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the origins of contemporary france-3-第2部分
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and traitors。 Such a decree against publishing any kind of joint
placard or petition; is a decree 〃null and void;〃 and 〃constitutes a
most flagrant attack on the nation's rights。〃'6' Especially is the
electoral law one of these; a law which; requiring a small
qualification tax for electors and a larger one for those who are
eligible; 〃consecrates the aristocracy of wealth。〃 The poor; who are
excluded by the decree; must regard it as invalid; register themselves
as they please and vote without scruple; because natural law has
precedence over written law。 It would simply be 〃fair reprisal〃 if; at
the end of the session; the millions of citizens lately deprived of
their vote unjustly; should seize the usurping majority by the threat
and tell them:
〃You cut us off from society in your chamber; because you are the
strongest there; we; in our turn; cut you off from the living society;
because we are strongest in the street。 You have killed us civilly …
we kill you physically。〃
Accordingly; from this point of view; all riots are legitimate。
Robespierre from the rostrum'7' excuses jacqueries; refuses to call
castle…burners brigands; and justifies the insurgents of Soissons;
Nancy; Avignon; and the colonies。 Desmoulins; alluding to two men hung
at Douai; states that it was done by the people and soldiers combined;
and declares that: 〃Henceforth; I have no hesitation in saying it
they have legitimated the insurrection;〃 they were guilty; and it
was well to hang them。'8' Not only do the party leaders excuse
assassinations; but they provoke them。 Desmoulins; 〃attorney…general
of the Lantern; insists on each of the 83 departments being threatened
with at least one lamppost hanging。〃 (This sobriquet is bestowed on
Desmoulins on account of his advocacy of street executions; the
victims of revolutionary passions being often hung at the nearest
lanterne; or street lamp; at that time in Paris suspended across the
street by ropes or chains。 … (Tr。)) Meanwhile Marat; in the name of
principle; constantly sounds the alarm in his journal:
〃When public safety is in peril; the people must take power out of
the hands of those whom it is entrusted 。 。 。 Put that Austrian woman
and her brother…in…law in prison 。 。 。 Seize the ministers and their
clerks and put them in irons 。 。 。 Make sure of the mayor and his
lieutenants; keep the general in sight; and arrests his staff。 。 。 The
heir to the throne has no rights to a dinner while you want bread。
Organize bodies of armed men。 March to the National Assembly and
demand food at once; supplied to you out of the national stocks。 。 。
Demand that the nation's poor have a future secured to them out of the
national contribution。 If you are refused join the army; take the
land; as well as gold which the rascals who want to force you to come
to terms by hunger have buried and share it amongst you。 Off with the
heads of the ministers and their underlings; for now is the time; that
of Lafayette and of every rascal on his staff; and of every
unpatriotic battalion officer; including Bailly and those municipal
reactionaries … all the traitors in the National Assembly!〃
Marat; indeed; still passes for a furious ranter among people of some
intelligence。 But for all that; this is the sum and substance of his
theory: It installs in the political establishment; over the heads of
delegated; regular; and legal powers an anonymous; imbecile; and
terrific power whose decisions are absolute; whose projects are
constantly adopted; and whose intervention is sanguinary。 This power
is that of the crowd; of a ferocious; suspicious sultan; who;
appointing his viziers; keeps his hands free to direct them and his
scimitar ready sharpened to cut of their heads。
II。 The Jacobins。 …
Formation of the Jacobins。 … The common human elements of his
character。 … Conceit and dogmatism are sensitive and rebellious in
every community。 … How kept down in all well…founded societies。 …
Their development in the new order of things。 …Effect of milieu on
imagination and ambitions。 … The stimulants of Utopianism; abuses of
speech; and derangement of ideas。 … Changes in office; interests
playing upon and perverted feeling。
That a speculator in his closet should have concocted such a theory is
comprehensible; paper will take all that is put upon it; while
abstract beings; the hollow simulacra and philosophic puppets he
concocts; are adapted to every sort of combination。 … That a lunatic
in his cell should adopt and preach this theory is also
comprehensible; he is beset with phantoms and lives outside the actual
world; and; moreover in this ever…agitated democracy he is the eternal
informer and instigator of every riot and murder that takes place; he
it is who under the name of 〃the people's friend〃 becomes the arbiter
of lives and the veritable sovereign。 That a people borne down with
taxes; wretched and starving; indoctrinated by public speakers and
sophists; should have welcomed this theory and acted under it is again
comprehensible; necessity knows no law; and where the is oppression;
that doctrine is true which serves to throw oppression off。
But that public men; legislators and statesmen; with; at last;
ministers and heads of the government; should have made this theory
their own;
* that they should have more fondly clung to it as it became more
destructive;
* that; daily for three years they should have seen social order
crumbling away piecemeal under its blows and not have recognized it as
the instrument of such vast ruin;
* that; in the light of the most disastrous experience; instead of
regarding it as a curse they should have glorified it as a boon;
* that many of them … an entire party; almost all of the Assembly …
should have venerated it as a religious dogma and carried it to
extremes with enthusiasm and rigor of faith;
* that; driven by it into a narrow strait; ever getting narrower and
narrower; they should have continued to crush each other at every
step;
* that; finally; on reaching the visionary temple of their so…called
liberty; they should have found themselves in a slaughter…house; and;
within its precincts; should have become in turn butcher and brute;
* that; through their maxims of a universal and perfect liberty they
should have inaugurated a despotism worthy of Dahomey; a tribunal like
that of the Inquisition; and raised human hecatombs like those of
ancient Mexico;
* that amidst their prisons and scaffolds they should persist in
believing in the righteousness of their cause; in their own humanity;
in their virtue; and; on their fall; have regarded themselves as
martyrs …
is certainly strange。 Such intellectual aberration; such excessive
conceit are rarely encountered; and a concurrence of circumstances;
the like of which has never been seen in the world but once; was
necessary to produce it。'8'
Extravagant conceit and dogmatism; however; are not rare in the human
species。 These two roots of the Jacobin intellect exist in all
countries; underground and indestructible。 Everywhere they are kept
from sprouting by the established order of things; everywhere are they
striving to overturn old historic foundations; which press them down。
Now; as in the past; students live in garrets; bohemians in lodgings;
physicians without patients and lawyers without clients in lonely
offices; so many Brissots; Dantons; Marats; Robespierres; and St。
Justs in embryo; only; for lack of air and sunshine; they never come
to maturity。 At twenty; on entering society; a young man's judgment
and pride are extremely sensitive。 … … Firstly; let his society be
what it will; it is for him a scandal to pure reason: for it was not
organized by a legislative philosopher in accordance with a sound
principle; but is the work of one generation after another; according
to manifold and changing necessities。 It is not a product of logic;
but of history; and the new…fledged thinker shrugs his shoulders as he
looks up and sees what the ancient tenement is; the foundations of
which are arbitrary; its architecture confused; and its many repairs
plainly visible。 In the second place; whatever degree of perfection
preceding institutions; laws; and customs have reached; these have not
received his approval; others; his predecessors; have chosen for him;
he is being subjected beforehand to moral; political; and social forms
which pleased them。 Whether they please him or not is of no
consequence。 Like a horse trotting along between the poles of a wagon
in the harness that happens to have been put on his back; he has to
make best of it。 Besides; whatever its organization; as it is
essentially a hierarchy; he is nearly always subaltern in it; and must
ever remain so; either soldier; corporal or sergeant。 Even under the
most liberal system; that in which the highest grades are accessible
to all; for every five or six men who take the lead or command others;
one hundred thousand must follow or be commanded。 This makes it vain
to tell every conscript that he carriers a marshal's baton in his
sack; when; nine hundred and ninety…nine times out of a thousand; he
discovers too late; on rummaging his sack; that the baton is not
there。 … … It is not surprising that he is tempted to kick against
social barriers within which; willing or not; he is enrolled; and
which predestine him to subordination。 It is not surprising that on
emerging from traditional influences he should accept a theory; which
subjects these arrangements to his judgment and gives him authority
over his superiors。 And all the more because there is no doctrine more
simple and better adapted to his inexperience; it is the only one he
can comprehend and manage off…hand。 Hence it is that young men on
leaving college; especially those who have their way to make in the
world; are more or less Jacobin; … it is a dis
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