the origins of contemporary france-4-第47章
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accomplices。〃 … 〃 It would be wise for the people's magistrates to
keep constantly manufacturing large quantities of strong; sharp;
short…bladed; double…edged knives; so as to arm each citizen known as
a friend of his country。 Now; the art of fighting with these terrible
weapons consists in this: Use the left arm as buckler; and cover it up
to the arm…pit with a sleeve quilted with some woollen stuff; filled
with rags and hair; and then rush on the enemy; the right hand
wielding the knife。〃'38' … Let us use these knives as soon as
possible; for 〃what means are now remaining for us to put an end to
the problems which overwhelm us? I repeat it; no other but executions
by the people。〃'39' … The Throne is at last down; but 〃be careful not
to give way to false pity! 。 。 。 。 No quarter! I advise you to
decimate the anti…revolutionary members of the municipality; of the
justices of the peace; of the members of the departments and of the
National Assembly。〃'40' … At the outset; a few lives would have
sufficed: 〃five hundred heads ought to have fallen when the Bastille
was taken; and all would then have gone on well。〃 But; through lack of
foresight and timidity; the evil was allowed to spread; and the more
it spread the larger the amputation should have been。 … With the
sure; keen eye of the surgeon; Marat gives its dimensions; he has made
his calculation beforehand。 In September; 1792; in the Council at the
Commune; he estimates forty thousand as the number of heads that
should be laid low。'41' Six weeks later; the social abscess having
enormously increased; the figures swell in proportion; he now demands
two hundred and seventy thousand heads;'42' always on the score of
humanity; 〃to ensure public tranquility;〃 on condition that the
operation be entrusted to him; as the temporary enforcer of the
justice。 … Except for this last point; the rest is granted to him; it
is unfortunate that he could not see with his own eyes the complete
fulfillment of his programme; the batches condemned by the
revolutionary Tribunal; the massacres of Lyons and Toulon; the
drownings of Nantes。 … From the beginning to the end; he was in
keeping with the Revolution; lucid on account of his blindness; thanks
to his crazy logic; thanks to the concordance of his personal malady
with the public malady; to the early manifestation of his complete
madness in the midst of the incomplete or tardy madness of the rest;
he alone steadfast; remorseless; triumphant; perched aloft at the
first bound on the sharp pinnacle which his rivals dared not climb or
only stumbled up。
II。 Danton。
Danton。 … Richness of his faculties。 … Disparity between his
condition and instincts。 … The Barbarian。 … His work。 … His
weakness。
There is nothing of the madman about Danton; on the contrary; not only
is his intellect sound; but he possesses political aptitudes to an
eminent degree; and to such an extent that; in this particular; none
of his associates or adversaries compare with him; while; among the
men of the Revolution; only Mirabeau equals or surpasses him。 He is
an original; spontaneous genius and not; like most of his
contemporaries; a disputatious; quill…driving theorist;'43' that is to
say; a fanatical pedant; an artificial being composed of his books; a
mill…horse with blinkers; and turning around in a circle without an
issue。 His free judgment is not hampered by abstract prejudices: he
does not carry about with him a social contract; like Rousseau; nor;
like Siéyès; a social art and cabinet principles or combinations;'44'
he has kept aloof from these instinctively and; perhaps; through
contempt for them; he had no need of them; he would not have known
what to do with them。 Systems are crutches for the impotent; while he
is able…bodied; formulas serve as spectacles for the short…sighted;
while his eyes are good。 〃He had read and meditated very little;〃
says a learned and philosophical witness;'45' 〃his knowledge was
scanty and he took no pride in investigation; but he observed and saw
。 。 His native capacity; which was very great and not absorbed by
other things; was naturally closed to vague; complex and false
notions; and naturally open to every notion of experience the truth of
which was made manifest。〃 Consequently; 〃his perceptions of men and
things; sudden; clear; impartial and true; were instinct with solid;
practical discretion。〃 To form a clear idea of the divergent or
concordant dispositions; fickle or earnest; actual or possible; of
different parties and of twenty…six millions of souls; to justly
estimate probable resistances; and calculate available forces; to
recognize and take advantage of the one decisive moment; to combine
executive means; to find men of action; to measure the effect
produced; to foresee near and remote contingencies; to regret nothing
and take things coolly; to accept crimes in proportion to their
political efficacy; to dodge before insurmountable obstacles; even in
contempt of current maxims; to consider objects and men the same as an
engineer contracting for machinery and calculating horse…power'46' …
such are the faculties of which he gave proof on the 10th of August
and the 2nd of September; during his effective dictatorship between
the 10th of August and the 21st of September; afterwards in the
Convention; on the first Committee of Public Safety; on the 31st of
May and on the 2nd of June:'47' we have seen him busy at work。 Up to
the last; in spite of his partisans; he has tried to diminish or; at
least; not add to; the resistance the government had to overcome。
Nearly up to the last; in spite of his adversaries; he tried to
increase or; at least; not destroy the available forces of the
government。 In defiance of the outcries of the clubs; which clamor
for the extermination of the Prussians; the capture of the King of
Prussia; the overthrow of all thrones; and the murder of Louis XVI。;
he negotiated the almost pacific withdrawal of Brunswick;'48' he
strove to detach Prussia from the coalition;'49' he wanted to turn a
war of propaganda into one of interests;'50' he caused the Convention
to pass the decree that France would not in any way interfere with
foreign governments; he secured an alliance with Sweden; he prescribed
beforehand the basis of the treaty of Basle; and had an idea of saving
the King。'51' In spite of the distrust and attacks of the Girondists;
who strove to discredit him and put him out of the way; he persists in
offering them his hand; he declared war on them only because they
refused to make peace;'52' and he made efforts to save them when they
were down。 Amidst so many ranters and scribblers whose logic is mere
words and whose rage is blind; who grind out phrases like a hand…
organ; or are wound up for murder; his intellect; always capacious and
supple; went right to facts; not to disfigure and pervert them; but to
accept them; to adapt himself to them; and to comprehend them。 With a
mind of this quality one goes far no matter in what direction; nothing
remains but to choose one's path。 Mandrin; under the ancient régime;
was also; in a similar way; a superior man;'53' only he chose the
highway。
Between the demagogue and the highwayman the resemblance is close:
both are leaders of bands and each requires an opportunity to organize
his band。 Danton; to organize his band; needed the Revolution。 … 〃Of
low birth; without patronage;〃 penniless; every office being filled;
and 〃the Paris bar exorbitantly priced;〃 admitted a lawyer after 〃a
struggle;〃 he for a long time wandered jobless frequenting the coffee…
houses; the same as similar men nowadays frequent the bars。 At the
Café de l'école; the proprietor; a good natured old fellow 〃in a small
round wig; gray coat and a napkin on his arm;〃 circulated among his
tables smiling blandly; while his daughter sat in the rear as
cashier。'54' Danton chatted with her and demanded her hand in
m