第 83 节
作者:开了      更新:2021-02-18 23:01      字数:9322
  members; one of whom is thrown down; has his head shaved; and is
  promenaded through the village in derision。 …  When the small tax…
  payer defends himself in this manner; it is a warning that he must
  be humored。  The assessment; accordingly; in the village councils is
  made amongst a knot of cronies。  Each relieves himself of the burden
  by shoving it off on somebody else。  〃They tax the large
  proprietors; whom they want to make pay the whole tax。〃 The noble;
  the old seigneur; is the most taxed; and to such an extent that in
  many places his income does not suffice to pay his quota。 …  In the
  next place they make themselves out poor; and falsify or elude the
  prescriptions of the law。  〃In most of the municipalities; houses;
  tenements; and factories'52' are estimated according to the value of
  the area they cover; and considered as land of the first class;
  which reduces the quota to almost nothing。〃 And this fraud is not
  practiced in the villages alone。  〃Communes of eight or ten thousand
  souls might be cited which have arranged matters so well amongst
  themselves in this respect that not a house is to be found worth
  more than fifty sous。〃  …  Last expedient of all; the commune defers
  as long as it can the preparation of its tax…rolls。  On the 30th of
  January; 1792; out of 40;211; there are only 2;560 which are
  complete; on the 5th of October; 1792; the schedules are not made
  out in 4;800 municipalities; and it must be noted that all this
  relates to a term of administration which has been finished for more
  than nine months。  At the same date; there are more than six
  thousand communes which have not yet begun to collect the land…tax
  of 1791; and more than fifteen thousand communes which have not yet
  begun to collect the personal tax; the Treasury and the departments
  have not yet received 152;000;000 francs; there being still
  222;000;000 to collect。  On the 1st February; 1793; there still
  remains due on the same period 161;000;000 francs; while of the
  50;000;000 assessed in 1790; to replace the salt…tax and other
  suppressed duties; only 2;000;000 have been collected。  Finally; at
  the same date; out of the two direct taxes of 1792; which should
  produce 300;000;000; less than 4;000;000 have been received。  …  It
  is a maxim of the debtor that he must put off payment as long as
  possible。  Whoever the creditor may be; the State or a private
  individual; a leg or a wing may be saved by dint of procrastination。
  The maxim is true; and; on this occasion; success once more
  demonstrates its soundness。  During the year 1792; the peasant
  begins to discharge a portion of his arrears; but it is with
  assignats。  In January; February; and March; 1792; the assignats
  diminish thirty…four; forty…four; and forty…five per cent。  in
  value; in January; February; and March; 1793; forty…seven and fifty
  percent。; in May; June; and July; 1793; fifty…four; sixty; and
  sixty…seven per cent。  Thus has the old credit of the State melted
  away in its hands; those who have held on to their crowns gain fifty
  per cent。  and more。  Again; the greater their delay the more their
  debts diminish; and already; on the strength of this; the way to
  release themselves at half…price is found。
  Meanwhile; hands are laid on the badly defended landed property of
  this feeble creditor。  …  It is always difficult for rude brains to
  form any conception of the vague; invisible; abstract entity called
  the State; to regard it as a veritable personage and a legitimate
  proprietor; especially when they are persistently told that the
  State is everybody。  The property of all is the property of each;
  and as the forests belong to the public; the first…comer has a right
  to profit by them。  In the month of December; 1789;'53' bands of
  sixty men or more chop down the trees in the Bois de Boulogne and at
  Vincennes。  In April; 1790; in the forest of Saint…Germain; 〃the
  patrols arrest all kinds of delinquents day and night:〃 handed over
  to the National Guards and municipalities in the vicinity; these are
  〃almost immediately released; even with the wood which they have cut
  down against the law。〃 iii There is no means of repressing 〃the
  reiterated threats and insults of the low class of people。〃 A mob of
  women; urged on by an old French guardsman; come and pillage under
  the nose of the escort a load of faggots confiscated for the benefit
  of a hospital; and in the forest itself; bands of marauders fire
  upon the patrols。  …  At Chantilly; three game…keepers are mortally
  wounded;'54' both parks are devastated for eighteen consecutive
  days; the game is all killed; transported to Paris and sold。  …  At
  Chambord the lieutenant of the constabulary writes to announce his
  powerlessness; the woods are ravaged and even burnt; the poachers
  are now masters of the situation; breaches in the wall are made by
  them; and the water from the pond is drawn off to enable them to
  catch the fish。  …  At Claix; in Dauphiny; an officer of the
  jurisdiction of woods and forests; who has secured an injunction
  against the inhabitants for cutting down trees on leased ground; is
  seized; tortured during five hours; and then stoned to death。  …  In
  vain does the National Assembly issue three decrees and regulations;
  placing the forests under the supervision and protection of
  administrative bodies;  …  he latter are too much afraid of their
  charge。  Between the central power; which is weak and remote; and
  the people; present and strong; they always decide in favor of the
  latter。  Not one of the five municipalities surrounding Chantilly is
  disposed to assist in the execution of the laws; while the
  directories of the district and department respectively; sanction
  their inertia。 …  Similarly; near Toulouse;'55' where the
  magnificent forest of Larramet is devastated in open day and by an
  armed force; where the wanton destruction by the populace leaves
  nothing of the underwood and shrubbery but 〃a few scattered trees
  and the remains of trunks cut at different heights;〃 the
  municipalities of Toulouse and of Tournefeuille refuse all aid。  And
  worse still; in other provinces; as for instance in Alsace; 〃whole
  municipalities; with their mayors at the head; cut down woods which
  are confided to them; and carry them off。〃'56'  If some tribunal is
  disposed to enforce the law; it is to no purpose; it takes the risk;
  either of not being allowed to give judgment; or of being
  constrained to reverse its decision。  At Paris the judgment prepared
  against the incendiaries of the tax…offices could not be given。  At
  Montargis; the sentence pronounced against the marauders who had
  stolen cartloads of wood in the national forests had to be revised;
  and by the judges themselves。  The moment the tribunal announced the
  confiscation of the carts and horses which had been seized; there
  arose a furious outcry against it; the court was insulted by those
  present; the condemned parties openly declared that they would have
  their carts and horses back by force。  Upon this 〃the judges
  withdrew into the council…chamber; and when soon after they resumed
  their seats; that part of their decision which related to the
  confiscation was canceled。〃
  And yet this administration of justice; ludicrous and flouted as it
  may be; is still a sort of barrier。  When it falls; along with the
  Government; everything is exposed to plunder; and there is no such
  thing as public property。  …  After August 10; 1792; each commune or
  individual appropriates whatever comes in its way; either products
  or the soil itself。  Some of the plunderers go so far as to say
  that; since the Government no longer represses them; they act under
  its authority。'57'  〃They have destroyed even the recent plantation
  of young trees。〃 〃One of the villages near Fontainebleau cleared off
  and divided an entire grove。  At Rambouillet; from August 10th to
  the end of October;〃 the loss is more than 100;000 crowns; the rural
  agitators demand with threats the partition of the forest among the
  inhabitants。  〃The destruction is enormous〃 everywhere; prolonged
  for entire months; and of such a kind; says the minister; as to dry
  up this source of public revenue for a long time to come。  …
  Communal property is no more respected than national property。  In
  each commune; these bold and needy folk; the rural populace; are
  privileged to enjoy and make the most of it。  Not content with
  enjoying it; they desire to acquire ownership of it; and; for days
  after the King's fall; the Legislative Assembly; losing its footing
  in the universal breaking up; empowers the indigent to put in force
  the agrarian law。  Henceforth it suffices in any commune for one…
  third of its inhabitants of both sexes; servants; common laborers;
  shepherds; farm…hands or cowherds; and even paupers; to demand a
  partition of the communal possessions。  All that the commune owns;
  save public edifices and woods; is to be cut up into as many equal
  lots as there are heads; the lots to be drawn