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第26章

the origins of contemporary france-1-第26章

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8;300;000 livres; besides 2;000;000 income in appanages; for the

Dauphin; Madame Royale; Madame Elisabeth; and Mesdames 3;500;000

livres; for the queen; 4;000;000: such is the statement of Necker in

1784。  Add to this the casual donations; admitted or concealed; 200;000

francs to M。 de Sartines; to aid him in paying his debts; 200;000 to

M。 Lamoignon; keeper of the seals; 100;000 to M。 de Miromesnil for

expenses in establishing himself; 166;000 to the widow of M。 de

Maurepas; 400;000 to the Prince de Salm; 1;200;000 to the Duc de

Polignac for the pledge of the county Fenestranges; 754;337 to

Mesdames to pay for Bellevue。'19'  M。 de Calonne;〃 says Augeard; a

reliable witness;'20'  〃scarcely entered on his duties; raised a loan

of 100;000;000 livres; one…quarters of which did not find its way into

the royal treasury; the rest was eaten up by people at the court; his

donations to the Comte Artois are estimated at 56;000;000; the portion

of Monsieur is 5;000;000; he gave to the Prince de Condé; in exchange

for 300;000 livres income; 12;000;000 paid down and 600;000 livres

annuity; and he causes the most burdensome acquisition to be made for

the State; in exchanges of which the damage is more than five to one。〃

We must not forget that in actual rates all these donations; pensions;

and salaries are worth double the amount。  …  Such is the use of the

great in relation to the central power; instead of constituting

themselves representatives of the people; they aimed to be the

favorites of the Sovereign; and they shear the flock which they ought

to preserve。



IV。

Isolation of the Chiefs … Sentiments of subordinates… Provincial

nobility … The Curates。



The fleeced flock is to discover finally what is done with its

wool。  〃Sooner or later;〃 says a parliament of 1764;'21'  〃the people

will learn that the remnants of our finances continue be wasted in

donations which are frequently undeserved; in excessive and multiplied

pensions for the same persons; in dowries and promises of dowry; and

in useless offices and salaries。〃 Sooner or later they will thrust

back 〃these greedy hands which are always open and never full; that

insatiable crowd which seems to be born only to seize all and possess

nothing; and pitiless as it is shameless。〃  …  And when this day

arrives the extortioners will find that they stand alone。  For the

characteristic of an aristocracy which cares only for itself is to

live aloof in a closed circle。  Having forgotten the public; it also

neglects its subordinates; after being separated from the nation it

separates itself from its own adherents。  Like a group of staff…

officers on furlough; it indulges in Sports without giving itself

further concern about inferior officers; when the hour of battle comes

nobody will march under its orders; and chieftains are sought

elsewhere。  Such is the isolation of the seigniors of the court and of

the prelates among the lower grades of the nobility and the clergy;

they appropriate to themselves too large a share; and give nothing; or

almost nothing; to the people who are not of their society。  For a

century a steady murmur against them rising; and goes on expanding

until it becomes an uproar; which the old and the new spirit; feudal

ideas and philosophic ideas; threaten in unison。  〃I see;〃 said the

bailiff of Mirabeau;'22'  〃that the nobility is demeaning itself and

becoming a wreck。  It is extended to all those children of

bloodsuckers; the vagabonds of finance; introduced by La Pompadour;

herself the spring of this foulness。  One portion of it demeans itself

in its servility to the court; the other portion is amalgamated with

that quill…driving rabble who are converting the blood of the king's

subjects into ink; another perishes stifled beneath vile robes; the

ignoble atoms of cabinet…dust which an office drags up out of the mire

;〃 and all; parvenus of the old or of the new stock; form a band

called the court; 'The court!〃 exclaims D'Argenson。  〃The entire evil

is found in this word; The court has become the senate of the nation;

the least of the valets at Versailles is a senator; chambermaids take

part in the government; if not to legislate; at least to impede laws

and regulations; and by dint of hindrance there are no longer either

laws; or rules; or law…makers。  。  。  。  Under Henry IV courtiers remained

each one at home; they had not entered into ruinous expenditure to

belong to the court; favors were not thus due to them as at the

present day。  。  。  The court is the sepulcher of the nation。〃 Many noble

officers; finding that high grades are only for courtiers; abandon the

service; and betake themselves with their discontent to their estates。

Others; who have not left their domains; brood there in discomfort;

idleness; and ennui; their ambition embittered by their powerlessness。

In 1789; says the Marquis de Ferrières; most of them 〃are so weary of

the court and of the ministers; they are almost democrats。〃 At least;

〃they want to withdraw the government from the ministerial oligarchy

in whose hands it is concentrated;〃 there are no grand seigniors for

deputies; they set them aside and 〃absolutely reject them; saying that

they would traffic with the interests of the nobles;〃 they themselves;

in their registers; insist that there be no more court nobility。



The same sentiments prevail among the lower clergy; and still more

actively; for they are excluded from the high offices; not only as

inferiors; but also as commoner。'23' Already; in 1766; the Marquis de

Mirabeau writes: 〃It would be an insult to most of our pretentious

ecclesiastics to offer them a curacy。  Revenues and honors are for the

abbés…commendatory; for tonsured beneficiaries not in orders; for the

numerous chapters (of nobility)。〃 On the contrary; 〃the true pastors

of souls; the collaborators in the holy ministry; scarcely obtain a

subsistence。〃 The first class 〃drawn from the nobility and from the

best of the bourgeoisie have pretensions only; without being of the

true ministry。  The other; only having duties to fulfill without

expectations and almost without income 。  。  。  can be recruited only

from the lowest ranks of civil society;〃 while the parasites who

despoil the laborers 〃affect to subjugate them and to degrade them

more and more。〃 〃I pity;〃 said Voltaire; 〃the lot of a country curate;

obliged to contend for a sheaf of wheat with his unfortunate

parishioner; to plead against him; to exact the tithe of peas and

lentils; to waste his miserable existence in constant strife。  。  。  。  I

pity still more the curate with a fixed allowance to whom monks;

called gros decimateurs'24'  dare offer a salary of forty ducats; to

go about during the year; two or three miles from his home; day and

night; in sunshine and in rain; in the snow and in the ice; exercising

the most trying and most disagreeable functions。〃 Attempts are made

for thirty years to secure their salaries and raise them a little; in

case of their inadequacy the beneficiary; collator or tithe…owner of

the parish is required to add to them until the curê obtains 500

livres (1768); then 700 livres (1785); the vicar 200 livres (1768);

then 250 (1778); and finally 350 (1785)。  Strictly; at the prices at

which things are; a man may support himself on that。'25'  But he must

live among the destitute to whom he owes alms; and he cherishes at the

bottom of his heart a secret bitterness towards the indolent Dives

who; with full pockets; dispatches him; with empty pockets; on a

mission of charity。  At Saint…Pierre de Barjouville; in the Toulousain;

the archbishop of Toulouse appropriates to himself one…half of the

tithes and gives away eight livres a year in alms。  At Bretx; the

chapter of Isle Jourdain; which retains one…half of certain tithes and

three…quarters of others; gives ten livres; at Croix Falgarde; the

Benedictines; to whom a half of the tithes belong; give ten livres per

annum。'26'  At Sainte…Croix d

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