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the origins of contemporary france-3-第119章

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after extorting his resignation。  Elsewhere in the rural cantons;

for example; in Franche…Comté;'28' a number of elections are canceled

when the person elected happens to be a Catholic。  The Jacobin

minority frequently secede; meet in a tavern; elect their mayor or

justice of the peace; and the validity of his election is secured

because he is a patriot; so much the worse for that of the majority;

whose more numerous votes are null because given by 〃fanatics。〃  The

response of universal suffrage thus appealed to cannot be other than

that which is framed for it。  Indisputable facts are to show to what

extent this response is compulsive or perverted; what a distance there

is between an official choice and public opinion; how the elections

give a contrary meaning to popular sentiment。  The departments of

Deux…Sèvres; Maine…et…Loire; la Vendée; Loire…Infèrieure; Morbihan;

and Finistère; send only anti…Catholic republicans to the Convention;

while these same departments are to become the inexhaustible nursery

of the great catholic and royalist insurrection。 Three regicides out

of four deputies represent Lozère; where; six months later; thirty

thousand peasants are to march under the Royal white banner。  Six

regicides out of nine deputies represent la Vendée; which is going to

rise from one end of it to the other in the name of the King。'29'



IV。



Composition of the National Convention。 … Number of Montagnards at the

start。 … Opinions and sentiments of the deputies of the Plain。 … The


Gironde。 … Ascendancy of the Girondins in the Convention。 … Their

intellectual character。 … Their principles。 … The plan of their

Constitution。 … Their fanaticism。 … Their sincerity; culture and

tastes。 … How they differ from pure Jacobins。 … How they comprehend

popular sovereignty。 … Their stipulations with regard to the

initiative of individuals and of groups。 … Weakness of philosophic

thought and of parliamentary authority in times of anarchy。



However vigorous the electoral pressure may have been; the voting

machine has not provided the expected results。 At the opening of the

session; out of 749 deputies; only about fifty'30' are found to

approve of the Commune; nearly all of the elected in places where; as

at Rheims and Paris; terror has the elector by the throat; 〃under the

clubs; axes; daggers; and bludgeons of the butchers。〃'31' But where

the physical impressions of murder have not been so tangible and

impressive; some sense of decency has prevented too glaring elections。

The inclination to vote for well…known names could not wholly be

arrested; seventy…seven former members of the Constituent Assembly;

and one hundred and eighty…six of the previous Legislative Assembly

enter the Convention; and the practical knowledge which many of these

have of government business has given them some insights。  In short;

the consciences of six hundred and fifty deputies are only in part

perverted。



They are all; unquestionably; decided republicans; enemies of

tradition; apostles of reason; and trained in deductive politics;

only on these conditions could they be elected。 Every candidate is

supposed to possess the Jacobin faith; or; at least; to recite the

revolutionary creed。 The Convention; consequently; at its opening

session votes unanimously; with cheers and enthusiasm; the abolition

of royalty; and three months later it pronounces; by a large majority;

Louis XVI。;



〃guilty of conspiring against the liberty of the nation; and of

assaults on



  the general welfare of the State。〃'32'



Nevertheless; social habitudes still subsist under political

prejudices。 A man who is born in and lives for a long time in an old

community; is; through this alone; marked with its imprint; the

customs to which he conforms have crystallized in him in the shape of

sentiments: if it is well…regulated and civilized; he has

involuntarily arrived at respect for property and for human life; and;

in most characters; this respect has taken very deep root。 A theory;

even if adopted; does not wholly succeed in destroying this respect;

only in rare instances is it successful; when it encounters coarse and

defective natures; to take full hold; it is necessary that it should

fall on the scattered inheritors of former destructive appetites; on

those hopelessly degenerate souls in which the passions of an anterior

date are slumbering; then only does its malevolence fully appear; for

it rouses the ferocious or plundering instincts of the barbarian; the

raider; the inquisitor; and the pasha。 On the contrary; with the

greatest number; do what it will; integrity and humanity always remain

powerful motives。 Nearly all these legislators; who originate in the

middle class; are at bottom; irrespective of a momentary delusion;

what they always have been up to now; advocates; attorneys; merchants;

priests; or physicians of the ancient regime; and what they will

become later on; docile administrators or zealous functionaries of

Napoleon's empire;'33' that is to say; ordinary civilized persons

belonging to the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; sufficiently

honest in private life to have a desire to be equally so in public

life。   Hence their horror of anarchy; of Marat;'34' and of the

September butchers and robbers。 Three days after their assembling

together they vote; 〃almost unanimously;〃 the preparation of a law

〃against the instigators of murder and assassination。〃  〃Almost

unanimously;〃 they desire to raise a guard; recruited in the 83

departments; against the armed bands of Paris and the Commune。

Pétition is elected as their first president by 〃almost the totality

of suffrages。〃 Roland who has just read his report to them; is greeted

with the 〃loudest〃 applause from nearly the 〃entire〃 Assembly。 In

short they are for the ideal republic against actual brigands。 This

accounts for their ranging themselves around those upright and sincere

deputies; who; in the two preceding Assemblies or alongside of them;

were the ablest defenders of both principles and humanity; around

Buzot; Lanjuinais; Pétition; and Rabaut…Saint…Etienne; around Brissot;

Vergniaud; Guadet; Gensonné; Isnard; and Condorcet; around Roland;

Louvet; Barbaroux; and the five hundred deputies of the 〃Plain;〃'35'

marching in one body under the leadership of the 180 Girondists who

now form the 〃Right。〃'36'



These latter; among the republicans; are the most sincere and have the

most faith; for they have long been such; after much thought; study

and as a matter of principle。 Nearly all of them are well…read

educated men; reasoners; philosophers; disciples of Diderot or of

Rousseau; satisfied that absolute truth had been revealed by their

masters; thoroughly imbued with the Encyclopédie'37' or the Contrat

Social; the same as the Puritans formerly were with the Bible。'38'  At

the age when the mind is maturing; and fondly clings to general

ideas;'39' they embraced the theory and aimed at a reconstr
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