bureaucracy-第55章
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Bixiou。 〃Well; young Poiret junior; you see;all these gentlemen
understand me。〃
Poiret 'crest…fallen'。 〃Monsieur Bixiou; would you do me the honor to
come down for once to my level and speak in a language I can
understand?〃
Bixiou 'winking at the rest'。 〃Willingly。〃 'Takes Poiret by the button
of his frock…coat。' 〃Before you leave this office forever perhaps you
would be glad to know what you are〃
Poiret 'quickly'。 〃An honest man; monsieur。〃
Bixiou 'shrugging his shoulders'。 〃to be able to define; explain;
and analyze precisely what a government clerk is? Do you know what he
is?〃
Poiret。 〃I think I do。〃
Bixiou 'twisting the button'。 〃I doubt it。〃
Poiret。 〃He is a man paid by government to do work。〃
Bixiou。 〃Oh! then a soldier is a government clerk?〃
Poiret 'puzzled'。 〃Why; no。〃
Bixiou。 〃But he is paid by the government to do work; to mount guard
and show off at reviews。 You may perhaps tell me that he longs to get
out of his place;that he works too hard and fingers too little
metal; except that of his musket。〃
Poiret 'his eyes wide open'。 〃Monsieur; a government clerk is;
logically speaking; a man who needs the salary to maintain himself;
and is not free to get out of his place; for he doesn't know how to do
anything but copy papers。〃
Bixiou。 〃Ah! now we are coming to a conclusion。 So the bureau is the
clerk's shell; husk; pod。 No clerk without a bureau; no bureau without
a clerk。 But what do you make; then; of a customs officer?〃 'Poiret
shuffles his feet and tries to edge away; Bixiou twists off one button
and catches him by another。' 〃He is; from the bureaucratic point of
view; a neutral being。 The excise…man is only half a clerk; he is on
the confines between civil and military service; neither altogether
soldier nor altogether clerk Here; here; where are you going?〃
'Twists the button。' 〃Where does the government clerk proper end?
That's a serious question。 Is a prefect a clerk?〃
Poiret 'hesitating'。 〃He is a functionary。〃
Bixiou。 〃But you don't mean that a functionary is not a clerk? that's
an absurdity。〃
Poiret 'weary and looking round for escape'。 〃I think Monsieur Godard
wants to say something。〃
Godard。 〃The clerk is the order; the functionary the species。〃
Bixiou 'laughing'。 〃I shouldn't have thought you capable of that
distinction; my brave subordinate。〃
Poiret 'trying to get away'。 〃Incomprehensible!〃
Bixiou。 〃La; la; papa; don't step on your tether。 If you stand still
and listen; we shall come to an understanding before long。 Now; here's
an axiom which I bequeath to this bureau and to all bureaus: Where the
clerk ends; the functionary begins; where the functionary ends; the
statesman rises。 There are very few statesmen among the prefects。 The
prefect is therefore a neutral being among the higher species。 He
comes between the statesman and the clerk; just as the custom…house
officer stands between the civil and the military。 Let us continue to
clear up these important points。〃 'Poiret turns crimson with
distress。' 〃Suppose we formulate the whole matter in a maxim worthy of
Larochefoucault: Officials with salaries of twenty thousand francs are
not clerks。 From which we may deduce mathematically this corollary:
The statesman first looms up in the sphere of higher salaries; and
also this second and not less logical and important corollary:
Directors…general may be statesmen。 Perhaps it is in that sense that
more than one deputy says in his heart; 'It is a fine thing to be a
director…general。' But in the interests of our noble French language
and of the Academy〃
Poiret 'magnetized by the fixity of Bixiou's eye'。 〃The French
language! the Academy!〃
Bixiou 'twisting off the second button and seizing another'。 〃Yes; in
the interests of our noble tongue; it is proper to observe that
although the head of a bureau; strictly speaking; may be called a
clerk; the head of a division must be called a bureaucrat。 These
gentlemen〃 'turning to the clerks and privately showing them the third
button off Poiret's coat' 〃will appreciate this delicate shade of
meaning。 And so; papa Poiret; don't you see it is clear that the
government clerk comes to a final end at the head of a division? Now
that question once settled; there is no longer any uncertainty; the
government clerk who has hitherto seemed undefinable is defined。〃
Poiret。 〃Yes; that appears to me beyond a doubt。〃
Bixiou。 〃Nevertheless; do me the kindness to answer the following
question: A judge being irremovable; and consequently debarred from
being; according to your subtle distinction; a functionary; and
receiving a salary which is not the equivalent of the work he does; is
he to be included in the class of clerks?〃
Poiret 'gazing at the cornice'。 〃Monsieur; I don't follow you。〃
Bixiou 'getting off the fourth button'。 〃I wanted to prove to you;
monsieur; that nothing is simple; but above alland what I am going
to say is intended for philosophersI wish (if you'll allow me to
misquote a saying of Louis XVIII。);I wish to make you see that
definitions lead to muddles。〃
Poiret 'wiping his forehead'。 〃Excuse me; I am sick at my stomach〃
'tries to button his coat'。 〃Ah! you have cut off all my buttons!〃
Bixiou。 〃But the point is; DO YOU UNDERSTAND ME?〃
Poiret 'angrily'。 〃Yes; monsieur; I do; I understand that you have
been playing me a shameful trick and twisting off my buttons while I
have been standing here unconscious of it。〃
Bixiou 'solemnly'。 〃Old man; you are mistaken! I wished to stamp upon
your brain the clearest possible image of constitutional government〃
'all the clerks look at Bixiou; Poiret; stupefied; gazes at him
uneasily'; 〃and also to keep my word to you。 In so doing I employed
the parabolical method of savages。 Listen and comprehend: While the
ministers start discussions in the Chambers that are just about as
useful and as conclusive as the one we are engaged in; the
administration cuts the buttons off the tax…payers。〃
All。 〃Bravo; Bixiou!〃
Poiret 'who comprehends'。 〃I don't regret my buttons。〃
Bixiou。 〃I shall follow Minard's example; I won't pocket such a
paltry salary as mine any longer; I shall deprive the government of my
co…operation。〃 'Departs amid general laughter。'
Another scene was taking place in the minister's reception…room; more
instructive than the one we have just related; because it shows how
great ideas are allowed to perish in the higher regions of State
affairs; and in what way statesmen console themselves。
Des Lupeaulx was presenting the new director; Monsieur Baudoyer; to
the minister。 A number of persons were assembled in the salon;two or
three ministerial deputies; a few men of influence; and Monsieur
Clergeot (whose division was now merged with La Billardiere's under
Baudoyer's direction); to whom the minister was promising an honorable
pension。 After a few general remarks; the great event of the day was
brought up。
A deputy。 〃So you lose Rabourdin?〃
Des Lupeaulx。 〃He has resigned。〃
Clergeot。 〃They say he wanted to reform the administration。〃
The Minister 'looking at the deputies'。 〃Salaries are not really in
proportion to the exigencies of the civil service。〃
De la Briere。 〃According to Monsieur Rabourdin; one hundred clerks
with a salary of twelve thousand francs would do better and quicker
work than a thousand clerks at twelve hundred。〃
Clergeot。 〃Perhaps he is right。〃
The Minister。 〃But what is to be done? The machine is built in that
way。 Must we take it to pieces and remake it? No one would have the
courage to attempt that in face of the Chamber; and the foolish
outcries of the Opposition; and the fierce denunciations of the press。
It follows that there will happen; one of these days; some damaging
'solution of continuity' between the government and the
administration。〃
A deputy。 〃In