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the origins of contemporary france-4-第58部分

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gangster; and finally throttled or hung。  Robespierre; on the

contrary; might have continued as he began;'101' a busy; hard…working

lawyer of good standing; member of the Arras Academy; winner of

competitive prizes; author of literary eulogies; moral essays and

philanthropic pamphlets; his little lamp; lighted like hundreds of

others of equal capacity at the focus of the new philosophy; would

have burned moderately without doing harm to any one; and diffused

over a provincial circle a dim; commonplace illumination proportionate

to the little oil his lamp would hold。



But the Revolution bore him into the Constituent Assembly; where; for

a long time on this great stage; his amour propre; the dominant

feeling of the pedant; suffered terribly。  He had already suffered on

this score from his earliest youth; and his wounds being still fresh

made him only the more sensitive。  … Born in Arras in 1758; orphaned

and poor; protégé of his bishop; a bursar through favor at the college

Louis…le…Grand; later a clerk with Brissot under the revolutionary

system of law…practice; and at length settled down in his gloomy rue

des Rapporteurs as a pettifogger。  Living with a bad…tempered sister;

he has adopts Rousseau; whom he had once seen and whom he ardently

studies; for his master in philosophy; politics and style。  Fancying;

probably; like other young men of his age and condition; that he could

play a similar part and thus emerge from his blind alley; he published

law pleadings for effect; contended for Academy prizes; and read

papers before his Arras colleagues。  His success was moderate: one of

his harangues obtained a notice in the Artois Almanac; the Academy of

Metz awarded him only a second prize; that of Amiens gave him no

prize; while the critic of the 〃Mercure〃 spoke of his style as

smacking of the provinces。  … In the National Assembly; eclipsed by

men of great and spontaneous ability; he remains a long time in the

shade; and; more than once; through obstination or lack of tact; makes

himself ridiculous。  With his sharp; thin; attorney's visage; 〃dull;

monotonous; coarse voice and wearisome delivery;〃 … 〃 an artesian

accent 〃 and constrained air;'102' his constantly putting himself

forward; his elaboration of commonplaces; his evident determination to

impose on cultivated people; still a body of intelligent listeners;

and the intolerable boredom he caused them … all this is not

calculated to render the Assembly indulgent to errors of sense and

taste。'103'  One day; referring to certain acts of the 〃Conseil:〃 〃It

is necessary that a noble and simple formula should announce national

rights and carry respect for law into the hearts of the people。

Consequently; in the decrees as promulgated; after the words Louis; by

the grace of God;〃 etc。; these words should follow:



〃People; behold the law imposed on you! Let this law be considered

sacred and inviolable for all!〃 Upon this; a Gascon deputy arises and

remarks in his southern accent; 〃Gentlemen; this style is unsuitable …

there is no need for sermons。'104' (cantique)。〃



General laughter; Robespierre keeps silent and bleeds internally: two

or three such mishaps nettle such a man from head to foot。  It is not

that his stupid remarks seem silly to him; no pedant taken in the act

and hissed would avow that he deserved such treatment; on the

contrary; he is content to have spoken as becomes a philosophic and

moral legislator; and so much the worse for the narrow minds and

corrupt hearts unable to comprehend him。… Thrown back upon himself;

his wounded vanity seeks inward nourishment and takes what it can find

in the sterile uniformity of his bourgeois moderation。  Robespierre;

unlike Danton; has no cravings。  He is sober; he is not tormented by

his senses; if he gives way to them; it is only no further than he can

help; and with a bad grace。  In the rue Saintonge in Paris; 〃for seven

months;〃 says his secretary;'105' 〃I knew of but one woman that he

kept company with; and he did not treat her very well。   。  。  very

often he would not let her enter his room〃: when busy; he must not be

disturbed。  He is naturally steady; hard…working; studious and fond of

seclusion; at college a model pupil; at home in his province an

attentive advocate; a punctual deputy in the Assembly; everywhere free

of temptation and incapable of going astray。  … 〃Irreproachable〃 is

the word which from early youth an inward voice constantly repeats to

him in low tones to console him for obscurity and patience。  Thus has

he ever been; is now; and ever will be; he says this to himself; tells

others so; and on this foundation; all of a piece; he builds up his

character。  He is not; like Desmoulins; to be seduced by dinners; like

Barnave; by flattery; like Mirabeau and Danton; by money; like the

Girondists; by the insinuating charm of ancient politeness and select

society; like the Dantonists; by the bait of joviality and unbounded

license … he is the incorruptible。  He is not to be deterred or

diverted; like the Feuillants; Girondists; and Dantonists; like

statesmen or specialists; by considerations of a lower order; by

regard for interests or respect for acquired positions; by the danger

of undertaking too much at once; by the necessity of not disorganizing

the service and of giving play to human passions; motives of utility

and opportunity: he is the uncompromising champion of the right。'106'

〃Alone; or nearly alone; I do not allow myself to be corrupted; alone

or nearly alone; I do not compromise justice; which two merits I

possess in the highest degree。  A few others may live correctly; but

they oppose or betray principles; a few others profess to have

principles; but they do not live correctly。  No one else leads so pure

a life or is so loyal to principles; no one else joins to so fervent a

worship of truth so strict a practice of virtue: I am the unique。〃 …

What can be more agreeable than this mute soliloquy? From the very

first day it can be heard toned down in Robespierre's address to the

Third…Estate of Arras;'107' the last day it is spoken aloud in his

great speech in the Convention;'108' during the interval; it crops out

and shines through all his compositions; harangues; or reports; in

exordiums; parentheses and perorations; permeating every sentence like

the drone of a bag…pipe。'109'  … Through the delight he takes in this

he can listen to nothing else; and it is just here that the outward

echoes supervene and sustain with their accompaniment the inward

cantata which he sings to his own glory。  Towards the end of the

Constituent Assembly; through the withdrawal or the elimination of

every man at all able or competent; he becomes one of the conspicuous

tenors on the political stage; while in the Jacobin Club he is

decidedly the tenor most in vogue。  … 〃Unique competitor of the Roman

Fabricius;〃 writes the branch club at Marseilles to him; 〃immortal

defender of popular rights;〃 says the Jacobin crew of Bou
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