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the origins of contemporary france-4-第191部分

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perfected Liberty it is no longer the small class of regular soldiers

whose evasion is punished with death; but an entire generation。  An

extreme penalty no longer suffices for these legislative

philanthropists: they add confiscation; they despoil parents for the

misdemeanors of their children; and render even women responsible for

a military and personal offence。〃



 Such is the admirable calculation of the Directory … that; if it

loses a soldier it gains a patrimony; and if the patrimony fails; it

recovers the soldier: in any event; it fills its coffers and its

ranks; while the faction; well supplied with men; may continue turning

all Europe to account; wasting; in the operation; as many French lives

as it pleases; requiring more than one hundred thousand men per annum;

which; including those which the Convention has squandered; makes

nearly nine hundred thousand in eight years。'128'  At this moment the

five Directors and their minions are completing the mowing down of the

virile; adult strength of the nation;'129' and we have seen through

what motives and for what object。  I do not believe that any civilized

nation was ever sacrificed in the same way; for such a purpose and by

such rulers:  the crippled remnant of a faction and sect; some

hundreds of preachers no longer believing in their creed; usurpers as

despised as they are detested; second…rate parvenus raised their heads

not through their capacity or merit; but through the blind upheavals

of a revolution; swimming on the surface for lack of weight; and; like

foul scum; borne along to the crest of the wave…such are the wretches

who strangle France under the pretence of setting her free; who bleed

her under the pretence of making her strong; who conquer populations

under the pretence of emancipating them; who despoil people under the

pretence of regenerating them; and who; from Brest to Lucerne; from

Amsterdam to Naples; slay and rob wholesale; systematically; to

strengthen the incoherent dictatorship of their brutality; folly and

corruption。



IX。   National Disgust。



National antipathy to the established order of things。  … Paralysis of

the State。  … Internal discords of the Jacobin party。  … Coup d'état

of Floréal 22; year VI。  … Coup d'état of Prairial 30; year VII。  …

Impossibility of establishing a viable government。  … Plans of Barras

and Siéyès。



Once again has triumphant Jacobinism shown its anti…social nature; its

capacity for destruction; its impotence to re…construct。  … The

nation; vanquished and discouraged; no longer resists; but; if it

submits it is as to a pestilence; while its transportations; its

administrative purifications; its decrees placing towns in a state of

siege; its daily violence; only exasperate the mute antipathy。



 〃Everything has been done;〃 says an honest Jacobin;'130' 〃to alienate

the immense majority of citizens from the Revolution and the Republic;

even those who had contributed to the downfall of the monarchy。  。  。

Instead of seeing the friends of the Revolution increase as we have

advanced on the revolutionary path 。  。  。  。  we see our ranks

thinning out and the early defenders of liberty deserting our cause。〃



It is impossible for the Jacobins to rally France and reconcile her to

their ways and dogmas; and on this point their own agents leave no

illusion。



〃Here;〃 writes the Troyes agent;'131' 〃public spirit not only needs to

be revived; but it needs to be re…created。  Scarcely one…fifth of the

citizens side with the government; and this fifth is hated and

despised by the majority。  。  。  。  Who attend upon and celebrate the

national fêtes? Public functionaries whom the law summons to them; and

many of these fêtes often dispense with them。  It is the same public

spirit which does not allow honest folks to take part in them and in

the addresses made at them; and which keeps those women away who ought

to be their principal ornament。  。  。  。  The same public spirit looks

only with indifference and contempt on the republican; heroic actions

given on the stage; and welcomes with transport all that bears any

allusion to royalty and the ancient régime。  The parvenus themselves

of the Revolution; the generals; the deputies; dislike Jacobin

institutions;'132' they place children in the chapel schools and send

them to the confessional; while the deputies who; in '92 and '93;

showed the most animosity to priests; do not consider their daughter

well brought up unless she has made her first communion。 〃 …



The little are still more hostile than the great。



 〃A fact unfortunately too true;〃 writes the commissary of a rural

canton;'133' 〃is that the people en masse seem not to want any of our

institutions。  。  。  。  It is considered well…bred; even among country

folks; to show disdain for everything characteristic of republican

usages。  。  。  Our rich farmers; who have profited most by the

Revolution; are the bitterest enemies of its forms: any citizen who

depended on them for the slightest favor and thought it well to

address them as citizen; would be turned out of their houses。〃



 To call someone Citizen is an insult; and patriot a still greater

one; for this term signifies Jacobin; partisan; murderer; robber'134'

and; as they were then styled; 〃man…eaters。〃 What is worse is that a

falsification of the word has brought discredit on the thing。  …

Nobody; say the reports; troubles himself about the general

interest;'135' nobody will serve as national guard or mayor。



 〃Public spirit has fallen into such a lethargic slumber as to make

one fear its complete collapse。  Our successes or our failures excite

neither uneasiness nor pleasure。'136' It seems; on reading the

accounts of battles; as if it were the history of another people。  The

changes that take place within our borders no longer excite any

emotion; one asks out of curiosity; one is answered without any

interest; one learns with indifference。〃



〃The pleasures of Paris'137' are not disturbed a moment by any the

Crises which succeed each other; nor by those which are feared。  Never

were the theatres and public entertainments more frequented。  At the

'Tivoli;' it is said that it is going to be worse than ever; the

country (patrie) is called la patraque; and dancing goes on。〃



This is understandable enough; how can one interest one's self in the

public weal when there is none; when the common patrimony of all has

become the private property of a gang; when this gang is devouring or

wasting all in the interior and outside the frontier; where it is

playing heads or tails? The Jacobins; through their final victory;

have dried patriotism up; that is to say; the deep inward spring which

supplies the substance; the vitality and the force of the State。 … In

vain do they multiply rigorous decrees and imperious prescriptions;

each energetic blow is absorbed by the general and mute resistance of

intentional passivity and of insurmountable disgust。
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