第 104 节
作者:开了      更新:2021-02-18 23:01      字数:9317
  they are going to fall upon them sword and pistol in hand。  For
  several long days the famished convoy remains moored in the stream;
  are carefully watched。  Boats filled with volunteers and peasants
  row around it uttering insults and threats: in the neighboring
  meadows the National Guards form themselves in line of battle。
  Finally; a decision is arrived at。  The bravest; well armed get into
  skiffs; approach the vessel cautiously; choose the most favorable
  time and spot; rush on board; and take possession; and are perfectly
  astonished to find neither enemies nor arms。  …  Nevertheless; the
  priests are confined on board; and their deputies; must make their
  appearance before the mayor。  The latter; a former usher and good
  Jacobin; being the most frightened; is the most violent。  He refuses
  to stamp the passports; and; seeing two priests approach; one
  provided with a sword…cane and the other with an iron…pointed stick;
  thinks that there is to be a sudden attack。  〃Here are two more of
  them;〃 he exclaims with terror; 〃they are all going to land。  My
  friends; the town is in danger! 〃  …  On hearing this the crowd
  becomes alarmed; and threatens the deputies; the cry of 〃To the lamp
  post!〃 is heard; and; to save them; National Guards are obliged to
  conduct them to prison in the center of a circle of bayonets。   …
  It must be noted that these madmen are 〃at bottom the kindest people
  in the world。〃 After the boarding of the ship; one of the most
  ferocious; by profession a barber; seeing the long beards of these
  poor priests; instantly cools down; draws forth his tools; and good…
  naturedly sets to work; spending several hours in shaving them。 In
  ordinary times ecclesiastics received nothing but salutations; three
  years previously they were 〃respected as fathers and guides。〃 But at
  the present moment the rustic; the man of the lower class; is out of
  his bearings。  Forcibly and against nature; he has been made a
  theologian; a politician; a police captain; a local independent
  sovereign; and in such a position his head is turned。  Among these
  people who seem to have lost their senses; only one; an officer of
  the National Guard; remains cool; he is; besides; very polite; well…
  behaved; and an agreeable talker; he comes in the evening to comfort
  the prisoners and to take tea with them in prison; in fact; he is
  accustomed to tragedies and; thanks to his profession; his nerves
  are in repose  …  this person is the executioner。  The others; 〃whom
  one would take for tigers;〃 are bewildered sheep; but they are not
  the less dangerous; for; carried away by their delirium; they bear
  down with their mass on whatever gives them umbrage。   …   On the
  road from Paris to Lyons'79' Roland's commissioners witness this
  terrible fright。  〃The people are constantly asking what our
  generals and armies are doing; they have vengeful expressions
  frequently on their lips。  Yes; they say; we will set out; but we
  must (at first) purge the interior。〃
  Something appalling is in preparation。  The seventh jacquerie is
  drawing near; this one universal and final  …  at first brutal; and
  then legal and systematic; undertaken and carried out on the
  strength of abstract principles by leaders worthy of the means they
  employ。  Nothing like it ever occurred in history; for the first
  time we see brutes gone mad; operating on a grand scale and for a
  long time; under the leadership of blockheads who have become
  insane。
  There is a certain strange malady commonly encountered in the
  quarters of the poor。  A workman; over…taxed with work; in misery
  and badly fed; takes to drink; he drinks more and more every day;
  and liquors of the strongest kind。  After a few years his nervous
  system; already weakened by spare diet; becomes over…excited and out
  of balance。  An hour comes when the brain; under a sudden stroke;
  ceases to direct the machine; in vain does it command; for it is no
  longer obeyed; each limb; each joint; each muscle; acting separately
  and for itself starts convulsively through discordant impulses。
  Meanwhile the man is gay; he thinks himself a millionaire; a king;
  loved and admired by everybody; he is not aware of the mischief he
  is doing to himself he does not comprehend the advice given him; he
  refuses the remedies offered to him; he sings and shouts for entire
  days; and; above all; drinks more than ever。  …  At last his face
  grows dark and his eyes become blood…shot。  Radiant visions give way
  to black and monstrous phantoms; he sees nothing around him hut
  menacing figures; traitors in ambush; ready to fall upon him
  unawares; murderers with upraised arms ready to cut his throat;
  executioners preparing torments for him; and he seems to be wading
  in a pool of blood。  So he precipitates; and; in order that he
  himself may not be killed; he kills。  No one is more to be dreaded;
  for his delirium sustains him; his strength is prodigious; his
  movements unforeseen; and he endures; without heeding them;
  suffering and wounds under which a healthy man would succumb。 …
  France; like such a madman; exhausted by fasting under the monarchy;
  drunk by the unhealthy drug of the Social…Contract; and by countless
  other adulterated or fiery beverages; is suddenly struck with
  paralysis of the brain; at once she is convulsed in every limb
  through the incoherent play and contradictory twitching of her
  discordant organs。  At this time she has traversed the period of
  joyous madness; and is about to enter upon the period of somber
  delirium: behold her capable of daring; suffering; and doing all;
  capable of incredible exploits and abominable barbarities; the
  moment her guides; as erratic as herself; indicate an enemy or an
  obstacle to her fury。
  THE END。
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  NOTES:
  '1' Moniteur; XI。  763。  (Sitting of March 28; 1792。)  … 〃Archives
  Nationales;〃 F7; 3235。  (Deliberation of the Directory of the
  Department; November 29; 1791; and January 27; 1792。   …  Petition
  of the Municipality of Mende and of forty…three others; November 30;
  1791。)
  '2' 〃Archives Nationales;〃 F7; 3198。  Minutes of the meeting of the
  municipal officers of Arles; September 2; 1791。   … Letters of the
  Royal Commissioners and of the National Assembly; October 24;
  November 6; 14; 17; 21; and December 21; 1791。   …  The
  Commissioners; to be impartial; attend in turn a mass by a nonjuring
  priest and one by a priest of the opposite side。  〃The church is
  full〃 with the former and always empty with the latter。
  '3' 〃Mémoire〃 of M。 Mérilhon; for Froment; passim。  …  Report of M。
  Alquier; p。  54。   …  De Dampmartin; I。  208。
  '4' …  De Dampmartin; I。  208。They would exclaim to the catholic
  peasants: 〃Allons; mes enfants; Vive le Roi!〃 (shouts of enthusiasm):
  〃those wretches of democrats; let us make an example of them; and
  restore the sacred rights of the throne and the altar!〃  …  〃As you
  please;〃 replied the rustics in their patois; 〃but we must hold fast
  to the Revolution; for there are some good things about it。〃  …  They
  remain calm; refuse to march to the assistance of Uzès; and withdraw
  into their mountains on the first sign of the approach of the
  National Guard。
  '5' This is what the author Soljenitsyne observed about his Russian
  countrymen in an interview with M。 Pivot in the French television in
  1998。  (SR。)
  '6' Dauban; 〃La Demagogie à Paris;〃 p。598; Letter of M。 de Brissac;
  August 25; 1789。
  '7' Moniteur; X。 339。  (Journal de Troyes; and a letter from
  Perpignan; November; 1791。)
  '8' Mercure de France; No。  for September 3; 1791。  〃Let Liberty be
  presented to us; and all France will kneel before her; but noble and
  proud hearts will eternally resist the oppression which assumes her
  sacred mask。  They will invoke liberty; but liberty without crime;
  the liberty which is maintained without dungeons; without
  inquisitors; without incendiaries; without brigands; without forced
  oaths; without illegal coalitions; without mob outrages; that
  liberty; finally; which allows no oppressor to go unpunished; and
  which does not crush peaceable citizens beneath the weight of the
  chains it has broken。〃
  '9' Rivarol; 〃Mémoires;〃 p。367。 (Letter of M。 Servan; published in
  the 〃Actes des Ap?tres。〃)
  '10' The King's brother; later to become King of France under the
  name of Louis XVIII。  (SR。)
  '11' 〃Archives Nationa1es;〃 F7。  3257。  Official reports;
  investigations; and correspondence in relation with the affair of M。
  Bussy (October; 1790)。
  '12' Mercure de France; May 15; 1790。  (Letter of Baron de Bois…
  d'Aisy; April 29; read in the National Assembly。)  …  Moniteur; IV。
  302。  Sitting of May 6。  (Official statement of the Justice of the
  Peace of Vitteaux; April 28。)
  '13' 〃Archives Nationales;〃 DXXIX。  4。  Letter of M。 Belin…
  Chatellenot (near Asnay…le…Duc) to the President of the National
  A