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compels; under penalty of imprisonment; mothers to take their daughters

to the popular club;〃 to listen to his filthy preaching; one evening; at

the theatre; probably after an orgy; he shouts at all the women between

the acts; lets loose upon them his smutty vocabulary; and; by way of

demonstration; or as a practical conclusion; ends by stripping himself

naked。'111' … This time; the genuine brute appears。  All the clothing

woven during the past centuries and with which civilization had dressed

him; the last drapery of humanity; falls to the ground。  Nothing remains

but the primitive animal; the ferocious; lewd gorilla supposed to be

tamed; but which still subsists indefinitely and which a dictatorship;

joined to drunkenness; revives in an uglier guise than in remotest times。





VIII。  Delirium。



Approach of madness。  … Loss of common…sense。  … Fabre; Gaston;

Guiter; in the army of the Eastern Pyrenees。  … Baudot; Lebas; Saint…

Just; and the predecessors and successors in the army of the Rhine。  …

Furious excitement。  … Lebon at Arras; and Carrier at Nantes。



If intoxication is needed to awaken the brute; a dictatorship suffices

to arouse the madman。  The mental equilibrium of most of these new

sovereigns is disturbed; the distance between what the man once was

and what he now is; is too great。  Formerly he was a petty lawyer;

village doctor; or schoolmaster; an unknown mover of a resolution in a

local club; and only yesterday he was one voter in the Convention out

of seven hundred and fifty。  Look at him now; the arbiter; in one of

the departments; of all fortunes and liberties; and master of five

thousand lives。  Like a pair of scales into which a disproportionate

weight has been thrown; his reason totters on the side of pride。  Some

of them regard their competency unlimited; like their powers; and

having just joined the army; claim the right of being appointed major…

generals。'112'  〃Declare officially;〃 writes Fabre to the Committee of

Public Safety;'113' 〃that; in future; generals shall be simply the

lieutenants of the delegates to the Convention。〃 Awaiting the required

declaration; they claim command and; in reality; exercise it。  〃I know

of neither generals nor privates;〃 says Gaston; a former justice of

the peace; to the officers; 〃as to the Minister; he is like a bull in

a china shop; I am in command here and must be obeyed。〃 〃What are

generals good for?〃 adds his colleague Guiter; 〃the old women in our

faubourgs know as much as they do。  Plans; formal maneuvers; tents;

camps; redoubts? All this is of no use! The only war suitable to

Frenchmen after this will be a rush with side arms。〃 To turn out of

office; guillotine; disorganize; march blindly on; waste lives

haphazard; force defeat; sometimes get killed themselves; is all they

know; and they would lose all if the effects of their incapacity and

arrogance were not redeemed by the devotion of the officers and the

enthusiasm of the soldiers。  … The same spectacle is visible at

Charleroy where; through his absurd orders; Saint…Just does his best

to compromise the army; leaving that place with the belief that he is

a great man。'114'  … There is the same spectacle in Alsace; where

Lacoste; Baudot; Ruamps; Soubrany; Muhaud; Saint…Just and Lebas;

through their excessive rigor; do their best to break up the army and

then boast of it。  The revolutionary Tribunal is installed at

headquarters; soldiers are urged to denounce their officers; the

informer is promised money and secrecy; he and the accused are not

allowed to confront each other; no investigation; no papers allowed;

even to make exception to the verdict … a simple examination without

any notes; the accused arrested at eight o'clock; condemned at nine

o'clock; and shot at ten o'clock。'115'



Naturally; under such a system; no one wants to command; already;

before Saint Just's arrival; Meunier had consented to act as Major…

General only ad interim; 〃every hour of the day〃 he demanded his

removal; unable to secure this; he refused to issue any order。  The

representatives; to procure his successor; are obliged to descend down

to a depot captain; Carlin; bold enough or stupid enough to allow

himself to take a commission under their lead; which was a commission

for the guillotine。  … If such is their presumption in military

matters; what must it be in civil affairs! On this side there is no

external check; no Spanish or German army capable of at once taking

them in flagrante delicto; and of profiting by their ambitious

incapacity and mischievous interference。  Whatever the social

instrumentality may be … judiciary; administration; credit; commerce;

manufactures; agriculture … they can dislocate and destroy it with

impunity。  … They never fail to do this; and; moreover; in their

dispatches; they take credit to themselves for the ruin they cause。

That; indeed; is their mission; otherwise; they would be regarded as

bad Jacobins; they would soon become 〃suspects;〃 they rule only on

condition of being infatuated and destructive; the overthrow of

common…sense is with them an act of State grace; a necessity of the

office; and; on this common ground of compulsory unreason; every

species of physical delirium may be set established。



With those that we can follow closely; not only is their judgment

perverted; but the entire nervous apparatus is affected; a permanent

over…excitement and a morbid restlessness has begun。  … Consider

Joseph Lebon; son of a sergeant…at…arms; subsequently; a teacher with

the Oratoriens of Beaune; next; curé of Neuville…Vitasse; repudiated

as an interloper by the élite of his parishioners; not respected;

without house or furniture; and almost without a flock。'116'  Two

years after this; finding himself sovereign of his province; his head

is spinning。  Lesser events would have made it turn; his is only a

twenty…eight…year…old head; not very solid; without any inside

ballast;'117' already disturbed by vanity; ambition; rancor; and

apostasy; by the sudden and complete volteface which puts him in

conflict with his past educational habits and most cherished

affections: it breaks down under the vastness and novelty of this

greatness。  … In the costume of a representative; a Henry IV hat; tri…

color plume; waving scarf; and saber dragging the ground; Lebon orders

the bell to be rung and summons the villagers into the church; where;

aloft in the pulpit in which he had formerly preached in a threadbare

cassock; he displays his metamorphosis。



〃Who would believe that I should have returned here with unlimited

powers!〃'118'



And that; before his counterfeit majesty; each person would be humble;

bowed down and silent! To a member of the municipality of Cambray who;

questioned by him; looked straight at him and answered curtly; and

who; to a query twice repeated in the same terms; dared to answer

twice in the same terms; he says:



 〃Shut up ! You disrespect me; you do not behave properly to the

national representative。〃



He immediately commits him to prison。'119' … One evening; at the

theater; he enters a box in which the ladies; seated in front; keep

their places。  In a rage; he goes out; rushes on the stage and;

brandishing his great saber; shouts and threatens the audience; taking

immense strides across the boards and acting and looking so much like

a wild beast that several of the ladies faint away:



 〃Look there !〃 he shouts; at those muscadines who do not condescend

to move for a representative of twenty…five millions of men! Everybody

used to make way for a prince … they will not budge for me; a

representative; who am more than a king!〃'120'



The word is spoken。  But this king is frightened; and he is one who

thinks of nothing but conspiracy;'121' in the street; in open

daylight; the people who are passing him are plotting against him

either by words or signs。  Meeting in the main street of Arras a young

girl and her mother talking Flemish; … that seems to him 〃suspect。〃

〃Where are you going?〃 he demands。  〃What's that to you?〃 replies the

child; who does not know him。  The girl; the mother and the father are

sent to prison。'122' … On the ramparts; another young girl;

accompanied by her mother; is taking the air; and reading a book。

〃Give me that book;〃 says the representative。  The mother hands it to

him; it is the 〃 History of Clarissa Harlowe。〃 The young girl;

extending her hand to receive back the book; adds; undoubtedly with a

smile: 〃That is not 'suspect。'〃 Lebon deals her a blow with his fist

on her stomach which knocks her down; both women are searched and he

personally leads them to the guard…room。  … The slightest expression;

a gesture; puts him beside himself; any motion that he does not

comprehend makes him start; as with an electric shock。  Just arrived

at Cambray; he is informed that a woman who had sold a bottle of wine

below the maximum; had been released after a procès…verb

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