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New York, New York County, New York
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In Paris' National Convention on Dec 16, 1792, Citizen Dupont's speech pushes for public schools teaching reason and atheism over religion, amid revolutionary fervor; applauded widely despite clerical objections.
Merged-components note: Continuation of the foreign news article reporting on a speech in the French National Convention, translated from London.
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The following is an exact Translation from a Speech, made in the National Convention at Paris (on the establishing Public Schools for the Education of Youth) by Citizen Dupont, a member of considerable weight.--And as the Doctrines contained in it were received with unanimous applause, except from two or three of the clergy, it may fairly be considered as an exposition of the creed of that enlightened Assembly. Translated from Le Moniteur, of Sunday, the 16th of December, 1792.
WHAT! Thrones are overturned! Sceptres broken! Kings expire! and yet the Altars of God remain! (here there is a murmur from some members ; and the Abbe Ichon demands, that the person speaking may be called to order.) Tyrants, in outrage to nature, continue to burn an impious incense on those altars! (Some murmurs arise, but they are lost in the applauses from the majority of the Assembly.) The thrones that have been reserved, have left thee altars naked, unsupported, and tottering. A single breath of enlightened reason will now be sufficient to make them disappear. And if humanity is under obligations to the French nation for the first of these benefits, the fall of Kings, can it be doubted, but that the French People, now Sovereign, will be wise enough, in like manner, to overthrow those altars and those idols, to which those Kings have hitherto made them subject? Nature and Reason, these ought to be the Gods of men! These are my Gods! (Here the Abbe Audrein cried out, "There's no bearing this;" and rushed out of the Assembly. A great laugh!) Admire, Legislators, if you desire that the French people should be happy—make haste to propagate these principles, and to teach them in your primary schools, instead of those fanatical principles which have hitherto been taught. The tyranny of kings was confined to make their people miserable in this life ; but those other tyrants, the Priests, extend their do- minions into another; of which they have no other idea than of eternal punishments;
doctrine which no men have hitherto had the good nature to believe. But the moment of the catastrophe is come—all these prejudices must fall at the same time. We must destroy them, or they will betray us.—For myself! I honestly avow to the Convention—I am an Atheist!* (Here there is some noise and tumult—but a great number of members cried out what is that to us? you are an honest man.') But I defy a single individual, amongst the twenty-four millions of Frenchmen, to make against me any well grounded reproach.—I doubt whether the Christians, or the Catholics, of which the last speaker, and those of his opinion, have been talking to us, can make the same challenge—(Great applauses.) There is another consideration. Paris has great losses.—It has been deprived of the commerce of luxury; of that factitious splendor which was found at Courts, and invited strangers hither.—Well! We must repair these losses.—Let me then represent to you the times, that are fast approaching, when our Philosophers, whose names are celebrated throughout Europe, Petion, Sieyes, Condorcet, and others—surrounded in our Pantheon, as the Greek Philosophers were at Athens, with a crowd of disciples coming from all parts of Europe, walking like the Peripatetics, and teaching—this Man, the system of the Universe, and developing the progress of all human knowledge; that perfecting in the Social system, and shewing in our degree of the 17th of June, 1789, the seed of the insurrection of the 14th of July, and the 10th of August, and of all those insurrections which are spreading, with such rapidity throughout Europe—so that these young strangers, on their return to their respective countries, may spread the same lights and may operate, for the happiness of mankind, similar revolutions throughout the whole. Numberless applauses arose, almost throughout the whole assembly—and in the galleries.) * Printed "Deist" in the American Daily Advertiser of Friday last, but corrected in the paper of Monday following
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Foreign News Details
Primary Location
Paris
Event Date
16th Of December, 1792
Key Persons
Outcome
received with unanimous applause except from two or three of the clergy; promotes overthrow of altars and idols, atheism, and teaching reason in primary schools
Event Details
Citizen Dupont delivers a speech in the National Convention advocating for public schools to teach reason and nature over religious principles, declaring himself an atheist, and criticizing kings and priests; mentions historical insurrections and envisions philosophers teaching European disciples to spread revolutionary ideas