the origins of contemporary france-4-第88章
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Lyons; Marseilles; Bordeaux; Tonnerre; Rochefort and elsewhere; to act
as missionaries among the too inert population; or form the committees
of action and the tribunals of extermination that are recruited with
difficulty on the spot。'70' … Sometimes also; when a town has a bad
record; the popular club of a sounder…minded city sends its delegates
there; to bring it into line; thus; four deputies of the Metz club
arrive without notice in Belfort; catechize their brethren; associate
with them on the local Revolutionary Committee; and; suddenly; without
consulting the municipality; or any other legal authority; draw up a
list of 〃moderates; fanatics and egoists;〃 on whom they impose an
extraordinary tax of one hundred and thirty…six thousand six hundred
and seventeen livres;'71' in like manner; sixty delegates from the
club of C?te…d'Or; Haute…Marne; Vosges; Moselle; Saone…et…Loire and
Mont…Terrible; all 〃tempered by the white heat of Pére Duchesne;〃
proceed to Strasbourg at the summons of the representatives; where;
under the title of 〃propagandists;〃 they are to regenerate the town。
… At the same time; in each department; the Jacobins of the principal
town are found scattered along the high ways; that they may inspect
their domain and govern their subjects。 Sometimes; it is the
representative on mission; who; personally; along with twenty 〃hairy
devils;〃 makes his round and shows off his traveling dictatorship;
again; it is his secretary or delegate who; in his place and in his
name; comes to a second…class town and draws up his documents。'72' At
another time; it is 〃a committee of investigation and propaganda〃
which; 〃chosen by the club and provided with full powers;〃 comes; in
the name of the representatives; to work up for a month all the
communes of the district。'73' Again; finally; it is the revolutionary
committee of the principal town; which;〃 declared central for the
whole department;〃'74' delegates one or the other of its members to go
outside the walls; and purge and recompose suspected municipalities。
… Thus does Jacobinism descend and spread itself; story after story;
from the Parisian center to the smallest and remotest commune:
throughout provincial France; whether colorless or of uncertain color;
the imposed or imported administration imposes its red stigma。
But the stamp is only superficial; for the sans…culottes; naturally;
are not disposed to confer offices on any but men of their sort; while
in the provinces; especially in the rural districts; such men are
rare。 As one of the representatives says: there is a 〃dearth of
subjects。〃 … At Macon; Javogues tries in vain;'75' he finds in the
club only 〃disguised federalists;〃 the people; he says; 〃will not open
their eyes it seems to me that this blindness is due to the physique
of the country; which is very rich。〃 Naturally; he storms and
dismisses; but; even in the revolutionary committee; none but dubious
candidates are presented to him for selection; he does not know how to
manage in order to renew the local authorities。 〃They play into each
others' hands;〃 and he ends by threatening to transfer the public
institutions of the town elsewhere; if they persist in proposing to
him none but bad patriots。 … At Strasbourg;'76' Couturier; and
Dentzel; on mission; report that: 〃owing to an unexampled coalition
among all the capable citizens; obstinately refusing to take the
office of mayor; in order; by this course; to clog the wheels; and
subject the representatives to repeated and indecent refusals;〃 he is
compelled to appoint a young man; not of legal age; and a stranger in
the department。 … At Marseilles; write the agents;'77' 〃in spite of
every effort and our ardent desire to republicanize the Marseilles
people; our pains and fatigues are nearly all fruitless。 。 。 。
Public spirit among owners of property; mechanics and journey…men is
everywhere detestable。 。 。 。 The number of discontented seems to
increase from day to day。 All the communes in Var; and most of those
in this department are against us。 。 。 。 they constitute a race to
be destroyed; a country to be colonized anew。 。 。 。
〃I repeat it; the only way to work out the Revolution in the
federalized departments; and especially in this one; is to deport all
the indigenous population who are able to bear arms; scatter them
through the armies and put garrisons in their places; which; again;
will have to be changed from time to time。〃 … At the other extremity
of the territory; in Alsace; 〃republican sentiments are still in the
cradle; fanaticism is extreme and incredible; the spirit of the
inhabitants in general is in no respect revolutionary。 。 。 Nothing
but the revolutionary army and the venerated guillotine will cure them
of their conceited aristocracy。 The execution of the laws depends on
striking off the heads of the guilty; for nearly all the rural
municipalities are composed only of the rich; of clerks of former
bailiffs; almost always devoted to the ancient régime。〃'78'… And in
the rest of France; the population; less refractory; is not more
Jacobin; here where the people appear 〃humble and submissive〃 as in
Lyons and Bordeaux; the inspectors report that it is wholly owing to
terror;'79' there; where opinion seems enthusiastic; as at Rochefort
and Grenoble; they report that it is 〃artificial heat。〃'80' At
Rochefort; zeal is maintained only 〃by the presence of five or six
Parisian Jacobins。〃 At Grenoble; Chépy; the political agent and
president of the club; writes that 〃he is knocked up; worn out; and
exhausted; in trying to keep up public spirit and maintain it on a
level with events;〃 but he is 〃conscious that; if he should leave; all
would crumble。〃 … There are none other than Moderates at Brest; at
Lille; at Dunkirk; if this or that department; the Nord; for instance;
hastened to accept the 〃Montagnard〃 constitution; it is only a
pretense: 〃an infinitely small portion of the population answered for
the rest。〃'81' … At Belfort; where 〃from one thousand to twelve
hundred fathers of families alone are counted;〃 writes the agent;'82'
〃one popular club of thirty or forty members; at the most; maintains
and enforces the love of liberty。〃 … In Arras; 〃out of three or four
hundred members composing the popular club〃 the weeding…out of 1793
has spared but 〃sixty…three; one tenth of whom are absent。〃'83' At
Toulouse; 〃out of about fourteen hundred members〃 who form the club;
only three or four hundred remain after the weeding…out of 1793;'84'
〃mere machines; for the most part;〃 and 〃whom ten or a dozen
intriguers lead as they please。〃 … The same state of things exists
elsewhere; a dozen or two determined Jacobins…twenty…two at Troyes;
twenty…one at Grenoble; ten at Bordeaux; seven at Poitiers; as many at
Dijon…constitute the active staff of a large town:'85' the whole
number might sit around one table。 … The Jacobins; straining as they
do to swell their numbers; only scatter their band; careful as they
are in making their selections; they only limit their number。 They
remain what they always have been; a small feudality of brigands
superposed on conquered France。'86' If the terror they spread around
multiplies their serfs; the horror they inspire diminishes their
proselytes; while their minority remains insignificant because; for
their collaborators; they can have only those just like themselves。
VI。
Quality of staff thus formed。 … Social state of the agents。 … Their
unfitness and bad conduct。 … The administrators in Seine…et…Marne。 …
Drunkenness and feasting。 … Committees and Municipalities in the
C?te…d'Or。 … Waste and extortions。 … Traffickers in favors at
Bordeaux。 … Seal breakers at Lyons。 … Monopolizers of national
possessions。 … Sales of personal property。 … Embezzlements and
Frauds。…A procès…verbal in the office of the mayor of Strasbourg。 …
Sales of real…estate。 … Commissioners on declarations at Toulouse