Two centuries ago, Chateaubriand warned us against a society where « figures would replace principles. » We are there. Faced with the spectacle of an American democracy gangrenous with dirty money and mafia ties, and before the guilty passivity of European chancelleries, the author of Memoirs from Beyond the Grave breaks his silence. This pastiche is not a stylistic exercise; it is an alarm. With his words of fire and ash, he depicts our tragedy: that of a West which, for lack of courage, walks with eyes wide open toward dishonor and war.

If François-René de Chateaubriand, the great witness to the shipwrecks of History, were to emerge today from his tomb on Grand-Bé to contemplate our century, he would not see ruins of stone, but moral ruins. He who had predicted the dangers of a democracy gnawed by money, what voice would he raise in the face of this « new world » where unscrupulous merchants make pacts with organized crime to enslave peoples? This text is a literary resurrection. It is the cry from beyond the grave of an aristocratic conscience coming to warn us: when a civilization accepts dishonor for the sake of comfort, it does not avoid war; it gets both.

It is said that the dead have their eyes open. From the rock of Saint-Malo where he sleeps facing the ocean, Chateaubriand has seen the rising black tide of vulgarity and compromise. He has seen America, which he once loved for its virgin forests, become the prey of a tornado of dirty-handed profiteers. He has seen Europe tremble before carnival tyrants. Because the silence of the living has become deafening, the Viscount has taken up the pen again.