登陆注册
19097600000733

第733章

appointed by the Committee of Public Safety "Commissioner on External Relations," that is to say, Minister of Foreign Affairs, and kept in this important position for nearly six months. He is a school-master from the Jura,[43] recently disembarked from his small town and whose "ignorance, low habits and stupidity surpass anything that can be imagined . . . The chief clerks have nothing to do with him; he neither sees nor asks for them. He is never found in his office, and when it is indispensable to ask for his signature on any legislative matter, the sole act to which he has reduced his functions, they are compelled to go and force it from him in the Café Hardy, where he usually passes his days." It must be borne in mind that he is envious and spiteful, avenging himself for his incapacity on those whose competency makes him sensible of his incompetence; he denounces them as Moderates, and, at last, succeeds in having a warrant of arrest issued against his four chief clerks; on the morning of Thermidor 9, with a wicked leer, he himself carries the news to one of them, M.

Miot. Unfortunately for him, after Thermidor, he is turned out and M.

Miot is put in his place. With diplomatic politeness, the latter calls on his predecessor and "expresses to him the usual compliments."Buchot, insensible to compliments, immediately thinks of the substantial, and the first thing he asks for is to keep provisionally his apartment in the ministry. On this being granted, he expresses his thanks and tells M. Miot that it was very well to appoint him, but "for myself, it is very disagreeable. I have been obliged to come to Paris and quit my post in the provinces, and now they leave me in the street." Thereupon, with astounding impudence, he asks the man whom he wished to guillotine to give him a place as ministerial clerk.

M. Miot tries to make him understand that for a former minister to descend so low would be improper. Buchot regards such delicacy as strange, and, seeing M. Miot's embarrassment, he ends by saying: "If you don't find me fit for a clerk, I shall be content with the place of a servant." This estimate of himself shows his proper value.

The other, whom we have also met before, and who is already known by his acts,[44] general in Paris of the entire armed force, commander-in-chief of one hundred and ten thousand men, is that former servant or under-clerk of the procureur Formey, who, dismissed by his employer for robbery, shut up in Bicêtre, by turns a runner and announcer for a traveling show, barrier-clerk and September assassin, has purged the Convention on the 2nd of June - in short, the famous Henriot, and now simply a brute and a sot. In this latter capacity, spared on the trial of the Hébertists, he is kept as a tool, for the reason, doubtless, that he is narrow, coarse and manageable, more compromised than anybody else, good for any job, without the slightest chance of becoming independent, unemployed in the army,45 having no prestige with true soldiers, a general for street parade and an interloper and lower than the lowest of the mob; his mansion, his box at the Opera-Comique, his horses, his importance at festivals and reviews, and, above all, his orgies make him perfectly content. - Every evening, in full uniform, escorted by his aides-de-camp, he gallops to Choisy-sur-Seine, where, in the domicile of a flatterer named Fauvel, along with some of Robespierre's confederates or the local demagogues, he revels.

They toss off the wines of the Duc de Coigny, smash the glasses, plates and bottles, betake themselves to neighboring dance-rooms and kick up a row, bursting in doors, and breaking benches and chairs to pieces - in short, they have a good time. - The next morning, having slept himself sober, he dictates his orders for the day, veritable masterpieces in which the silliness, imbecility and credulity of a numskull, the sentimentality of the drunkard, the clap-trap of a mountebank and the tirades of a cheap philosopher form an unique compound, at once sickening and irritating, like the fiery, pungent mixtures of cheap bars, which suit his audience better because they contain the biting, mawkish ingredients that compose the adulterated brandy of the Revolution. - He is posted on foreign maneuvers, and enlarges upon the true reasons for the famine: "A lot of bread has been lately found in the privies: the Pitts and Cobourgs and other rascals who want to enslave justice and reason, and assassinate philosophy, must be called to account for this. Headquarters, etc."[46] He has theories on religions and preaches civic modesty to all dissenters: "The ministers and sectaries of every form of worship are requested not to practice any further religious ceremonies outside their temples. Every good sectarian will see the propriety of observing this order. The interior of a temple is large enough for paying one's homage to the Eternal, who requires no rites that are repulsive to every thinking man. The wise agree that a pure heart is the sublimest homage that Divinity can desire. Headquarters, etc." -He sighs for the universal idyllic state, and invokes the suppression of the armed force:

"I beg my fellow-citizens, who are led to the criminal courts out of curiosity, to act as their own police; this is a task which every good citizen should fulfill wherever he happens to be. In a free country, justice should not be secured by pikes and bayonets, but through reason and philosophy. These must maintain a watchful eye over society; these must purify it and proscribe thieves and evil-doers.

Each individual must bring his small philosophic portion with him and, with these small portions, compose a rational totality that will turn out to be of benefit and to the welfare of all. Oh, for the time when functionaries shall be rare, when the wicked shall be overthrown, when the law shall become the sole functionary in society! Headquarters, etc. " -- Every morning, he preaches in the same pontifical strain.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 暖婚蜜意

    暖婚蜜意

    "你拥有的,我深知遥不可及。经济,权力。我能永远爱你,但我知道我配不上你。我珍爱的,你不明它的意义。珍馐,美玉。我能舍弃一切,但我唯独不能没有你。他是身份神秘的商界巨鳄,也是背景军政商三界的家族独子。她是普通百姓,本科毕业,成天为了过日子累死累活的程序员。他冷酷无情的外表下,隐藏着的是对她的义无反顾和趋之若鹜。那年杏花雨下,她笑的灿烂,他爱的深沉。两个看似生活不会有交集的人会摩擦出怎样的火花。爱情的风花雪月又有着如何的起伏波澜,这一切,就等你自己在书里寻找答案。"--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 又把夫人弄丢了

    又把夫人弄丢了

    他们之间,是遥迢年华里的初见惊艳,再见依然。他们之间,是隔了千山万水的念念不相忘,有泪不须流。他把她名字刻于骨上,心上,只为来生还会记得许给她的诺言。
  • 蔷薇少女:高冷校草的溺爱

    蔷薇少女:高冷校草的溺爱

    樱花盛开,又是爱恋的开始。璃沫和瑾萱以成绩考进樱兰学院,却偶遇到校草,璃沫报道时,才发现原来自己和校草一个班,和校草发生了一系列的故事,欧阳铭轩和瑾萱和打情骂俏,子默和陌千羽的你情我愿,璃沫和羽泽的甜蜜。璃沫后不得已离开了羽泽,3年后,她,回来了,羽泽却恨她,恨她当初把他抛弃,恨她曾经给他失望,恨她......
  • 上古世纪之暗黑觉醒

    上古世纪之暗黑觉醒

    故事发生在掌控冥界的诺伊女神开启冥界之门,终结了人与神的那场征战,无数种族被迫离开原大陆,越过汪洋大海,来到东大陆开始新生,其中信仰诺伊女神的诺亚一族发展最为迅速,经过三百年,已经建立起帝国,反抗的原居民只有一区最为活跃,这个故事,便是从这里讲起
  • 医学见能

    医学见能

    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。
  • 药师如来观行仪轨法

    药师如来观行仪轨法

    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。
  • 华人十大科学家:李远哲

    华人十大科学家:李远哲

    李远哲(Yuan TsehLee),1986年以分子水平化学反应动力学的研究与赫施巴赫(Dudley R. Hechbach)及约翰·波兰伊(John C.Polanyi)共获诺贝尔化学奖,是第一位获得诺贝尔化学奖的台湾人。目前为“中央研究院”、美国人文与科学学院、美国国家科学院,以及德国哥廷根科学院等之院士。于1994年1月15日,放弃美国国籍,回到台湾。《李远哲》由朱丹、孟繁玲编著,是“华人十大科学家”系列丛书之一。《李远哲》记述了李远哲的成长之路,他的童年时代,他的求学历程,他的梦想,他的探索与实践,他的勇敢为人类带来了认知世界的曙光。
  • 萌妻归来:老公,求轻宠

    萌妻归来:老公,求轻宠

    她强行扑倒了他,第二天拍拍手走人,一走就是三年……再次重逢之后,积聚多年的怨气,让他化身为狼,需求无度,他们之间说得最多的话,就是各种的语气助词。“老公公,我们能不能用点正常的语言沟通?”“行,我们去沙发上……好好沟通!”
  • 细节做事 宽心做人(MBook随身读)

    细节做事 宽心做人(MBook随身读)

    《细节做事宽心做人》从理论到实践,对人生关键领域的细节——做人细节、做事细节、职场细节、理财细节、生活细节等方面展开了全面、深入的探讨,通过大量真实、生动的事例和准确、透彻的分析,向读者揭示了细节决定人生成败的道理。
  • 假糖

    假糖

    任何值得去的地方,都没有捷径。那片蓝色的天和宽敞的教室,跑不完的操和上不完的课,回不去的过去和深爱的人,有一个名字叫做时光。那个你,这个我,我们!