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interests have been discussed; and leagues formed。  You have been kept

in ignorance of the fermentation which is at its height among all

classes of the Third…Estate; and a spark will kindle the

conflagration。  If the king's decision should be favorable to the first

two orders a general insurrection will occur throughout the provinces;

600;000 men in arms and the horrors of the Jacquerie。〃 The word is

spoken and the reality is coming。  An insurrectionary multitude

rejecting its natural leaders must elect or submit to others。  It is

like an army which; entering on a campaign; finding itself without

officers; the vacancies are for the boldest; most violent; those most

oppressed by the previous rule; and who; leading the advance; shouting

〃forward〃 and thus form the leading groups。  In 1789; the bands are

ready; for; below the suffering people there is yet another people

which suffers yet more; whose insurrection is permanent; and which;

repressed; persecuted; and obscure; only awaits an opportunity to come

out of its hiding…place and openly give their passions free vent。







IV。



Insurrectionary leaders and recruits。  … Poachers。  … Smugglers and

dealers in contraband salt。  … Bandits。  … Beggars and vagabonds。  …

Advent of brigands。  … The people of Paris。



  Vagrants; recalcitrants of all kinds; fugitives of the law or the

police; beggars; cripples; foul; filthy; haggard and savage; they are

bred by the social injustice of the system; and around every one of

the social wounds these swarm like vermin。  …  Four hundred

captaincies protects vast quantities of game feeding on the crops

under the eyes of owners of the land; transforming these into

thousands of poachers; the more dangerous since they are armed; and

defy the most terrible laws。  Already in 1752'21' are seen around Paris

〃gatherings of fifty or sixty; all fully armed and acting as if on

regular foraging campaigns; with the infantry at the center and the

cavalry on the wings。  。  。  。  They live in the forests where they have

created a fortified and guarded area and paying exactly for what they

take to live on。〃 In 1777'22'; at Sens in Burgundy; the public

attorney; M。 Terray; hunting on his own property with two officers;

meets a gang of poachers who fire on the game under their eyes; and

soon afterwards fire on them。  Terray is wounded and one of the

officers has his coat pierced; guards arrive; but the poachers stand

firm and repel them; dragoons are sent for and the poachers kill of

these; along with three horses; and are attacked with sabers; four of

them are brought to the ground and seven are captured。…Reports of the

States…General show that every year; in each extensive forest; murders

occur; sometimes at the hands of a poacher; and again; and the most

frequently; by the shot of a gamekeeper。  … It is a continuous warfare

at home; every vast domain thus harbors its rebels; provided with

powder and ball and knowing how to use them。



   Other recruits for rioting are found among smugglers and in

dealers in contraband salt'23'。  A tax; as soon as it becomes

exorbitant; invites fraud; and raises up a population of delinquents

against its army of clerks。  The number of such defrauders may be seen

when we consider the number of custom officers: twelve hundred leagues

of interior custom districts are guarded by 50;000 men; of which

23;000 are soldiers in civilian dress'24'。  〃In the principal provinces

of the salt…tax and in the provinces of the five great tax leasing

administrations (fermes); for four leagues (ten miles) on either side

of the prohibited line;〃 cultivation is abandoned; everybody is either

a customs official or a smuggler'25'。  The more excessive the tax the

higher the premium offered to the violators of the law; at every place

on the boundaries of Brittany with Normandy; Maine and Anjou; four

pence per pound added to the salt…tax multiplies beyond any conception

the already enormous number of contraband dealers。  〃Numerous bands of

men;'26' armed with frettes; or long sticks pointed with iron; and

often with pistols or guns; attempt to force a passage。  〃A multitude

of women and of children; quite young; cross the brigades boundaries

or; on the other side; troops of dogs are brought there; kept closed

up for a certain time without food or drink; then loaded with salt and

now turned loose so that they; driven by hunger; immediately bring

their cargo back to their masters。〃…Vagabonds; outlaws; the famished;

sniff this lucrative occupation from afar and run to it like so many

packs of hounds。  〃The outskirts of Brittany are filled with a

population of emigrants; mostly outcast from their own districts; who;

after a year's registered stay; may enjoy the privileges of the

Bretons: their occupation is limited to collecting piles of salt to

re…sell to the contraband dealers。〃  We might imagine them; as in a

flash of lightening; as a long line of restless nomads; nocturnal and

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

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