about the freedom of the press, an issue on which Talleyrand spoke twice in the Chamber of Peers, on 24 July 1821 and 26 February 1822. "Laws or constitutions are only valid when they write what time demands. - When they write without time presiding over the writing, they are bad. - The time never retreats; sometimes it is stationary. He commands nothing, and then we have to wait for everything in mind and the time when he is stationary is used to fix what is. Such was the beautiful century of Louis XIV. - More often he walks, but walks slowly, and his slowness must make the mind shy - if the mind goes faster than the tempo, he gets lost. As long as the constituent assembly has written what the tems prescribes, it has been fine: this writing is expressed in all its sections, and this has become the code of our time, and not only in France. The time then wanted freedom of the press - it had to be granted - when the constituent assembly wanted to go alone, to go without the time, it only made one room, and there it had a serious wrong: several others could be noticed, these faults are repaired; we have two rooms;[the representation is finished the representative system is complete, and it is only complete with the freedom of the crossed out newspapers]. Today, time does not want censorship; it is being pushed back from everywhere, our institutions and general opinion are against it. Our institutions that are the work of the tems and that the king considered to be tested enough to give them to us want freedom and a very strong repressive law. - If we now govern with the instruments of another government we will govern badly"....
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