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the origins of contemporary france-5-第99章

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respect for the usages of good society。



Through this visible separation of stories; people had acquired the

habit of remaining in the condition in which they were placed; they

were not irritated by being obliged to stay in it ; the soldier who

enlisted did not aspire to become an officer; the young officer of the

lower noblesse and of small means did not aspire to the post of

colonel or lieutenant…general; a limited perspective kept hopes and

the imagination from fruitlessly launching forth into a boundless

future: ambition; humbled to the ground at the start; walked instead

of flying; it recognized at the outset that the summits were beyond

its reach; to be able to mount upward one or two steps was enough。 …

In general; a man obtained promotion on the spot; in his town;

corporation or parliament。 The assistant…counselor who pleaded his

first case in the court of Grenoble or of Rennes calculated that; in

twenty years; he would become first judge at Grenoble or at Rennes;

rest twenty years or more in office; and he aimed at nothing better。

Alongside of the counselor of a (court) presidency; or of an

〃election〃 magistrate; of a clerk in the salt…tax bureau; or in the

frontier custom…house; or in the bureau of 〃rivers and forests;〃

alongside of a clerk in the treasury or ministry of foreign affairs;

or of a lawyer or prosecuting attorney; there was always some son;

son…in…law or nephew; fitted by domestic training; by a technical

apprenticeship; by moral adaptation; not only to perform the duties of

the office; but to be contented in it; pretend to nothing beyond it;

not to look above himself with regret or envy; satisfied with the

society around him; and feel; moreover; that elsewhere he would be out

of his element and uncomfortable。



Life; thus restricted and circumscribed; was more cheerful then than

at the present day; souls; less disturbed and less strained; less

exhausted and less burdened with cares; were healthier。 The Frenchman;

exempt from modern preoccupations; followed amiable and social

instincts; inclined to take things easily; and of a playful

disposition owing to his natural talent for amusing himself by amusing

others; in mutual enjoyment of each other's company and without

calculation; through easy and considerate intercourse; smiling or

laughing; in short; in a constant flow of inspiration; good…humor and

gayety。'15' It is probable that; if the Revolution had not intervened;

the great parvenus of the time and of the Empire would; like their

forerunners; have submitted to prevailing necessities and readily

accommodated themselves to the discipline of the established Régime。

Cambacérès; who had succeeded to his father as counselor at the bar of

Montpellier; would have become president (of the tribunal) in his

turn; meanwhile; he would have composed able jurisprudential treatises

and invented some new paté de becfigues; Lebrun; former collaborator

with Maupeou; might have become counselor in the court of excise at

Paris; or chief…clerk in the Treasury department; he would have kept

up a philosophical salon; with fashionable ladies and polished men of

letters to praise his elegant and faulty translations。 Amongst the

future marshals; some of them; pure plebeians; Masséna; Augereau;

Lannes; Ney; Lefebvre; might have succeeded through brilliant actions

and have become 〃officers of fortune;〃 while others; taking in hand

specially difficult services; like commandant Fischer who undertook

the destruction of Mandrin's band; and again; like the hero Chevert;

and the veteran Lückner; might have become lieutenant…generals。 Rough

as these men were; they would have found; even in the lower ranks; if

not full employment for their superior faculties; at least sufficient

food for their strong and coarse appetites; they would have uttered

just the same oaths; at just as extravagant suppers; with mistresses

of just the same caliber。'16' Had their temperament; character and

genius been indomitable; had they reared and pranced to escape bridle

and harness and been driven like ordinary men; they need not have

broken out of the traces for all that; there were plenty of openings

and issues for them on either side of the highway on which others were

trotting along。 Many families often contained; among numerous

children; some hot…headed; imaginative youth; some independent nature

rebellious in advance; in short; a refractory spirit; unwilling or

incapable of being disciplined; a regular life; mediocrity; even the

certainty of getting ahead; were distasteful to him; he would abandon

the hereditary homestead or purchased office to the docile elder

brother; son…in…law or nephew; by which the domain or the post

remained in the family; as for himself; tempted by illimitable

prospects; he would leave France and go abroad; Voltaire says'17' that

〃Frenchmen were found everywhere;〃 in Canada; in Louisiana; as

surgeons; fencing…masters; riding…masters; officers; engineers;

adventurers especially; and even filibusters; trappers and

backwoodsmen; the supplest; most sympathetic and boldest of colonizers

and civilizers; alone capable of bringing the natives under

assimilation by assimilating with them; by adopting their customs and

by marrying their women; mixing bloods; and forming new and

intermediary races; like Dumas de La Pailleterie; whose descendants

have furnished original and superior men for the past three

generations; and like the Canada half…breeds by which the aboriginal

race succeeds in transforming itself and in surviving。 They were the

first explorers of the great lakes; the first to trace the Mississippi

to its mouth; and found colonial empires with Champlain and Lasalle in

North America and with Dupleix and La Bourdonnais in Hindustan。 Such

was the outlet for daring; uncontrollable spirits; restive

temperaments under constraint and subject to the routine of an old

civilization; souls astray and unclassed from their birth; in which

the primitive instincts of the nomad and barbarian sprouted afresh; in

which insubordination was innate; and in which energy and capacity to

take the initiative remained intact。 … Mirabeau; having compromised

his family by scandals; was on the point of being dispatched by his

father to the Dutch Indies; where deaths were common; it might happen

that he would be hanged or become governor of some large district in

Java or Sumatra; the venerated and adored sovereign of five hundred

thousand Malays; both ends being within the compass of his merits。 Had

Danton been well advised; instead of borrowing the money with which to

buy an advocate's place in the Council at about seventy thousand

livres; which brought him only three cases in four years and obliged

him to hang on to the skirts of his father…in…law; he would have gone

to Pondicherry or to the palace of some indigenous rajah or king as

agent; councilor or companion of his pleasures; he might have become

prime…minister to Tippoo Sahib; or other 
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