the origins of contemporary france-5-第116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!
brought before and admitted in the prefecture may deprive 38;000
clergymen of their bread;'36' 43;000 letter…carriers and telegraph
messengers; 45;000 sellers of tobacco and collecting…clerks; 75;000
stone…breakers; and 120;000 male and female teachers;'37' directly or
indirectly; the good or ill favor of the prefecture is of consequence;
since recent military laws; to all adults between 20 and 45 years;
and; since recent school laws; to all children between 6 and 13 years
of age。 According to these figures; which go on increasing from year
to; calculate the breadth of the margin on which; alongside of the
legal text which states the law for persons and things in general; the
prefect in his turn gives the law for persons and things in
particular。 On this margin; which belongs to him; he writes what he
pleases; at one time permissions and favors; exemptions;
dispensations; leaves of absence; relief of taxes or discharges; help
and subventions; preferences and gratuities; appointments and
promotions; and at another time disgrace; hardship; legal proceedings;
dismissals; and special favors。 To guide his hand in each case; that
is to say; to spread all the favors on one side and all the disfavors
on the other; he has; among the local Jacobins; special informers and
important applicants。 If not restrained by a very strong sentiment of
distributive justice and very great solicitude for the public good he
can hardly resist them; and in general when he takes up his pen it is
to write under the dictation of his Jacobin collaborators。
Democracy in France in 1889; Summary。
Thus has the institution of the year VIII deviated (The France of the
revolution corrected and decreed by Napoleon); no longer attaining its
object。 The prefects; formerly appointed to a department; like a
pacier of the Middle Ages; imposed on it from above; ignorant of local
passions; independent; qualified and fitted for the office; was;
during fifty years; in general; able to remain the impartial minister
of the law and of equity; maintaining the rights of each; and exacting
from each his due; without heeding opinions and without respect to
persons。 Now he is obliged to become an accomplice of the ruling
faction; govern for the advantage of some to the detriment of others;
and to put into his scales; as a preponderating weight; every time he
weighs judgment; a consideration for persons and opinions。 At the same
time; the entire administrative staff in his hands; and under his eye;
deteriorates; each year; on the recommendation of a senator or deputy;
he adds to it; or sees; intruders there; whose previous services are
null; feeble in capacity and of weak integrity who do poor work or
none at all; and who; to hold their post or get promoted; count not on
their merits but on their sponsors。 The rest; able and faithful
functionaries of the old school; who are poor and to whom no path is
open; become weary and lose their energy; they are no longer even
certain of keeping their place; if they stay; it is for the dispatch
of current business and because they cannot be dispensed with; perhaps
to…morrow; however; they will cease to be considered indispensable;
some political denunciation; or to give a political favorite a place;
will put them by anticipation on the retired list。 From now on they
have two powers to consult; one; legitimate and natural; the authority
of their administrative chiefs; and the other illegitimate and
parasite; consisting of democratic influence from both above and
below。 For them; as for the prefect; public welfare descends to the
second rank and the electoral interest mounts upward to the first
rank。 With them as with him self…respect; professional honor; the
conscientious performance of duty; reciprocal loyalty go down;
discipline relaxes; punctuality falters; and; as the saying goes; the
great administrative edifice is no longer a well…kept house; but a
barracks。
Naturally; under the democratic regime; the maintenance and service of
this house becomes more and more costly;'38' for; owing to the
additional centimes; it is the rich and well…to…do minority which
defrays the larger portion of the expense。 Owing to universal
suffrage; the poor or half…poor majority which dominate the elections
so that the large majority with impunity can overtax the minority。 At
Paris; the parliament and the government; elected by this numerical
majority; contrive demands in its behalf; force expenditure; augment
public works; schools; endowments; gratuities; prizes; a
multiplication of offices to increase the number of their clients;
while it never tires in decreeing; in the name of principles; works
for show; theatrical; ruinous; and dangerous; the cost of which they
do not care to know; and of which the social import escapes them。
Democracy; above as well as below; is short…sighted; it seizes
whatever food it comes across; like an animal; with open jaws and head
down; it refuses to anticipate and to calculate; it burdens the future
and wastes every fortune it undertakes to manage; not alone that of
the central state; but; again; those of all local societies。 Up to the
advent of universal suffrage; the administrators appointed above or
elected below; in the department or in the commune; kept tight hold of
the purse…strings; since 1848; especially since 1870; and still later;
since the passage of the laws of 1882; which; in suppressing the
obligatory consent of the heaviest taxed; let slip the last of these
strings; this purse; wide open; is emptied in the street。 … In
1851;'39' the departments; all together; expended 97 millions; in
1869; 192 millions; in 1881; 314 millions。 In 1836; the communes; all
together; save Paris; expended 117 millions; in 1862; 450 millions; in
1877; 676 millions。 If we examine the receipts covering this
expenditure; we find that the additional centimes which supplied the
local budgets; in 1820; with 80 millions; and; in 1850; with 131
millions; supplied them; in 1870; with 249 millions; in 1880; with 318
millions; and; in 1887; with 364 millions。 The annual increase;
therefore; of these superadded centimes to the principal of the direct
taxes is enormous; and finally ends in an overflow。 In 1874;'40' there
were already 24 departments in which the sum of additional centimes
reached or surpassed the sum of the principal。 〃In a very few years;〃
says an eminent economist;'41' 〃it is probable that; for nearly all of
the departments;〃 the overcharge will be similar。 Already; for a long
time; in the total of personal taxation;'42' the local budgets raised
more than the state; and; in 1888; the principal of the tax real
property; 183 millions; is less than the total of centimes joined with
it; 196 millions。 Coming generations are burdened over and beyond the
present generation; while the sum of loans constantly increases; like
that of taxation。 The indebted communes; except Paris; owed;
altogether; in 1868; 524 millions francs'43' ; in 1871; 711 millions;
and in 1878; 1322 millions francs。'44' Paris; in 1868; already owed
1326 millions; March 30; 1878; it owed 1988 millions。 In this same
Paris; the annual contribution of each inhabitant for local expenses
was; at the end of the first Empire; in 1813; 37 francs per head; at
the end of the Restoration;'45' francs; after the July monarchy; in
1848; 43 francs; and; at the end of the second Empire; in 1869; 94
francs。 In 1887;45 it is 110 francs per head。 '46'
VIII。 Final result in a tendency to bankruptcy。
Such; in brief; is the history of local society from 1789 down to
1889。 After the philosophic demolition of the Revolution and the
practical constructions of the Consulate; it could no longer be a
small patrimony; something to take pride in; an object of affection
and devotion to its inhabitants。 The departments and communes have
become more or less vast lodging…houses; all built on the same plan
and managed according to the same