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without discussion; the decrees which the Committee of Public Safety

present to it ready made。  It is no more than a registry…office; and

scarcely that; for it has relinquished its right of appointing its own

committees; that office being assigned to the Committee of Public

Safety; it votes as a whole all lists of names which the Committee

send in。'119'  Naturally; none but the creatures of the latter and the

faithful are inscribed; thus; the whole legislative and parliamentary

power belongs to it。   As to executive and administrative power; the

ministers have become mere clerks of the Committee of Public Safety;

〃they come every day at specified hours to receive its orders and

acts;'120'  〃they submit to it 〃the list with explanations; of all the

agents〃 sent into the departments and abroad ; they refer to it every

minute detail; they are its scribes; merely its puppets; so

insignificant that they finally lose their title; and for the

〃Commission on External Relations〃 a former school…master is taken; an

inept clubbist; bar…fly and the pillar of the billiard…room; scarcely

able to read the documents brought to him to sign in the café where he

passes his days。'121'  Thus is the second power in the State

converted by the Committee into a squad of domestics; while the

foremost one is converted into an audience of claqueurs。



To make them do their duty; it has two hands。   One; the right;

which seizes people unawares by the collar; is the Committee of

General Security; composed of twelve extreme Montagnards; such as

Panis; Vadier; Le Bas; Geoffroy; David; Amar; La Vicomterie; Lebon and

Ruhl; all nominated; that is to say; appointed by it; being its

confederates and subalterns。  They are its lieutenants of police; and

once a week they come and take part in its labors; as formerly the

Sartines; and the Lenoirs assisted the Comptroller…general。  A man who

this secret committee deems a 〃suspect;〃 is suddenly seized; no matter

who; whether representative; minister; or general; and finds himself

the next morning behind the bars in one of the ten new Bastilles。  

There; the other hand seizes him by the throat; this is the

revolutionary tribunal; an exceptional court like the extraordinary

commissions of the ancient régime; only far more terrible。  Aided by

its police gang; the Committee of Public Safety itself selects the

sixteen judges and sixty jurymen'122' from among the most servile; the

most furious; or the most brutal of the fanatics:'123' Fouquier…

Tinville; Hermann; Dumas; Payan; Coffinhal; Fleuriot…Lescot; and;

lower down on the scale; apostate priests; renegade nobles;

disappointed artists; infatuated studio…apprentices; journeymen

scarcely able to write their names; shoemakers; joiners; carpenters;

tailors; barbers; former lackeys; an idiot like Ganney; a deaf man

like Leroy…Dix…Ao?t; their names and professions indicate all that is

necessary to be told: these men are licensed and paid murderers。  The

Jurymen themselves are allowed eighteen francs a day; so that they may

attend to their business more leisurely。  This business consists in

condemning without proof; without any pleadings; and scarcely any

examination; in a hurry; in batches; whoever the Committee of Public

Safety might send to them; even the most confirmed Montagnards:

Danton; who contrived the tribunal; will soon discover this。  … it is

through these two government institutions that the Committee of Public

Safety keeps every head under the cleaver and each head; to avoid

being struck off; bows down;'124' in the provinces as well as in

Paris。



This has happened when the existing local hierarchy was replaced by

new authorities making the omnipotent will of the Committee present

everywhere。  Directly or indirectly; 〃for all government measures or

measures of public safety; all that relates to persons and the general

and internal police; all constituted bodies and all public

functionaries; are placed under its inspection。〃'125'  You may imagine

how the risk of being guillotined weighed upon them。



To suppress in advance any tendency to administrative inertia; it has

had withdrawn from the too powerful; too much respected; department

governments; 〃too inclined to federalism;〃 their departmental

dominance and their 〃political influence。〃'126'  It reduces these to

the levying of taxes and the supervision of roads and canals; it

purges them out through its agents; it even purges out the governments

of municipalities and districts。  To suppress beforehand all

probability of popular opposition; it has had the sessions of the

sections reduced to two per week; it installs in these sections; for

about forty sous a day; a majority of sans…culottes ; it orders the

suspension 〃until further directives〃 of all municipal elections。'127'



Finally; to have full control on the spot; it appoints its own men;

first; the commissioners and the representatives on missions; a sort

of temporary corps of directors sent into each department with

unlimited powers;'128' next; a body of national agents; a sort of

permanent body of sub…delegates; through whom in each district and

municipality it replaces the procureurs…syndics。'129'  To this army of

functionaries is added in each town; bourg or large village; a

revolutionary committee; paid three francs a day per member; charged

with the application of its decrees; and required to make reports

thereon。  Never before was such a vast and closely woven network cast

from above to envelope and keep captive twenty…six million people。

Such is the real constitution which the Jacobins substitute for the

constitution they have prepared for show。  In the arsenal of the

monarchy which they destroyed they took the most despotic institutions

… centralization; Royal Council; lieutenants of police; special

tribunals; intendants and sub…delegates; they disinterred the antique

Roman law of lèse…majesty; refurbished old blades which civilization

had dulled; aiming them at every throat and now wielded at random

against liberties; property and lives。  It is called the

〃revolutionary government;〃 according to official statements it is to

last until peace is secured; in the minds of genuine Jacobins it must

continue until all the French have been regenerated in accordance with

the formula。

____________________________________________________________________



Notes:



'1' Titus Flavious Clemens; (Greek writer born in Athens around 150

and dead in Cappadoce in 250) He lived in Alexandria。  (SR)。



'2' The words of Marat。



'3' After the Constitution is completed; said Legendre; in the Jacobin

club; we will make the federalists dance。



'4' Archives Nationales; F。I。C。。  56; (Circular of Gohier; Minister of

Justice; to the French people; July 6; 1793)。  〃Certain persons are

disposed to pervert the events of May 31 and June 2; by atrocious

exaggerations and the grossest fables; and prevent the fortunate

results they present from being seen。  They are absolutely determined

to see nothing but violations of the liberty of the people's

representatives in a step which was specially designed to hasten on

the Constitutional Act on which the liberty of all is established。  Of

what consequence is it who are the authors of the Constitution

presented to you? What does it matter whether it issues from a

mountain amidst lightning and the rolling thunder; like the Tables of

the Law given to the Hebrews; or whether it comes; like the laws given

to the early Romans; inspired in the tranquil asylum of a divinity

jealous of his religious surroundings? Is this constitution worthy of

a free people? That is the only question which citizens who wear the

livery of no party need examine!〃



'5' Buchez et Roux; XXVIII。; 177。  (report by Hérault Séchelles; June

10; 1793)。  Ibid; XXXI。; 400。  (Text of constitution submitted to

discussion June 11th; and passed June 24th。)



'6' De Sybel; II。; 331。  (According to the facsimile published in the

Quarterly Review)。  〃Hérault says that he and four of his colleagues

are ordered to furnish the draft of a constitution by Monday。〃



'7' Report by Hérault…Séchelles。  (Buchez et Roux; XXVIII。  178。)



'8' Buchez et Roux; XXXI; 400。  (Articles of the Declaration of

Rights; 1; 7; 9; 11; 27; 31; 35)



'9' Buchez et Roux; XXVIII。; 178。  Report by Hérault…Séchelles。  〃Each

of us had the same desire; that of attaining to the greatest

democratic result。  The sovereignty of the people and the dignity of

man were constantly in our minds。  。  。  A secret sentiment tells us

that our work is perhaps the most popular that ever existed。〃



'10' Archives Nationales; B。  II。; 23。  (Table of votes by the

commission appointed to collect the procès…verbaux of the adoption of

the constitution; August 20; 1793。)  Number of primary assemblies

sending in their procès…verbaux; 6;589 (516 cantons have not yet sent

theirs in)。   Number of voters on 

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