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1796。) 〃An approximative calculation makes the number of the authors

of so many crimes three hundred thousand; for in each commune there

were about five or six of these ferocious brutes who; named Brutus;

perfected the art of removing seals; drowning and cutting throats。

They consumed immense amounts in constructing 'Mountains;' in

reveling; and in fetes every three months which; after the first

parade; became parodies; represented by three or four actors in them;

and with no audience。  These consisted; finally; of a drum…beater and

the musical officer; and the latter; ashamed of himself; often

concealed his scarf in his pocket; on his way to the Temple of Reason。

。  。  。  But these 300 000 brigands had 2 or 300 directors; members of

the National convention; who cannot be called anything but scoundrels;

since the language provides no other epithet so forcible。〃





BOOK FOURTH。   The Governed。



CHAPTER I。  The Oppressed。



I。     Revolutionary Destruction。



Magnitude of revolutionary destructiveness。  … The four ways of

effecting it。  … Expulsion from the country through forced emigration

and legal banishment。  … Number of those expelled。  … Privation of

liberty。  … Different sorts of imprisonment。  … Number and situation

of those imprisoned。  … Murders after being tried; or without trial。

… Number of those guillotined or shot after trial。  … Indication of

the number of other lives destroyed。  … Necessity and plan for wider

destruction。  … Spoliation。  … Its extent。  … Squandering。  … Utter

losses。  … Ruin of individuals and the State。  … The Notables the most

oppressed。



The object of the Jacobin; first of all; is the destruction of his

adversaries; avowed or presumed; probable or possible。  Four violent

measures concur; together or in turn; to bring about the physical or

social extermination of all Frenchmen who no longer belong to the sect

or the party。



The first operation consists in expelling them from the territory。  …

Since 1789; they have been chased off through a forced emigration;

handed over to jacqueries; or popular uprisings; in the country; and

to insurrections in the cities;'1' defenseless and not allowed to

defend themselves; three…fourths of them have left France; simply to

escape popular brutalities against which neither the law nor the

government afforded them any protection。  According as the law and the

administration; in becoming more Jacobin; became more hostile to them;

so did they leave in greater crowds。  After the 10th of August and 2nd

of September; the flight necessarily was more general; for;

henceforth; if any one persisted in remaining after that date it was

with the almost positive certainty that he would be consigned to a

prison; to await a massacre or the guillotine。  About the same time;

the law added to the fugitive the banished; all unsworn priests;

almost an entire class consisting of nearly 40 000 persons。'2' It is

calculated that; on issuing from the reign of Terror; the total number

of fugitives and banished) amounted to 150 000'3' the list would have

been still larger; had not the frontier been guarded by patrols and

one had to cross it at the risk of one's life; and yet; many do risk

their lives in attempting to cross it; in disguise; wandering about at

night; in mid…winter; exposed to gunshots; determined to escape cost

what it will; into Switzerland; Italy; or Germany; and even into

Hungary; in quest of security and the right of praying to God as one

pleases。'4' … If any exiled or deported person ventures to return; he

is tracked like a wild beast; and; as soon as taken; he is

guillotined。'5' For example; M。 de Choiseul; and other unfortunates;

wrecked and cast ashore on the coast of Normandy; are not sufficiently

protected by the law of nations。  They are brought before a military

commission; saved temporarily through public commiseration; they

remain in prison until the First Consul intervenes between them and

the homicidal law and consents; through favor; to deport them to the

Dutch frontier。  … If they have taken up arms against the Republic

they are cut off from humanity; a Pandour'6' taken prisoner is treated

as a man; an émigré made prisoner is treated like a wolf … they shoot

him on the spot。  In some cases; even the pettiest legal formalities

are dispensed with。

 〃When I am lucky enough to catch 'em;〃 writes Gen。  Vandamme; 〃I do

not trouble the military commission to try them。  They are already

tried … my saber and pistols do their business。〃'7'



The second operation consists in depriving 〃suspects〃 of their

liberty; of which deprivation there are several degrees; there are

various ways of getting hold of people。  … Sometimes; the 〃suspect〃 is

〃adjourned;〃 that is to say; the order of arrest is simply suspended;

he lives under a perpetual menace that is generally fulfilled; he

never knows in the morning that he will not sleep in a prison that

night。  Sometimes; he is put on the limits of his commune。  Sometimes;

he is confined to his house with or without guards; and; in the former

case; he is obliged to pay them。  Again; finally; and which occurs

most frequently; he is shut up in this or that common jail。  … In the

single department of Doubs; twelve hundred men and women are

〃adjourned;〃 three hundred put on the limits of the commune; fifteen

hundred confined to their houses; and twenty two hundred

imprisoned。'8' In Paris; thirty…six such prisons and more than

〃violins〃; or temporary jails; soon filled by the revolutionary

committees; do not suffice for the service。'9' It is estimated that;

in France; not counting more than 40;000 provisional jails; twelve

hundred prisons; full and running over; contain each more than two

hundred inmates。'10'  At Paris; notwithstanding the daily void created

by the guillotine; the number of the imprisoned on Floréal 9; year

II。; amounts to 7;840; and; on Messidor 25 following; notwithstanding

the large batches of 50 and 60 persons led in one day; and every day;

to the scaffold; the number is still 7;502。'11' There are more than

one thousand persons in the prisons of Arras; more than one thousand

five hundred in those of Toulouse; more than three thousand in those

of Strasbourg; and more than thirteen thousand in those of Nantes。  In

the two departments alone of Bouches du…Rh?ne and Vaucluse;

Representative Maignet; who is on the spot; reports from 12;000 to

15;000 arrests。'12'  〃A little before Thermidor;〃 says Representative

Beaulieu; 〃the number of incarcerated arose to nearly 400;000; as is

apparent on the lists and registers then before the Committee of

General Security。〃'13' …  Among these poor creatures; there are

children; and not alone in the prisons of Nantes where the

revolutionary searches have collected the whole of the rural

population; in the prisons of Arras; among twenty similar cases; I

find a coal…dealer and his wife with their seven sons and daughters;

from seventeen down to six years of age; a widow with her four

children from nineteen down to twelve years of age; another noble

widow with her nine children; from seventeen down to three years of

age; and six children; without father or mother; from twenty…three

down to nine years of age。'14' … These prisoners of State were

treated; almost everywhere; worse than robbers and assassins under the

ancient régime。  They began by subjecting them to rapiotage; that is

to say; stripping them naked or; at best; feeling their bodies under

their shirts; women and young girls fainted away under this

examination; formerly confined to convicts on entering the bagnio。'15'

… Frequently; before consigning them to their dungeons or shutting

them up in their cells; they would be left two or three nights pell…

mell in a lower hall on benches; or in the court on the pavement;

〃without beds or straw。〃 〃The feelings are wounded in all directions;

every point of sensibility; so to say; being played upon。  They are

dep

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