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the origins of contemporary france-4-第25部分

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natural man; certainly we of to…day have some difficulty in

recognizing him; he bears but little resemblance to the artificial

being who (in 1789) stands in his shoes; the creature which an

antiquated system of constraint and fraud has deformed; held fast in

his hereditary harness of thralldom and superstition; blinded by his

religion and held in check by prestige; exploited by his government

and tamed by dint of blows; always with a halter on; always put to

work in the wrong way and against nature; whatever stall he may

occupy; high or low; however full or empty his crib may be; now in

menial service like the blinded hack…horse turning the mill…wheel; and

now on parade like a trained dog which; decked with flags; shows off

its antics before the public。'26'  But imagine all these out of the

way; the flags and the bands; the fetters and compartments in the

social stable; and you will see a new man appearing; the original man;

intact and healthy in mind; soul and body。  … In this condition; he is

free of prejudice; he is not ensnared in a net of lies; he is neither

Jew; Protestant nor Catholic; if he tries to imagine the universe as a

whole and the principle of events; he will not let himself be duped by

a pretended revelation; he will listen only to his own reason; he may

chance; now and then; to become an atheist; but; generally; he will

settle down into a deist。  … In this condition of things he is not

fettered by a hierarchy; he is neither noble nor commoner; land…owner

nor tenant; inferior nor superior。  Independent of the others; all are

equal; and; if all agree in the forming of an association; their

common…sense will stipulate that its first article shall secure the

maintenance of this primordial equality。  … Such is man; as nature

made him; as history has unmade him; and as the Revolution is to re…

make him。'27'  One cannot batter away too vigorously against the two

casings that hold him tight; one the positive religion which narrows

and perverts his intellect; and the other the social inequality which

perverts and weakens his will;'28' for; at every effort; some band is

loosened; and; as each band gives way; the paralyzed limbs recover

their action。



Let us trace; (say the Jacobins); the progress of this liberating

operation。   Always timid and at loggerheads with the ecclesiastical

organization; the Constituent Assembly could take only half…measures;

it cut into the bark without daring to drive the ax into the solid

trunk。  Its work reduced itself down to the confiscation of clerical

property; to a dissolution of the religious orders; and to a check

upon the authority of the pope; its object was to establish a new

church and transform priests into sworn functionaries of the State;

and this was all。  As if Catholicism; even administrative; would cease

to be Catholicism! As if the noxious tree; once stamped with the

public seal; would cease to be noxious! Instead of the old laboratory

of falsehoods being destroyed another one is officially established

alongside of it; so that there are now two instead of one。  With or

without the official label it operates in every commune in France and;

as in the past; it distributes with impunity its drug to the public。

This is precisely what we; (the Jacobins) cannot tolerate。  … We must;

indeed; keep up appearances; and; as far as words go; we will decree

anew freedom of worship。'29'  But; in fact and in practice; we will

demolish the laboratory and prevent the drug from being sold; there

shall no longer be any Catholic worship in France; no baptism; no

confession; no marriage; no extreme unction; no mass; nobody shall

preach or listen to a sermon; nobody shall administer or receive a

sacrament; save in secret; and with the prospect before him of

imprisonment or the scaffold。  … With this object in mind; we do one

thing at a time。  There is no problem with the Church claiming to be

be orthodox: its members having refused to take the oath are outlaws;

one excludes oneself from an association when one repudiates the pact;

they have lost their qualifications as citizens and have become

ordinary foreigners under the surveillance of the police; and; as they

propagate around them discontent and disobedience; they are not only

foreigners but seditious persons; enemies in disguise; the authors of

a secret and widespread Vendée; it is not necessary for us to

prosecute them as charlatans; it is sufficient to strike them down as

rebels。  As such; we have already banished from France all unsworn

ecclesiastics; about forty thousand priests; and we are deporting

those who did not cross the frontier within the allotted time: we

allow only sexagenarians and the infirm to remain on French soil; and;

again; as prisoners and in seclusion; they incur the penalty of death

if they do not of their own accord report to the prisons of their

country town; the banished who return home incur the penalty of death;

and there is penalty of death against those who shelter priests。'30'

Consequently; in default of an orthodox clergy; there must no longer

be an orthodox worship; the most dangerous of the two manufactories of

superstition is shut down。  That the sale of this poisonous food may

be more surely stopped we punish those who ask for it the same as

those who provide it; and we prosecute not only the pastors; but;

again; the fanatics of the flock; if these are not the authors of the

ecclesiastical rebellion they are its promoters and accomplices。  Now;

thanks to the schism among them; we already know who they are; and; in

each commune; the list is made out。  We style as fanatics all who

reject the ministry of the sworn priests; the bourgeois who calls him

an interloper; all the nuns who do not confess to him; all the

peasants who stay away from his mass; all the old women who do not

kiss his paten; and all the relations of an infant who do not wish him

to baptize it。  All these people and those who associate with them;

whether allied; close relatives; friends; guests or visitors; of

whatever class; either men or women; are seditious at heart; and;

therefore; 〃suspects。〃 We deprive them of their electoral rights; we

withdraw their pensions; we impose on them special taxation; we

confine them to their dwellings; we imprison them by thousands; and

guillotine them by hundreds; the rest will gradually become

discouraged and abandon an impracticable cult。'31'  … The lukewarm

remain; the sheep…like crowd which holds on to its rites: the

Constituent Assembly will seize them wherever it finds them; and; as

they are the same in the authorized as in the refractory church;

instead of seeking them with the priest who does not submit; it will

seek them with the one who does。  But it will proceed without zeal;

without confidence; often even with distrust; questioning itself

whether these rites; being administered by one who is excommunicated;

are not of doubtful quality。  Such a church is not sound; and we have

only to
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