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the origins of contemporary france-4-第8部分

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dissolves before it is completed; and the incurable weakness of the

party appears in full daylight。



Firstly; in the departments; as at Paris;'55' the party has no roots。

For the past three years all the sensible and orderly people; occupied

with their own affairs; who has no taste or interest in politics;

nine…tenths of the electors; abstain from voting and in this large

mass the Girondins have no adherents。  As they themselves admit;'56'

this class remains attached to the institutions of 1791; which they

have overthrown; if it has any esteem for them; it is as 〃extremely

honest madmen。〃 Again; this esteem is mingled with aversion: it

reproaches them with the violent decrees they have passed in concert

with the 〃Mountain;〃 with persecutions; confiscations; every species

of injustice and cruelty; it always sees the King's blood on their

hands; they; too; are regicides; anti…Catholics; anti…Christians;

demolishers and levelers。'57'  Undoubtedly they are less so than the

〃Mountain;〃 hence; when the provincial insurrection breaks out; many

Feuillants and even Royalists follow them to the section assemblies

and join in their protests。  But the majority goes no further; and

soon falls back into is accustomed inertia。  It is not in harmony with

its leaders:'58'  its latent preferences are opposed to their avowed

program; it does not wholly trust them; it has only a half…way

affection for them; its recent sympathies are deadened by old

animosities: everywhere; instead of firmness there is only caprice。

All this affords no assurance of steadfast loyalty and practical

adhesion。  The Girondin deputies scattered through the provinces

relied upon each department arousing itself at their summons and

forming a republican Vendée against the 〃Mountain:〃 nowhere do they

find anything beyond mild approval and speculative hopes。



There remains to support them the élite of the republican party; the

scholars and lovers of literature; who are honest and sincere

thinkers; who; worked upon by the current dogmas; have accepted the

philosophical catechism literally and seriously。  Elected judges; or

department; district; and city administrators; commanders and officers

of the National Guard; presidents and secretaries of sections; they

occupy most of the places conferred by local authority; and hence

their almost unanimous protest seems at first to be the voice of

France。  In reality; it is only the despairing cry of a group of

staff…officers without an army。  Chosen under the electoral pressure

with which we are familiar; they possess rank; office and titles; but

no credit or influence; they are supported only by those whom they

really represent; that is to say; those who elected them; a tenth of

the population; and forming a sectarian minority。  Again; in this

minority there are a good many who are lukewarm; with most men the

distance is great between conviction and action; the interval is

filled up with acquired habits; indolence; fear and egoism。  One's

belief in the abstractions of the 〃Contrat…social〃 is of little

account; no one readily bestirs oneself for an abstract end。

Uncertainties beset one at the outset; the road one has to follow is

found to be perilous and obscure; and one hesitates and postpones; one

feels himself a home…body and is afraid of engaging too deeply and of

going too far。  Having expended one's breath in words one is less

willing to give one's money; another may open his purse but he may not

be disposed to give himself; which is as true of the Girondins as it

is of the Feuillants。



〃At Marseilles;'59' at Bordeaux;〃 says a deputy; 〃in nearly all the

principal towns; the proprietor; slow; indifferent and timid; could

not make up his mind to leave home for a moment; it was to mercenaries

that he entrusted his cause his arms。〃



Only the federates of Mayenne; Ile…et…Vilaine; and especially of

Finisterre; were 〃young men well brought up and well informed about

the cause they were going to support。〃 In Normandy; the Central

Committee; unable to do better; has to recruit its soldiers; and

especially gunners; from the band of Carabots; former Jacobins; a lot

of ruffians ready for anything; pillagers and runaways at the first

canon…shot。  At Caen; Wimpffen; having ordered the eight battalions of

the National Guard to assemble in the court; demands volunteers and

finds that only seventeen step forth; on the following day a formal

requisition brings out only one hundred and thirty combatants; other

towns; except Vire; which furnishes about twenty; refuse their

contingent。  In short; a marching army cannot be formed; or; if it

does march; it halts at the first station; that of Evreux before

reaching Vernon; and that of Marseilles at the walls of Avignon。



On the other hand; by virtue of being sincere and logical; those who

have rebelled entertain scruples and themselves define the limits of

their insurrection。  The fugitive deputies at their head would believe

themselves guilty of usurpation had they; like the 〃Mountain〃 at

Paris; constituted themselves at Caen en sovereign assembly'60':

according to them; their right and their duty is reduced to giving

testimony concerning the 31st of May and the 1st of June; and to

exhorting the people and to being eloquent。  They are not legally

qualified to take executive power; it is for the local magistrates;

the élus(elected) of the sections; and better still; the department committees

to command in the departments。  Lodged as they are in official

quarters; they are merely to print formal statements; write letters;

and; behaving properly; wait until the sovereign people; their

employer; reinstates them。  It has been outraged in their persons; it

must avenge itself for this outrage; since it approves of its

mandatories; it is bound to restore them to office; it being the

master of the house; it is bound to have its own way in the house。  

As to the department committees; it is true that; in the heat of the

first excitement; they thought of forming a new Convention at

Bourges;'61' either through a muster of substitute deputies; or

through the convocation of a national commission of one hundred and

seventy members。  But time is wanting; also the means; to carry out

the plan; it remains suspended in the air like vain menace; at the end

of a fortnight it vanishes in smoke; the departments succeed in

federating only in scattered groups; they desist from the formation of

a central government; and thus; through this fact alone; condemn

themselves to succumb; one after the other; in detail; and each at

home。   What is worse; through conscientiousness and patriotism;

they prepare their own defeat: the refrain from calling upon the

armies and from stripping the frontiers; they do not contest the right

of the Convention to provide as it pleases for the national defense。

Lyons allows the passage of convoys of cannon…balls which are to be

subsequently used in cannonading its defenders'62'
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