第 18 节
作者:开了      更新:2021-02-18 23:01      字数:9321
  are coming! They are burning the crops! They are only six leagues
  off; and then only two … the refugees who have run away from the
  disorder prove it。
  On the 28th of July; at Angoulême;'11' the alarm bell is heard about
  three o'clock in the afternoon; the drums beat to arms; and cannon
  are mounted on the ramparts。  The town has to be put in a state of
  defense against 15;000 bandits who are approaching; and from the
  walls a cloud of dust on the road is discovered with terror。  It
  proves to be the post…wagon on its way to Bordeaux。  After this the
  number of brigands is reduced to 1;500; but there is no doubt that
  they are ravaging the country。  At nine o'clock in the evening
  20;000 men are under arms; and thus they pass the night; always
  listening without hearing anything。  Towards three o'clock in the
  morning there is another alarm; the church bells ringing and the
  people forming a battle array。  They are convinced that the brigands
  have burned Ruffec; Vernenil; La Rochefoucauld; and other places。
  The next day countrymen flock in to give their aid against bandits
  who are still absent。  〃At nine o'clock;〃 says a witness; 〃we had
  40;000 men in the town; to whom we showed our gratitude。〃 As the
  bandits do not show themselves; it must be because they are
  concealed; a hundred horsemen; a large number of men on foot; start
  out to search the forest of Bra?onne; and to their great surprise
  they find nothing。  But the terror is not allayed; 〃during the
  following days a guard is kept mounted; and companies are enrolled
  among the townsmen;〃 while Bordeaux; duly informed; dispatches a
  courier to offer the support of 20;000 men and even 30;000。  〃What
  is surprising;〃 adds the narrator; is that at ten leagues off in the
  neighborhood; in each parish; a similar disturbance took place; and
  at about the same hour。〃  All that is required is that a girl;
  returning to the village at night; should meet two men who do not
  belong to the neighborhood。  The case is the same in Auvergne。
  Whole parishes; on the strength of this; betake themselves at night
  to the woods; abandoning their houses; and carrying away their
  furniture; 〃the fugitives trod down and destroyed their own crops;
  pregnant women were injured in the forests; and others lost their
  wits。〃 Fear lends them wings。  Two years after this; Madame Campan
  was shown a rocky peak on which a woman had taken refuge; and from
  which she was obliged to be let down with ropes。   The people at
  last return to their homes; and resume their usual routines。  But
  such large masses are not unsettled with impunity; a tumult like
  this is; in itself; a lively source of alarm。  As the country did
  rise; it must have been on account of threatened danger and if the
  peril was not due to brigands; it must have come from some other
  quarter。  Arthur Young; at Dijon and in Alsace;'12' hears at the
  public dinner tables that the Queen had formed a plot to undermine
  the National Assembly and to massacre all Paris。  Later on he is
  arrested in a village near Clermont; and examined because he is
  evidently conspiring with the Queen and the Comte d'Entraigues to
  blow up the town and send the survivors to the galleys。
  No argument; no experience has any effect against the multiplying
  phantoms of an over…excited imagination。  Henceforth every commune;
  and every man; provide themselves with arms and keep them ready for
  use。  The peasant searches his hoard; and 〃finds from ten to twelve
  francs for the purchase of a gun。〃 〃A national militia is found in
  the poorest village。〃 Burgess guards and companies of volunteers
  patrol all the towns。  Military commanders deliver arms; ammunition;
  and equipment; on the requisition of municipal bodies; while; in
  case of refusal; the arsenals are pillaged; and; voluntarily or by
  force; four hundred thousand guns thus pass into the hands of the
  people in six months。'13' Not content with this they must have
  cannon。  Brest having demanded two; every town in Brittany does the
  same thing; their self…esteem is at stake as well as a need of
  feeling themselves strong。  …  They lack nothing now to render
  themselves masters。  All authority; all force; every means of
  constraint and of intimidation is in their hands; and in theirs
  alone; and these sovereign hands have nothing to guide them in this
  actual interregnum of all legal powers; but the wild or murderous
  suggestions of hunger or distrust。
  V。
  Attacks on public individuals and public property。  … At Strasbourg。
  … At Cherbourg。  … At Mauberge。  … At Rouen。  … At Besan?on。  … At
  Troyes。
  It would take too much space to recount all the violent acts which
  were committed; … convoys arrested; grain pillaged; millers and corn
  merchants hung; decapitated; slaughtered; farmers called upon under
  the threats of death to give up even the seed reserved for sowing;
  proprietors ransomed and houses sacked。'14' These outrages;
  unpunished; tolerated and even excused or badly suppressed; are
  constantly repeated; and are; at first; directed against public men
  and public property。  As is commonly the case; the rabble head the
  march and stamp the character of the whole insurrection。
  On the 19th of July; at Strasbourg; on the news of Necker's return
  to office; it interprets after its own fashion the public joy; which
  it witnesses。  Five or six hundred beggars;'15' their numbers soon
  increased by the petty tradesmen; rush to the town hall; the
  magistrates only having time to fly through a back door。  The
  soldiers; on their part; with arms in their hands; allow all these
  things to go on; while several of them spur the assailants on。  The
  windows are dashed to pieces under a hailstorm of stones; the doors
  are forced with iron crowbars; and the populace enter amid a burst
  of acclamations from the spectators。  Immediately; through every
  opening in the building; which has a facade frontage of eighty feet;
  〃 there is a shower of shutters; sashes; chairs; tables; sofas;
  books and papers; and then another of tiles; boards; balconies and
  fragments of wood…work。〃 The public archives are thrown to the wind;
  and the surrounding streets are strewed with them; the letters of
  enfranchisement; the charters of privileges; all the authentic acts
  which; since Louis XIV; have guaranteed the liberties of the town;
  perish in the flames。  Some of the rabble in the cellars stave in
  casks of precious wine; fifteen thousand measures of it are lost;
  making a pool five feet deep in which several are drowned。  Others;
  loaded with booty; go away under the eyes of the soldiers without
  being arrested。  The havoc continues for three days; a number of
  houses belonging to some of the magistrates 〃are sacked from garret
  to cellar。〃 When the honest citizens at last obtain arms and restore
  order; they are content with the hanging of one of the robbers;
  although; in order to please the people; the magistrates are changed
  and the price of bread and meat is reduced。  …  It is not surprising
  that after such tactics; and with such rewards; the riot should
  spread through the neighborhood far and near: in fact; starting from
  Strasbourg it overruns Alsace; while in the country as in the city;
  there are always drunkards and rascals found to head it。
  No matter where; be it in the East; in the West; or in the North;
  the instigators are always of this stamp。  At Cherbourg; on the 21st
  of July;'16' the two leaders of the riot are 〃 highway robbers;〃 who
  place themselves at the head of women of the suburbs; foreign
  sailors; the populace of the harbor; and it includes soldiers in
  workmen's smocks。  They force the delivery of the keys of the grain
  warehouses; and wreck the dwellings of the three richest merchants;
  also that of M。 de Garantot; the sub…delegate: 〃All records and
  papers are burnt; at M。 de Garantot's alone the loss is estimated at
  more than 100;000 crowns at least。〃  The same instinct of
  destruction prevails everywhere; a sort of envious fury against all
  who possess; command; or enjoy anything。  At Maubeuge; on the 27th
  of July; at the very assembly of the representatives of the
  commune;'17' the rabble interferes directly in its usual fashion。  A
  band of nail and gun…makers takes possession of the town…hall; and
  obliges the mayor to reduce the price of bread。  Almost immediately
  after this another band follows uttering cries of death; and smashes
  the windows; while the garrison; which has been ordered out; quietly
  contemplates the damage done。  Death to the mayor; to all rulers;
  and to all employees! The rioters force open the prisons; set the
  prisoners free; and attack the tax…offices。  The octroi offices are
  demolished from top to bottom: they pull down the harbor offices and
  throw the scales and weights into the river。  All the custom and
  excise stores are carried off; and the officials are compelled to
  give acquaintances。  The houses of the registrar and of the sheriff;
  that of the revenue comptr