登陆注册
38552500000068

第68章

``This cry of outlawry,'' writes Williams, ``at this period produced the same effect on a Frenchman as the cry of pestilence;the outlaw became civilly excommunicated, and it was as though men believed that they would be contaminated passing through the air which he had breathed.Such was the effect it produced upon the gunners who had trained their cannon against the Convention.

Without receiving further orders, merely on hearing that the Commune was `outside the law,' they immediately turned their batteries about.''

Robespierre and all his band--Saint-Just, the president of the Revolutionary Tribunal, the mayor of the Commune, &c.,--were guillotined on the 10th of Thermidor to the number of twenty-one.

Their execution was followed on the morrow by a fresh batch of seventy Jacobins, and on the next day by thirteen.The Terror, which had lasted ten months, was at an end.

The downfall of the Jacobin edifice in Thermidor is one of the most curious psychological events of the revolutionary period.

None of the Montagnards who had worked for the downfall of Robespierre had for a moment dreamed that it would mark the end of the Terror.

Tallien, Barras, Fouche, &c., overthrew Robespierre as he had overthrown Hebert, Danton, the Girondists, and many others.

But when the acclamations of the crowd told them that the death of Robespierre was regarded as having put an end to the Terror they acted as though such had been their intention.They were the more obliged to do so in that the Plain--that is, the great majority of the Assembly--which had allowed itself to be decimated by Robespierre, now rebelled furiously against the system it had so long acclaimed even while it abhorred it.

Nothing is more terrible than a body of men who have been afraid and are afraid no longer.The Plain revenged itself for being terrorised by the Mountain, and terrorised that body in turn.

The servility of the colleagues of Robespierre in the Convention was by no means based upon any feeling of sympathy for him.The dictator filled them with an unspeakable alarm, but beneath the marks of admiration and enthusiasm which they lavished on him out of fear was concealed an intense hatred.We can gather as much by reading the reports of various deputies inserted in the Moniteur of August 11, 15, and 29, 1794, and notably that on ``the conspiracy of the triumvirs, Robespierre, Couthon, and Saint-Just.'' Never did slaves heap such invectives on a fallen master.

We learn that ``these monsters had for some time been renewing the most horrible prescriptions of Marius and Sulla.''

Robespierre is represented as a most frightful scoundrel; we are assured that ``like Caligula, he would soon have asked the French people to worship his horse...He sought security in the execution of all who aroused his slightest suspicion.''

These reports forget to add that the power of Robespierre obtained no support, as did that of the Marius and Sulla to whom they allude, from a powerful army, but merely from the repeated adhesion of the members of the Convention.Without their extreme timidity the power of the dictator could not have lasted a single day.

Robespierre was one of the most odious tyrants of history, but he is distinguished from all others in that he made himself a tyrant without soldiers.

We may sum up his doctrines by saying that he was the most perfect incarnation, save perhaps Saint-Just, of the Jacobin faith, in all its narrow logic, its intense mysticism, and its inflexible rigidity.He has admirers even to-day.M.Hamel describes him as ``the martyr of Thermidor.'' There has been some talk of erecting a monument to him.I would willingly subscribe to such a purpose, feeling that it is useful to preserve proofs of the blindness of the crowd, and of the extraordinary docility of which an assembly is capable when the leader knows how to handle it.His statue would recall the passionate cries of admiration and enthusiasm with which the Convention acclaimed the most threatening measures of the dictator, on the very eve of the day when it was about to cast him down.

4.Fouquier-Tinville, Marat, Billaud-Varenne, &c.

I shall devote a paragraph to certain revolutionists who were famous for the development of their most sanguinary instincts.

Their ferocity was complicated by other sentiments, by fear and hatred, which could but fortify it.

Fouquier-Tinville, the public prosecutor of the Revolutionary Tribunal, was one of those who have left the most sinister memories.This magistrate, formerly reputed for his kindness, and who became the bloodthirsty creature whose memory evokes such repulsion, has already served me as an example in other works, when I have wished to show the transformation of certain natures in time of revolution.

Needy in the extreme at the moment of the fall of the monarchy, he had everything to hope from a social upheaval and nothing to lose.He was one of those men whom a period of disorder will always find ready to sustain it.

The Convention abandoned its powers to him.He had to pronounce upon the fate of nearly two thousand accused, among whom were Marie-Antoinette, the Girondists, Danton, Hebert, &c.He had all the suspects brought before him executed, and did not scruple to betray his former protectors.As soon as one of them fell into his power--Camille Desmoulins, Danton, or another--he would plead against him.

Fouquier-Tinville had a very inferior mind, which the Revolution brought to the top.Under normal conditions, hedged about by professional rules, his destiny would have been that of a peaceable and obscure magistrate.This was precisely the lot of his deputy, or substitute, at the Tribunal, Gilbert-Liendon.

``He should,'' writes M.Durel, ``have inspired the same horror as his colleague, yet he completed his career in the upper ranks of the Imperial magistracy.''

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 小捕快追妻记

    小捕快追妻记

    菜地里种出个小萝卜头,养大后,还帮他追个花魁当老婆,这人生似乎有点开挂了
  • 新生代海王

    新生代海王

    男人无论大小都有一颗征服海洋的心,当你生在一个以海洋为主的世界,你是选择去寻找新大陆,还是找个不为人知的小岛当自己的秘密花园?这一切尽在本书
  • 让绯闻升级

    让绯闻升级

    树叶渐渐泛黄,带着些凉意的秋风席卷着地上的落叶。林荫小道已经布满金色。他和她再次相遇时,只是草率的微笑点头,便了事。在混杂的娱乐圈里,他已经摸爬滚打了这么多年,终于成为了领头者,却还是抵不住诱惑。而她,正是他戒不掉的罂粟。他们不是不爱,而是真的没有勇气去爱。两人就像仙人掌一样,拥抱了只会遍体鳞伤。时间荏苒,两人犀利的棱角早已被磨平。物是人非,他给她的感觉再也不是那么陌生,而是荒唐的熟悉,让她连呼吸都变得困难。一段不被认可的爱会走的有多久?没人会给出答案,可能他们从一开始的相爱都是错的。曾经的懵懂青涩已经满身荆棘,可他们一点都不后悔,只因爱情没有对错。
  • 徐志摩诗文集

    徐志摩诗文集

    读书是一件辛苦的事,读书又是一件愉悦的事。读书是求知的理性选择,同时,读书又是人们内在自发的精神需求。不同的读书者总会有不同的读书体验,但对经典之藏、对精品之选的渴求却永远存在。
  • 青春有你足够

    青春有你足够

    不知道是从哪个时候开始,白珺得了自闭症,乔落也不知道是哪个时候喜欢上的她。每次见她一个人在的时候,总是会不由自主地靠近她,陪着她,尽管两个人坐在一起不说话十分的尴尬,但是乔落就是喜欢和她坐在学校的桂花树下。这一年她是复读的,但是依旧没有考上高中,更何况是考上和乔落一样的重点高中了……她的自闭症因为在乔落的陪伴下渐渐地好了,和乔落在一起时,心中总会有那一丝悸动。但是毕业象征着分别,她和乔落分开了,没有说再见。这一年,她读了市内的军校,遇见了一个性格冷淡却十分对她好的人。乔落也因为她读了军校,一直默默地守护在她的身旁……
  • 游游海南岛

    游游海南岛

    本书记录的图片张张精美,可以满足不同摄影水平爱好者的要求。她们还写了15个不为人知的故事,文笔也极其优美。各种自助行、背包客、跟团游,跟着她指点的路线行走就可以了。
  • 权妃

    权妃

    异世大陆,万族林立;位面交汇,强者云集。一朝穿越,她脱胎换骨,浴火洗礼,从此涅槃重生!北荒之境震乾坤,南漠之地傲苍穹。疏家废女逆天改了命,大陆一时间风起云涌。笑话!她可是现代二十一世纪的王牌特工,天生的王者,怎么会允许别人踩在她的头上!她倒要看看,谁还敢说她个不是。只不过……扬名立威这件事儿还是先放一放,能不能先告诉她睡了权九叔是怎么回事儿!啊!
  • 遇你如除却乌云

    遇你如除却乌云

    她,背负巨债,养爹养妹养全家,终为他人做嫁……他,身份成谜,冷情冷心冷世界,终为一人倾心……“在爱情里,从来没有先来后到,我若是认定,谁抢,都一样是死……”因为我,没有和人公平竞争的习惯!他,特殊的生长环境,养成他绝情的个性。可他遇到她,之后便懂了,人情冷暖。一物降一物,倒是应景得很……
  • 歌德传

    歌德传

    当日新月异的科技造福人类几代人后……当工业革命的熊熊烈火摧残了世界一百多年后……当环境被肆虐的体无完肤后……当人类还在为他们的贪婪和享受继续横行于大地后……世界正悄无声息的发生着变化!在愤怒爆发的那一刻……遥望海平面!世界即将灭亡!取而代之的是崭新的纪元!只有真正拥有信仰的人才能逃离那场世界末日!当然,还有一些足够幸运和自私的人!哭泣、欢笑、绝望、绝处逢生……曾今传说中,消失绝迹和被众人所遗忘的东西,都将在这次毁灭性的灾难中获得重生!生与死本来就是相互联系的。只有强大的新人类才能在乱世中存活下来……而站在最高点的……将是主宰这个新世界的王者!
  • 重生后我成了红颜祸水

    重生后我成了红颜祸水

    帝都出了名的冷面贵公子,不知道怎么就被那个声名狼藉的女人缠上了。所有人都为那女人捏了把汗,不知道哪一天没准她就会被一掌劈死。可是后来,他毁婚约,抗圣旨,执意娶她为妻!一向冷酷无情的常胜将军,变成了宠妻狂魔。在他眼中:温柔真挚,热烈似火是她沉着冷静,运筹帷幄是她铠甲披身,英姿飒爽是她独闯阎王阵,救他与生死是她