友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!
the origins of contemporary france-3-第12部分
快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部! 如果本书没有阅读完,想下次继续接着阅读,可使用上方 "收藏到我的浏览器" 功能 和 "加入书签" 功能!
hundred clubs that were leagued together。 Three weeks after this the
Assembly was flooded with petitions from every quarter; demanding a
decree of which the first proposal had been rejected; and which is now
passed by a great majority because a discussion of it had ripened
public opinion。〃
In other words; the Assembly must go ahead or it will be driven along;
in which process the worst expedients are the best。 Those who conduct
the club; whether fanatics or intriguers; are fully agreed on this
point。
At the head of the former class is Duport; once a counselor in the
parliament; who; after 1788; knew how to turn riots to account。 The
first revolutionary consultations were held in his house。 He wants to
plough deep; and his devices for burying the ploughshare are such that
Sieyès; a radical; if there ever was one; dubbed it a 〃cavernous
policy。〃'33' Duport; on the 28th of July; 1789; is the organizer of
the Committee on Searches; by which all favorably disposed informers
or spies form in his hands a supervisory police; which fast becomes a
police of provocation。 He finds recruits in the lower hall of the
Jacobin club; where workmen come to be catechized every morning; while
his two lieutenants; the brothers Laurette; have only to draw on the
same source for a zealous staff in a choice selection of their
instruments。 〃Ten reliable men receive orders there daily;'34' each of
these in turn gives his orders to ten more; belonging to different
battalions in Paris。 In this way each battalion and section receives
the same insurrectionary orders; the same denunciations of the
constituted authorities; of the mayor of Paris; of the president of
the department; and of the commander of the National Guard;〃
everything taking place secretly。 These are dark deeds: the leaders
themselves call it 'the Sabbath' and; along with fanatics they enlist
ruffians。 〃They spread the rumor that; on a certain day; there will be
a great commotion with assassinations and pillage; preceded by the
payment of money distributed from hand to hand by subaltern officers
among those that can be relied on; and that these bands are to
assemble; as advertised; within a radius of thirty or forty
leagues。〃'35' One day; to provoke a riot; 〃half a dozen men; who
have arranged the thing; form a small group; in which one of them
holds forth vehemently; at once a crowd of about sixty others gathers
around them。 Then the six men move on from place to place;〃 to form
fresh groups making their apparent excitement pass for popular
irritation。 Another day; 〃about forty fanatics; with powerful
lungs; and four or five hundred paid men;〃 scatter themselves around
the Tuileries; 〃yelling furiously;〃 and; gathering under the windows
of the Assembly; 〃move resolutions to assassinate。〃 〃Our ushers;〃
says a deputy to the Assembly; 〃whom you ordered to suppress this
tumult; heard reiterated threats of bringing you the heads of those
the crowd wished to proscribe。 That very evening; in the Palais…Royal;
〃I heard a subordinate leader of this factious band boast of having
charged your ushers to take this answer back; adding that there was
time enough yet for all good citizens to follow his advice。〃 The
watchword of these agitators is; are you true and the response is; a
true man。 Their pay is twelve francs a day; and when in action they
make engagements on the spot at that rate。 〃From several depositions
taken by officers of the National Guard and at the mayoralty;〃 it is
ascertained that twelve francs a day were tendered to 〃honest people
to join in with those you may have heard shouting; and some of them
actually had the twelve francs put into their hands。〃 The money
comes from the coffers of the Duke of Orleans; and they are freely
drawn upon; at his death; with a property amounting to 114;000;000
francs; his debts amount to 74;000;000。'36' Being one of the faction;
he contributes to its expenses; and; being the richest man in the
kingdom; he contributes proportionately to his wealth。 Not because he
is a party leader; for he is too effeminate; too nervous; but 〃his
petty council;〃'37' and especially one of his private secretaries;
Laclos; cherishes great designs for him; their object being to make
him lieutenant…general of the kingdom; afterwards regent; and even
king;'38' so that they may rule in his name and 〃share the profits。〃 …
… In the mean time they turn his whims to the best account;
particularly Laclos; who is a kind of subordinate Macchiavelli;
capable of anything; profound; depraved; and long indulging his
fondness for monstrous combinations; nobody ever so coolly delighted
in indescribable compounds of human wickedness and debauchery。 In
politics; as in romance; his department is 〃Les Liaisons Dangereuses。〃
Formerly he maneuvered as an amateur with prostitutes and ruffians in
the fashionable world; now he maneuvers in earnest with the
prostitutes and ruffians of the sidewalks。 On the 5th of October
1789; he is seen; 〃dressed in a brown coat;〃'39' foremost among the
women starting for Versailles; while his hand'40' is visible 〃in the
Réveillon affair; also in the burning of barriers and Chateaux;〃 and
in the widespread panic which aroused all France against imaginary
bandits。 His operations; says Malouet; 〃were all paid for by the Duke
of Orleans〃; he entered into them 〃for his own account; and the
Jacobins for theirs。〃 At this time their alliance is plain to
everybody。 On the 21st of November; 1790; Laclos becomes secretary of
the club; chief of the department of correspondence; titular editor of
its journal; and the invisible; active; and permanent director of all
its enterprises。 Whether actual demagogues or prompted by ambition;
whether paid agents or earnest revolutionaries; each group works on
its own account; both in concert; both in the same direction; and both
devoted to the same undertaking; which is the conquest of power by
every possible means。
V。
Small number of Jacobins。 … Sources of their power。 … They form a
league。 … They have faith。 … Their unscrupulousness。 … The power of
the party vested in the group which best fulfills these conditions。
At first sight their success seems doubtful; for they are in a
minority; and a very small one。 At Besan?on; in November; 1791; the
revolutionaries of every shade of opinion and degree; whether
Girondists or Montagnards; consist of about 500 or 600 out of 3;000
electors; and; in November; 1792; of not more than the same number out
of 6;000 and 7;000。'41' At Paris; in November; 1791; there are 6;700
out of more than 81;000 on the rolls; in October; 1792; there are less
than 14;000 out of 160;000。'42' At Troyes; in 1792; there are found
only 400 or 500 out of 7;000 electors; and at Strasbourg the same
number out of 8;000 electors。'43' Accordingly only about one…tenth of
the electoral population are revolutionaries; and if we leave out the
Girondists and the semi…conservatives; the number is reduced by one…
half。 Towards the end of 1792; at Besan?on; scarcely more than 300
pure Jacobins are found in a population of from 25;000 to 30;000;
while at Paris; out of 700;000 inhabitants only 5;000 are Jacobins。
It is certain that in the capital; where the most excitement prevails;
and where more of them are found than elsewhere; never; even in a
crisis and when vagabonds are paid and bandits recruited; are there
more than 10;000。'44' In a large town like Toulouse a representative
of the people on missionary service wins over only about 400
persons。'45' Counting fifty or so in each small town; twenty in each
large borough; and five or six in each village; we find; on an
average; but one Jacobin to fifteen electors and National Guards;
while; taking the whole of France; all the Jacobins put together do
not amount to 300;000。'46' This is a small number for the
enslavement of six millions of able…bodied men; and for installing in
a country of twenty…six millions inhabitants a more absolute despotism
than that of an Asiatic sovereign。 Force; however; is not measured by
numbers; they form a band in the midst of a crowd and; in this
disorganized; inert crowd; a band that is determined to push its way
like an iron wedge splitting a log。
And against sedition from within as well as conquest from without a
nation may only defend itself through the activities of its
government; which provides the indispensable instruments of common
action。 Let it fail or falter and the great majority; undecided about
what to do; lukewarm and busy elsewhere; ceases to be a corps and
disintegrates into dust。 Of the two governments around which the
nation might have rallied; the first one; after July 14; 1789; lies
prostrate on the ground where it slowly crumbles away。 Now its ghost;
which returns; is still more odious because it brings with it the same
senseless abuses and intolerable burdens; and; in addition to these; a
yelping pack of claimants and recriminators。 After 1790 it appears on
the frontier more arbitrary than ever at the head of a coming invasion
of angry émigrés and grasping foreigners。 … … The other government;
that just constructed by the Constituent Assembly; is so badly put
together that the majority cannot use it。 It is not adapted to its
hand; no political instrument at once so ponderous and so helpless was
ever seen。 An enormous effort is needed to set it in motion; every
citizen is obliged to give it about two days labor per week。'47' Thus
laboriously started but half in motion; it poorly meets the various
tasks imposed upon it the collection of taxes; public order in the
streets; the circulation of supplies; and security for consciences;
lives and property。 Toppled over by its own action; another rises out
of it; illegal and serviceable; which takes its place and stands。
In a great centralized state whoever possesses the head possesses the
body。 By virtue of being led
快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!