友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
飞读中文网 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

the origins of contemporary france-5-第24章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!




within his function or not; the functionary must be content to do

whatever is demanded of him; and readily anticipate every commission。

If his scruples arrest him; if he alleges personal obligations; if he

had rather not fail in delicacy; or even in common loyalty; he incurs

the risk of offending or losing the favor of the master; which is the

case with M。 de Rémusat;'67' who is unwilling to become his spy;

reporter; and denunciator for the Faubourg Saint…Germain; who does not

offer; at Vienna; to pump out of Madame d'André the address of her

husband so that M。 d'André may be taken and immediately shot。  Savary;

who was the negotiator for his being given up; kept constantly telling

M。 de Rémusat; 〃You are going against your interest … I must say that

I do not comprehend you!〃 And yet Savary; himself minister of the

police; executor of most important services; head manager of the

murder of the Duc d'Enghien and of the ambuscade at Bayonne;

counterfeiter of Austrian bank…notes for the campaign of 1809 and of

Russian banknotes for that of 1812;'68' Savary ends in getting weary;

he is charged with too many dirty jobs; however hardened his

conscience it has a tender spot; he discovers at last that he has

scruples。  It is with great repugnance that; in February; 1814; he

executes the order to have a small infernal machine prepared; moving

by clock…work; so as to blow up the Bourbons on their return into

France。'69'  〃Ah;〃 said he; giving himself a blow on the forehead; 〃it

must be admitted that the Emperor is sometimes hard to serve!〃



If he exacts so much from the human creature; it is because; in

playing the game he has to play; he must absorb everything; in the

situation in which be has placed himself; caution is unnecessary。  〃Is

a statesman;〃 said he; 〃made to have feeling? Is he not wholly an

eccentric personage; always alone by himself; he on one side and the

world on the other?〃'70'



In this duel without truce or mercy; people interest him only whilst

they are useful to him; their value depends on what he can make out of

them; his sole business is to squeeze them; to extract to the last

drop whatever is available in them。



〃I find very little satisfaction in useless sentiments;〃 said he

again;'71' 〃and Berthier is so mediocre that I do not know why I waste

my time on him。 And yet when I am not set against him; I am not sure

that I do not like him。〃



He goes no further。  According to him; this indifference is necessary

in a statesman。  The glass he looks through is that of his own

policy;'72' he must take care that it does not magnify or diminish

objects。 … Therefore; outside of explosions of nervous sensibility;

〃he has no consideration for men other than that of a foreman for his

workmen;〃'73' or; more precisely; for his tools; once the tool is worn

out; little does he care whether it rusts away in a corner or is cast

aside on a heap of scrap…iron。  〃Portalis; Minister of Justice;'74'

enters his room one day with a downcast look and his eyes filled with

tears。  'What's the matter with you; Portalis?' inquired Napoleon;

'are you ill? 'No; sire; but very wretched。  The poor Archbishop of

Tours; my old schoolmate 。 。 。' 'Eh; well; what has happened to him?'

'Alas; sire; he has just died。' 'What do I care? he was no longer good

for anything。'〃 Owning and making the most of men and of things; of

bodies and of souls; using and abusing them at discretion; even to

exhaustion; without being responsible to any one; he reaches that

point after a few years where he can say as glibly and more

despotically than Louis XIV。 himself;



〃My armies; my fleets; my cardinals; my councils; my senate; my

populations; my empire。〃'75'



 Addressing army corps about to rush into battle:



 〃Soldiers; I need your lives; and you owe them to me。〃



He says to General Dorsenne and to the grenadiers of the guard:'76'



 〃I hear that you complain that you want to return to Paris; to your

mistresses。  Undeceive yourselves。  I shall keep you under arms until

you are eighty。  You were born to the bivouac; and you shall die

there。〃



How he treats his brothers and relations who have become kings; how he

reins them in; how he applies the spur and the whip and makes them

trot and jump fences and ditches; may be found in his correspondence;

every stray impulse to take the lead; even when justified by an

unforeseen urgency and with the most evident good intention; is

suppressed as a deviation; is arrested with a brusque roughness which

strains the loins and weakens the knees of the delinquent。  The

amiable Prince Eugene; so obedient and so loyal;'77' is thus warned:



〃If you want orders or advice from His Majesty in the alteration of

the ceiling of your room you should wait till you get them; were Milan

burning and you asked orders for putting out the fire; you should let

Milan burn until you got them。 。 。 His Majesty is displeased; and very

much displeased; with you; you must never attempt to do his work。

Never does he like this; and he will never forgive it。〃



This enables us to judge of his tone with subalterns。  The French

battalions are refused admission into certain places in Holland:'78'



 〃Announce to the King of Holland; that if his ministers have acted on

their own responsibility; I will have them arrested and all their

heads cut off。〃



He says to M。 de Ségur; member of the Academy commission which had

just approved M。 de Chateaubriand's discourse:'79'



 〃You; and M。 de Fontaines; as state councillor and grand master; I

ought to put in Vincennes。 。 。 。 Tell the second class of the

Institute that I will have no political subjects treated at its

meetings。 。 。 。 。If it disobeys; I will break it up like a bad club。



Even when not angry or scolding;'80' when the claws are drawn in; one

feels the clutch。  He says to Beugnot; whom he has just berated;

scandalously and unjustly; … conscious of having done him injustice

and with a view to produce an effect on the bystanders; …



〃Well; you great imbecile; you have got back your brains?〃



On this; Beugnot; tall as a drum…major; bows very low; while the

smaller man; raising his hand; seizes him by the ear; 〃a heady mark of

favor;〃 says Beugnot; a sign of familiarity and of returning good

humor。  And better yet; the master deigns to lecture Beugnot on his

personal tastes; on his regrets; on his wish to return to France: What

would he like? To be his minister in Paris? 〃Judging by what he saw of

me the other day I should not be there very long; I might die of worry

before the end of the month。〃 He has already killed Portalis; Cretet;

and almost Treilhard; even though he had led a hard life: he could no

longer urinate; nor the others either。  The same thing would have

happened to Beignot; if not worse。 。 。 。



〃 Stay here 。 。 。 。 after which you will be old; or rather we all

shall be old; and I will send you to the Senate to drivel at your

ease。〃


返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!