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the origins of contemporary france-5-第96章

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absorbs all others; not only has this a value; but the sole value。 One

man; therefore; is as good as another and the law should treat all

alike。 … Here; amour…propre (self…esteem; pride or arrogance); so keen

in France; and so readily excited; comes in to interpret and apply the

formula:'3'



 〃Since all men equal each other; I am as good as any man; if the law

confers a right on people of this or that condition; fortune or birth;

it must confer the same right on me。 Every door that is open to them

must be open to me; every door that is closed to me must be closed to

them。 Otherwise; I am treated as an inferior and wounded in my deepest

feelings。 When the legislator places a ballot in their hands he is

bound to place another just like it in my hands; even if they know how

to use it and I do not; even if a limited suffrage is of use to the

community and universal suffrage is not。 So much the worse if I am

sovereign only in name; and through the imagination; I consent to my

sovereignty being illusory; but with the understanding that the

sovereignty of others is regarded likewise; so I prefer servitude and

privation for all; rather than liberties and advantages for a few;

and; provided the same level is passed over all heads; I submit to the

yoke for all heads; including my own。〃



Such is the internal composition of the instinct of' equality; and

such is the natural instinct of Frenchmen。 It is beneficial or

mischievous according as one or the other of its ingredients

predominates; at one time the noble sentiment of equity and at another

time the low envy of foolish vanity;'4' healthy or unhealthy; however;

its power in France is enormous; and the new Régime gratifies it in

every possible way; good or bad。 No more legal disqualifications! On

the one hand; the republican laws of proscription or of exception were

all repealed: we have seen an amnesty and the return of the émigrés;

the Concordat; the restoration of Catholic worship; the compulsory

reconciliation of the constitutionalists with the orthodox; the First

Consul admits no difference between them; his new clergy are recruited

from both groups and; in this respect; he forces the Pope to yield。'5'

He gives twelve of the sixty episcopal thrones to former schismatics;

he wants them to take their places boldly; he relieves them from

ecclesiastical penitence and from any humiliating recantation; he

takes care that; in the other forty…eight dioceses; the priests who

formerly took the civic oath shall be employed and well treated by

their superiors who; at the same epoch; refused to take the civic

oath。 On the other hand; all the exclusions; inequalities and

distinctions of the monarchy remain abolished。 Not only are the

Calvinist and even Israelite cults legally authorized; the same as the

Catholic cult; but; again; the Protestant consistories and Jewish

synagogues'6' are constituted and organized on the same footing as the

Catholic churches。 Pastors and rabbis likewise become functionaries

under the same title as bishops and cure's; all are recognized or

sanctioned by the government and all equally benefit by its patronage:

it is an unique thing in Europe to find the small churches of the

minority obtaining the same measure of indifference and good will from

the State as the great church of the majority; and; henceforth; in

fact as in law; the ministers of the three cults; formerly ignored;

tolerated or proscribed; enjoy their rank; titles and honors in the

social as well as in the legal hierarchy; equally with the ministers

of that cult which was once the only one dominant or allowed



Similarly; in the civilian status; no inferiority or discredit must

legally attach to any condition whatever; either to plebeian;

villager; peasant or poor man as such; as formerly under the monarchy;

nor to noble; bourgeois; citizen; notable or rich man; as recently

under the Republic。 Each of these two classes is relieved of its

degradation; no class is burdened by taxation or by the conscription

beyond its due; all persons and all property find in the government;

in the administration; in the tribunals; in the gendarme; the same

reliable protection。 … So much for equity and the true spirit of

equality。 … Let us now turn around and consider envy and the bad

spirit of equality。 The plebiscite; undoubtedly; as well as the

election of deputies to the Corps Legislatif are simply comedies; but;

in these comedies; one r?le is as good as another and the duke of the

old or new pattern; a mere figurant among hundreds and thousands of

others; votes only once like the corner…grocer。 Undoubtedly; the

private individual of the commune or department; in institutions of

charity; worship or education; is deprived of any independence; of any

initiation; of any control; as the State has confiscated for itself

all collective action; but the classes deprived of this are especially

the upper classes; alone sufficiently enlightened and wealthy to take

the lead; form projects and provide for expenditure: in this

usurpation; the State has encroached upon and eaten deeper into the

large body of superior existences scattered about than into the

limited circle where humbler lives clamber and crawl along; nearly the

entire loss; all perceptible privation; is for the large landed

proprietor and not for his hired hands; for the large manufacturer or

city merchant and not for their workmen or clerks;'7' while the clerk;

the workman; the journeyman; the handicraftsman; who grumble at being

the groundlings; find themselves less badly off since their masters or

patrons; fallen from a higher point; are where they are and they can

elbow them。



Now that men are born on the ground; all on the same level; and are

confined within universal and uniform limits; social life no longer

appears to them other than a competition; a rivalry instituted and

proclaimed by the State; and of which it is the umpire; for; through

its interference; all are comprised within its enclosure and shut up

and kept there; no other field is open to run on; on the contrary;

every career within these bounds; indicated and staked out beforehand;

offers an opportunity for all runners: the government has laid out and

leveled the ground; established compartments; divided off and prepared

rectilinear lists which converge to the goal; there; it presides; the

unique arbiter of the race; exposing to all competitors the

innumerable prizes which it proposes for them。 … These prizes consist

of offices; the various employments of the State; political; military;

ecclesiastical; judiciary; administrative and university; all the

honors and dignities which it dispenses; all the grades of its

hierarchy from the lowest to the highest; from that of corporal;

college…regent; alderman; office … supernumerary; assistant priest up

to that of senator; marshal of France; grand master of the university;

cardinal; and minister of State。 It confers on its possessor;

accor
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