登陆注册
19097600000648

第648章

[22] Ibid., 270. - The pretension of reforming men's sentiments is found in all the programs. Ibid., 305. (Report of Saint-Just, February 26, 1794.) "Our object is to create an order of things establishing a universal inclination toward the good, and to have factions immediately hurled upon the scaffold." Ibid., 337. (Report of Saint-Just, March 13, 1794." - Ibid., 337. (Report of Saint-Just, March 13, 1794.) "We see but one way of arresting the evil, and that is to convert the revolution into a civil power and wage war on every species of perversity, as designedly created amongst us for the enervation of the republic."[23] Ibid., XXXV., 276. (Institutions, by Saint-Just. - Ibid., 287.)- Moniteur, XVIII., 343. Meeting of the Jacobin Club, Brumaire 13, year II., speech by Baudot.

[24] Buchez et Roux, XXIX, 142. (Speech by Jean Bon St. André in the Convention, Sep. 25, 1793.) "We are said to exercise arbitrary power, we are charged with being despots. We, despots! . . . Ah, no doubt, if despotism is to secure the triumph of liberty, such a despotism is political regeneration." (Applause.) - Ibid, XXXI., 276.

(Report by Robespierre, Pluviose 17, year, II.) "It has been said that terror is the incentive of despotic government. Does yours, then, resemble despotism? Yes, as the sword which flashes in the hands of the heroes of liberty, resembles that with which the satellites of tyranny are armed..... The government of the Revolution is the despotism of freedom against tyranny."[25] Ibid., XXXII, 353. Decree of April 1791. "The Convention declares, that, supported by the virtues of the French people, it will insure the triumph of the democratic revolution and show no pity in punishing its enemies."[26] In the following portrayal of the ancient régime, the bombast and credulity of the day overflows in the most extravagant exaggerations (Buchez et Roux, XXXI., 300, Report, by Saint-Just, February 26, 1794.): "In 1788, Louis XVI. Caused eight thousand persons of both sexes and of every age to be sacrificed in the rue Meslay and on the Pont-Neuf. These scenes were repeated by the court on the Champs de Mars; the court had hangings in the prisons, and the bodies of the drowned found in the Seine were its victims. These were four hundred thousand prisoners in confinement; fifteen thousand smugglers were hung in a year, and three thousand men were broken on the wheel; there were more prisoners in Paris than there are now . . . Look at Europe. There are four millions of people shut up in Europe whose shrieks are never heard." - Ibid., XXIV., 132. (Speech by Robespierre, May 10, 1793). "Up to this time the art of governing has simply consisted in the art of stripping and subduing the masses for the benefit of the few, and legislation, the mode of reducing these outrages to a system."[27] Buchez et Roux, XXXII., 353. (Report by Robespierre to the Convention, May 7, 1794.) "Nature tells us that man is born for freedom while the experience of man for centuries shows him a slave.

His rights are written in his heart and history records his humiliation."[28] Ibid., 372. "Priests are to morality what charlatans are to medical practice. How different is the God of nature from the God of the priests! I know of nothing which is so much like atheism as the religions they have manufactured." Already, in the Constituent Assembly, Robespierre wanted to prevent the father from endowing a child. "You have done nothing for liberty if yours laws do not tend to diminish by mild and effective means the inequality of fortunes."(Hamel, I., 403.)[29] Decree of Frimaire 18, year II. - Note the restrictions: "The convention, in the foregoing arrangement, has no idea of derogating from any law or precaution for public safety against refractory or turbulent priests, or against those who might attempt to abuse the pretext of religion in order to compromise the cause of liberty. Nor does it mean to disapprove of what has thus far been done by virtue of the ordinances of representatives of the people, nor to furnish anybody with a pretext for unsettling patriotism and relaxing the energy of public spirit."[30] Decrees of May 27, and August 26, 1792, March 18, April 21 and October 20, 1793, April 11, and May 11, 1794. - Add (Moniteur, XIX., 697) the decree providing for the confiscation of the possessions of ecclesiastics "who have voluntarily left or been so reported, who are retired as old or inform, or who have preferred transportation to retirement." - Ibid., XVIII., 492, (session of Frimaire 2). A speech by Forester. "As to the priesthood, its continuation has become a disgrace and even a crime." - Archives Nationales, AF. II., 36. (An order by Lequinio, representative of the people of Charante-Inférieur, la Vendée and Deux-Sèvres, Saintes, Nivose 1, year II.) "In order that freedom of worship may exist in full plenitude it is forbidden to all whom it may concern to preach or write in favor of any form of worship or religious opinion whatsoever." And especially "it is expressly forbidden to any former minister, belonging to any religious sect whatever, to preach, write or teach morality under penalty of being regarded as a suspect and, as such, immediately put under arrest. .

. . Every man who undertakes to preach any religious precepts whatsoever is, by that fact, culpable before the people. He violates . . . social equality, which does not permit the individual to publicly raise his ideal pretensions above those of his neighbor."[31] Ludofic Sciout, "Histoire de la Constitution Civile du clergé,"vols. III. and IV., passim. - Jules Sauzay, "Histoire de la persécution révolutionaire dans le Doubs," vols. III., IV., V., and VI., particularly the list, at the end of the work, of those deported, guillotined, sent into the interior and imprisoned.

同类推荐
  • 仁王般若经陀罗尼念诵轨仪

    仁王般若经陀罗尼念诵轨仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Soul of Man

    The Soul of Man

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Is Shakespeare Dead

    Is Shakespeare Dead

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 书诀

    书诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 集异记

    集异记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 机关算尽太聪明

    机关算尽太聪明

    周灵犀本为庶出之女,在府中整日如履薄冰。本以为嫁人之后便可安心过自己的小日子,可是却陷入接二连三的勾心斗角之中。府里的阴谋毒害和朝中的争权夺利,让周灵犀无可适从。夹杂在权力争斗之中的爱情之路,亦是一波三折。面对仇恨之后的秘密、祥和之下的阴谋,一个弱女子,又怎能机关算尽?最终只怕会误了卿卿性命。
  • 中二少年的热血物语

    中二少年的热血物语

    圣战结束后,败亡的人类被迫接受了一系列不平等条约受到大陆上其余各族的鄙视。就在这时,一个少年横空出世,看他如何闯荡这个残忍的世界。(ps:以上简介纯属胡扯,真实情况是这是一个苦逼中二如何装逼的故事。)
  • Stories of Modern French Novels

    Stories of Modern French Novels

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 亿万娇妻:老婆太难追

    亿万娇妻:老婆太难追

    霸气版:花滑新秀意外重生,带着太多的不甘和怒气,她来了!目标是收服淡漠无情的高干子弟?温润宠溺的灵力高手?还是傲娇忠犬的系统君?都不是!她的目标不仅是成为花样滑冰的天后,还要为华夏建立一个体育帝国,田径短板?足球垃圾?这些都将成为过去!且看一代天之骄女,如何凭借灵韵养成系统,扮猪吃虎,叱咤体坛。简洁版:本文是披着体育外衣的女强爽文,通过系统和自己的毅力,女主不断打脸,里面脑洞甚大,涉及舞蹈、体育、商业、冒险……1V1HE文,欢迎跳坑!求点击求收藏求推荐!
  • 至尊狂妻:凤啸九霄

    至尊狂妻:凤啸九霄

    小时候的遭遇造成成了她日后的冷漠。冷静机智的她,似乎没有事情能激起她心中丝毫波澜,却独独在他面前失去冷静,如同一个邻家少女般。他一界之皇,数年前遭人暗算,落入人间却被他误伤。明明找她是为了报复却偏偏被她吸引,总是喜欢看她气急跳脚的样子,命运将他们安排在一起,却也给他们设置了重重障碍,阴谋诡计接连不断,他们最终将是是携手天下还是背道而驰。请删除此文
  • 精彩,于驻足间呈现

    精彩,于驻足间呈现

    《精彩于驻足间呈现》由九州出版社出版。《精彩于驻足间呈现》编辑推荐:一篇好的游记,不仅仅是作者对他所观的大自然的描述,那一座山,那一条河,那一棵树,那一轮月,那一潭水,那静如处子的昆虫或疾飞的小鸟,那闪电,那雷鸣,那狂风,那细雨等,无不打上作者情感或人生的烙印。或以物喜,或以物悲,见物思人,由景及人,他们都向我们传递了他们自己的思想情感。通过阅读《精彩于驻足间呈现》,满足畅游中国和世界人文或自然美景的愿望。
  • 卧底在佛门

    卧底在佛门

    心性善良的主角,虽然身世悲苦但是却有喜欢的富家女孩。无法看破红尘的他,却偏偏与佛有缘。误学到至高的佛门神通,被绑上寺庙,终极卧底。以佛门神通练就绝世剑术,仗剑天涯,好不自在!
  • 都市医圣

    都市医圣

    实习生赵晨飞,意外吸收了几颗九龙宝珠,从此武学、医学、玄学集于一身,屌丝逆袭。冰雪美人主动融化,魔鬼御姐乖乖投降,绝色姐妹花双宿双飞。美女们齐呼:“我要做大房。”看来只能买个大房了。
  • 熏腊味食谱

    熏腊味食谱

    《熏腊味食谱》主要介绍了熏制品、腊制品的制作方法,制作过程详尽,原料取材容易。《熏腊味食谱》行文简洁,通俗易懂,一学就能做出符合自己口味的熏腊品,是学习制作熏腊品的极好参考书。
  • 贴身保安

    贴身保安

    将军女儿示爱,商界才女倾心,娇蛮公主臣服,周围美女不断!特种兵赵建辉,偶然间救了商场大亨的女儿,却惹来她未婚夫的不满……平静就此打破,我本欲低调,怎奈被推上巅峰之路,看男主角如何玩转都市,掀起阵阵狂澜!