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the origins of contemporary france-1-第148章

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pursued; an entire tribe; male and female; of unsociable prowlers;

familiar with to underhand tricks; toughened by hard weather; ragged;

〃nearly all infected by persistent scabies;〃 and I find similar bodies

in the vicinity of Morlaix; Lorient; and other ports on the frontiers

of other provinces and on the frontiers of the kingdom。  From 1783 to

1787; in Quercy; two allied bands of smugglers; sixty and eighty each;

defraud the revenue of 40;000 of tobacco; kill two customs officers;

and; with their guns; defend their stores in the mountains; to

suppress them soldiers are needed; which their military commander will

not furnish。  In 1789;'27' a large troop of smugglers carry on

operations permanently on the frontiers of Maine and Anjou; the

military commander writes that 〃their chief is an intelligent and

formidable bandit; who already has under him fifty…five men; he will;

due to misery and rebellion soon have a corps;〃 it would; as we are

unable to take him by force; be best; if some of his men could be

turned and made to hand him over to us。  These are the means resorted

to in regions where brigandage is endemic。  …  Here; indeed; as in

Calabria; the people are on the side of the brigands against the

gendarmes。  The exploits of Mandrin in 1754;'28' may be remembered: his

company of sixty men who bring in contraband goods and ransom only the

clerks; his expedition; lasting nearly a year; across Franche…Comté;

Lyonnais; Bourbonnais; Auvergne and Burgundy; the twenty…seven towns

he enters making no resistance; delivering prisoners and making sale

of his merchandise。  To overcome him a camp had to be formed at Valance

and 2;000 men sent against him; he was taken through treachery; and

still at the present day certain families are proud of their

relationship to him; declaring him a liberator。  … No symptom is more

alarming: on the enemies of the law being preferred by the people to

its defenders; society disintegrates and the worms begin to work。  …

Add to these the veritable brigands; assassins and robbers。  〃In

1782;'29' the provost's court of Montargis is engaged on the trial of

Hulin and two hundred of his accomplices who; for ten years; by means

of joint enterprises; have desolated a portion of the kingdom。〃 …

Mercier enumerates in France 〃an army of more than 10;000 brigands and

vagabonds〃 against which the police; composed of 3;756 men; is always

on the march。  〃Complaints are daily made;〃 says the provincial

assembly of Haute…Guyenne; 〃that there is no police in the country。〃

The absentee seignior pays no attention to this matter; his judges and

officials take good care not to operate gratuitously against an

insolvent criminal; the result is that 〃his estates become the refuge

of all the rascals of the area。〃'30'  …  Every abuse thus carries with

it a risk; both due to misplaced carelessness as well as excessive

rigor; to relaxed feudalism as well as to harsh monarchy。  All the

institutions appear to work together to breed and or tolerate the

troublemakers; preparing; outside the social defenses; the men of

action who will carry it by storm。



But the total effect of all this is yet more damaging; for; out of

the vast numbers of workers it ruins it forms beggars unwilling to

work; dangerous sluggards going about begging and extorting bread from

peasants who have not too much for themselves。  〃The vagabonds about

the country;〃 says Letrosne;'31' 〃are a terrible pest; they are like

an enemy's force which; distributed over the territory; obtains a

living as it pleases; levying veritable contributions。  。  。  。  They are

constantly roving around the country; examining the approaches to

houses; and informing themselves about their inmates and of their

habits。… Woe to those supposed to have money! 。  。  。  What numbers of

highway robberies and what burglaries! What numbers of travelers

assassinated; and houses and doors broken into! What assassinations of

curates; farmers and widows; tormented to discover money and

afterwards killed! Twenty…five years anterior (page 384/284) to the

Revolution it was not infrequent to see fifteen or twenty of these

〃invade a farm…house to sleep there; intimidating the farmers and

exacting whatever they pleased。〃 In 1764; the government takes

measures against them which indicate the magnitude of the evil'32'。



〃Are held to be vagabonds and vagrants; and condemned as such;

those who; for a preceding term of six months; shall have exercised no

trade or profession; and who; having no occupation or means of

subsistence; can procure no persons worthy of confidence to attest and

verify their habits and mode of life。  。  。  。  The intent of His Majesty

is not merely to arrest vagabonds traversing the country but; again;

all mendicants whatsoever who; without occupations; may be regarded as

suspected of vagabondage。〃



The penalty for able…bodied men is three years in the galleys; in

case of a second conviction; nine years; and for a third; imprisonment

for life。  Under the age of sixteen; they are put in an institution。  〃A

mendicant who has made himself liable to arrest by the police;〃 says

the circular; 〃is not to be released except under the most positive

assurance that he will no longer beg; this course will be followed

only in case of persons worthy of confidence and solvent guaranteeing

the mendicant; and engaging to provide him with employment or to

support him; and they shall indicate the means by which they are to

prevent him from begging。〃 This being furnished; the special

authorization of the intendant must be obtained in addition。  By virtue

of this law; 50;000 beggars are said to have been arrested at once;

and; as the ordinary hospitals and prisons were not large enough to

contain them; jails had to be constructed。  Up to the end of the

ancient régime this measure is carried out with occasional

intermissions: in Languedoc; in 1768; arrests were still made of 433

in six months; and; in 1785; 205 in four months'33'。  A little before

this time 300 were confined in the depot of Besan?on; 500 in that of

Rennes and 650 in that of Saint Denis。  It cost the king a million a

year to support them; and God knows how they were bedded and fed!

Water; straw; bread; and two ounces of salted grease; the whole at an

expense of five sous a day; and; as the price of provisions for twenty

years back had increased more than a third; the keeper who had them in

charge was obliged to make them fast or ruin himself。   …  With

respect to the mode of filling the depots; the police are Turks in

their treatment of the lower class; they strike into the heap; their

broom bruising as many as they sweep out。  According to the ordinance

of 1778; writes an intendant;'34'



〃the police must arrest not only beggars and vagabonds whom they

encounter but; again; those denounced as such or as suspected persons。

The citizen; the most irreproachable in his conduct and the least open

to suspicion of vagabondage; is not s
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