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the origins of contemporary france-4-第2部分

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more than transform spontaneous anarchy into legal anarchy。

Deliberately and through distrust of authority they have undermined

the principle of command; reduced the King to the post of a decorative

puppet; and almost annihilated the central power: from the top to the

bottom of the hierarchy the superior has lost his hold on the

inferior; the minister on the departments; the departments on the

districts; and the districts on the communes。  Throughout all branches

of the service; the chief; elected on the spot and by his

subordinates; has come to depend on them。  Thenceforth; each post in

which authority is vested is found isolated; dismantled and preyed

upon; while; to crown all; the Declaration of Rights; proclaiming 〃the

jurisdiction of constituents over their clerks;〃'2' has invited the

assailants to make the assault。  On the strength of this a faction

arises which ends in becoming an organized band ; under its clamor;

its menaces and its pikes; at Paris and in the provinces; at the polls

and in the parliament; the majorities are all silenced; while the

minorities vote; decree and govern; the Legislative Assembly is

purged; the King is dethroned; and the Convention is mutilated。  Of

all the garrisons of the central citadel; whether royalists;

Constitutionalists; or Girondins; not one has been able to defend

itself; to re…fashion the executive instrument; to draw the sword and

use it in the streets: on the first attack; often at the first

summons; all have surrendered; and now the citadel; with every other

public fortress; is in the hands of the Jacobins。





This time; its occupants are of a different stamp。  Aside from the

great mass of well…disposed people fond of a quiet life; the

Revolution has sifted out and separated from the rest all who are

fanatical; brutal or perverse enough to have lost respect for others;

these form the new garrison  sectarians blinded by their creed; the

roughs (assommeurs) who are hardened by their calling; and those who

make all they can out of their offices。  None of this class are

scrupulous concerning human life or property ; for; as we have seen;

they have shaped the theory to suit themselves; and reduced popular

sovereignty to their sovereignty。  The commonwealth; according to the

Jacobin; is his; with him; the commonwealth comprises all private

possessions; bodies; estates; souls and consciences; everything

belongs to him; the fact of being a Jacobin makes him legitimately

czar and pope。  Little does he care about the wills of actually living

Frenchmen; his mandate does not emanate from a vote ; it descends to

him from aloft; conferred on him by Truth; by Reason; by Virtue。  As

he alone is enlightened; and the only patriot; he alone is worthy to

take command; while resistance; according to his imperious pride; is

criminal。  If the majority protests it is because the majority is

imbecile or corrupt; in either case; it deserves to be brought to

heel。  And; in fact; the Jacobin only does that and right away too;

insurrections; usurpations; pillaging; murders; assaults on

individuals; on judges and public attorneys; on assemblies; violations

of law; attacks on the State; on communities  there is no outrage

not committed by him。  He has always acted as sovereign instinctively

; he was so as a private individual and clubbist; he is not to cease

being so; now that he possesses legal authority; and all the more

because if he hesitates he knows he is lost; to save himself from the

scaffold he has no refuge but in a dictatorship。  Such a man; unlike

his predecessors; will not allow himself to be turned out; on the

contrary; he will exact obedience at any cost。  He will not hesitate

to restore the central power; he will put back the local wheels that

have been detached; he will repair the old forcing gear; he will set

it agoing so as to work more rudely and arbitrarily than ever; with

greater contempt for private rights and public liberties than either a

Louis XIV。  or a Napoleon。







II。    Jacobin Dissimulation。



Contrast between his words and his acts。  … How he dissimulates his

change of front。    The Constitution of June; 1793。  … Its promises

of freedom。



In the mean time; he has to harmonize his coming acts with his recent

declarations; which; at the first glance; seems a difficult operation:

for; in the speeches he has made he has already condemned the actions

he meditates。  Yesterday he exaggerated the rights of the governed;

even to a suppression of those of the government; to…morrow he is to

exaggerate the rights of the people in power; even to suppressing

those who are governed。  The people; as he puts it; is the sole

sovereign; and he is going to treat the people as slaves; the

government; as he puts it; is a valet; and he is going to endow the

government with prerogatives of a sultan。  He has just denounced the

slightest exercise of public authority as a crime; he is now going to

punish as a crime the slightest resistance to public authority。  What

will justify such a volte…face and with what excuse can he repudiate

the principles with which he justified his takeover?  He takes good

care not to repudiate them; it would drive the already rebellious

provinces to extremes; on the contrary; he proclaims them with renewed

vigor; through which move the ignorant crowd; seeing the same flask

always presented to it; imagines that it is always served with the

same liquor; and is thus forced to drink tyranny under the label of

freedom。  Whatever the charlatan can do with his labels; signboards;

shouting and lies for the next six months; will be done to disguise

the new nostrum; so much the worse for the public if; later on; it

discovers that the draught is bitter; sooner or later it must swallow

it; willingly or by compulsion: for; in the interval; the instruments

are being got ready to force it down the public throat。'3'



As a beginning; the Constitution; so long anticipated and so often

promised; is hastily fabricated:'4' declarations of rights in thirty…

five articles; the Constitutional bill in one hundred and twenty…four

articles; political principles and institutions of every sort;

electoral; legislative; executive; administrative; judicial; financial

and military;'5' in three weeks all is drawn up and passed on the

double。   Of course; the new Constitutionalists do not propose to

produce an effective and serviceable instrument; that is the least of

their worries。  Hérault Séchelles; the reporter of the bill; writes on

the 7th of June; 〃to have procured for him at once the laws of Minos;

of which he has urgent need;〃 very urgent need; as he must hand in the

Constitution that week。'6' Such circumstance is sufficiently

characteristic of both the workmen and the work。  All is mere show and

pretense。  Some of the workmen are shrewd politicians whose sole

object is to furnish the public with words instead of realities;

others; ordinary scribblers of abstractions; or 
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