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第48章

the origins of contemporary france-4-第48章

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tables smiling blandly; while his daughter sat in the rear as

cashier。'54' Danton chatted with her and demanded her hand in

marriage。  To obtain her; he had to mend his ways; purchase an

attorneyship in the Court of the Royal Council and find guarantors and

sponsors in his small native town。'55'  Once married and lodged in the

gloomy Passage du Commerce; he finds himself 〃more burdened with debts

than with causes;〃 tied down to a sedentary profession which demands

vigorous application; accuracy; a moderate tone; a respectable style

and blameless deportment; obliged to keep house on so small a scale

that; without the help of a louis regularly advanced to him each week

by his coffee…house father…in…law; he could not make both ends

meet。'56' His free…and…easy tastes; his alternately impetuous and

indolent disposition; his love of enjoyment and of having his own way;

his rude; violent instincts; his expansiveness; creativeness and

activity; all rebel against this life: he is ill…suited for the quiet

routine of our civil careers。  It is not the steady discipline of an

old society; but the tumultuous brutality of a society going to pieces

or in a state of formation; that suits him。  In temperament and

character he is a barbarian; and a barbarian born to command his

fellow…creatures; like this or that vassal of the sixth century or

baron of the tenth century。  A giant with the face of a 〃 Tartar;〃

pitted with the small…pox; tragically and terribly ugly; with a mask

convulsed like that of a growling 〃bull…dog;〃'57' with small;

cavernous; restless eyes buried under the huge wrinkles of a

threatening brow; with a thundering voice and moving and acting like a

combatant; full…blooded; boiling over with passion and energy。  His

strength in its outbursts appears boundless like a force of nature;

when speaking he is roaring like a bull and be heard through closed

windows fifty yards off in the street; employing immoderate imagery;

intensely in earnest; trembling with indignation; revenge and

patriotic sentiments; able to arouse savage instincts in the most

tranquil breast and generous instincts in the most brutal

personalities。'58' He may be profane; using emphatic terms;'59'

cynical; but not monotonous and affected like Hébert; but spontaneous

and to the point; full of crude jests worthy of Rabelais; possessing a

stock of jovial sensuality and good…humor; cordial and familiar in his

ways; frank; friendly in tone。  He is; both outwardly and inwardly;

the best fitted for winning the confidence and sympathy of a Gallic;

Parisian populace。  His talents all contribute to 〃his inborn;

practical popularity;〃 and to make of him 〃a grand…seignior of sans…

cullotterie。〃'60' … With such talents for acting; there is a strong

temptation to act it out the moment the theatre is ready; whatever the

theatre; even unlawful and murky; whatever the actors rogues;

scoundrels and loose women; whatever the part; ignoble; murderous; and

finally fatal to him who undertakes it。  … To hold out against such

temptation; would require a sentiment of repugnance which a refined or

thorough culture develops in both sense and mind; but which was

completely wanting in Danton。  Nothing disgusts him physically or

morally: he embraces Marat;'61' fraternizes with drunkards;

congratulates the Septembriseurs; retorts in blackguard terms to the

insults of prostitutes; treats reprobates; thieves and jail…birds as

equals; … Carra; Westermann; Huguenin; Rossignol and the confirmed

scoundrels whom he sends into the departments after the 2nd of

September。



 〃Eh! What the hell! Do you think we ought to send young misses。〃 '62'…



Garbage men are needed for the collection of garbage; one cannot hold

one's nose when they come for their wages; one must pay them well;

talk to them encouragingly; and leave them plenty of elbow room。

Danton is willing to play the part of the fire; and he humors vices;

he has no scruples; and lets people scratch and take。  … He has stolen

as much to give as to keep; to maintain his role as much as to benefit

by it; squaring accounts by spending the money of the Court against

the Court; probably inwardly chuckling; the same as the peasant in a

blouse on getting ahead of his well…duped landlord; or as the Frank;

whom the ancient historian describes as leering on pocketing Roman

gold the better to make war against Rome。  … The graft on this

plebeian seedling has not taken; in our modern garden this remains as

in the ancient forest; its vigorous sap preserves its primitive

raciness and produces none of the fine fruits of our civilization; a

moral sense; honor and conscience。  Danton has no respect for himself

nor for others; the nice; delicate limitations that circumscribe human

personality; seem to him as legal conventionality and mere drawing…

room courtesy。  Like a Clovis; he tramples on this; and like a Clovis;

equal in faculties; in similar expedients; and with a worse horde at

his back; he throws himself athwart society; to stagger along; destroy

and reconstruct it to his own advantage。



At the start; he comprehended the peculiar character and normal

procedure of the Revolution; that is to say; the useful agency of

popular brutality: in 1788 he had already figured in insurrections。

He comprehended from the first the ultimate object and definite result

of the Revolution; that is to say; the dictatorship of the violent

minority。  Immediately after the 14th of July;〃 1789; he organized in

his quarter of the city'63' a small independent republic; aggressive

and predominant; the center of the faction; a refuge for the riff…raff

and a rendezvous for fanatics; a pandemonium composed of every

available madcap; every rogue; visionary; shoulder…hitter; newspaper

scribbler and stump…speaker; either a secret or avowed plotter of

murder; Camille Desmoulins; Fréron; Hébert; Chaumette; Clootz;

Théroigne; Marat;  while; in this more than Jacobin State; the model

in anticipation of that he is to establish later; he reigns; as he

will afterwards reign; the permanent president of the district;

commander of the battalion; orator of the club; and the concocter of

bold undertakings。  Here; usurpation is the rule there is no

recognition of legal authority; they brave the King; the ministers;

the judges; the Assembly; the municipality; the mayor; the commandant

of the National Guard。  Nature and principle raise them above the law;

the district takes Marat under its protection; posts two sentinels at

his door to protect him from prosecutions; and uses arms against the

armed force sent with a warrant to arrest him。'64'  yet more; in the

name of the city of Paris; 〃chief sentinel of the nation;〃 they assume

to govern France: Danton betakes himself to the National Assembly and

declares that the citizens of Paris are the natural representatives of

the eighty…three departments; and summons it; on their injunction; to

cancel an act it has passed。'65' … The entire Jacobin conception is

therein expressed: Danton; with his keen insight; took it all in and

proclaimed it in appropriate terms; to apply it at the present time on

a grand scale;'66' he has merely to pass from the small theatre to the

large one; from the Cordeliers club to the Commune; to the Ministry;

and the Committee of Public Safety; and; in all these theatres; he

plays the same part with the same end in view and the same results。  A

despotism formed by conquest and maintained by terror; the despotism

of the Jacobin Parisian rabble; is the end to which he directly

marches。  He employs no other means and; adapting the means to the end

and the end to the means; manages the important days and instigates

the decisive measures of the Revolution: the 10th of August;'67' the

2nd of September; the 31st of May; the 2nd of June;'68' the decree

providing for an army of paid sans…culottes 〃to keep down aristocrats

with their pikes;〃 the decree in each commune where grain is dear;

taxing 

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