登陆注册
5010600000205

第205章

"Our towns," says the parliament of Brittany,[35] "are so filled with beggars it seems as if the measures taken to suppress mendicity only increase it." - "The principal highways," writes the intendant, "are infested with dangerous vagabonds and vagrants, actual beggars, which the police do not arrest, either through negligence or because their interference is not provoked by special solicitations."What would be done with them if they were arrested? They are too many, and there is no place to put them. And, moreover, how prevent people who live on alms from demanding alms? The effect, undoubtedly, is lamentable but inevitable. Poverty, to a certain extent, is a slow gangrene in which the morbid parts consume the healthy parts, the man scarcely able to subsist being eaten up alive by the man who has nothing to live on.

"The peasant is ruined, perishing, the victim of oppression by the multitude of the poor that lay waste the country and take refuge in the towns. Hence the mobs so prejudicial to public safety, that crowd of smugglers and vagrants, that large body of men who have become robbers and assassins, solely because they lack bread. This gives but a faint idea of the disorders I have seen with my own eyes[36]. The poverty of the rural districts, excessive in itself, becomes yet more so through the disturbances it engenders; we have not to seek elsewhere for frightful sources of mendicity and for all the vices."[37]

Of what avail are palliatives or violent proceedings against an evil which is in the blood, and which belongs to the very constitution of the social organism? What police force could effect anything in a parish in which one-quarter or one-third of its inhabitants have nothing to eat but that which they beg from door to door? At Argentré,[38] in Brittany, "a town without trade or industry, out of 2,300 inhabitants, more than one-half are anything else but well-off, and over 500 are reduced to beggary." At Dainville, in Artois, "out of 130 houses sixty are on the poor-list."[39] In Normandy, according to statements made by the curates, "of 900 parishioners in Saint-Malo, three-quarters can barely live and the rest are in poverty." "Of 1,500inhabitants in Saint-Patrice, 400 live on alms." Of 500 inhabitants in Saint-Laurent three-quarters live on alms." At Marboef, says a report, "of 500 persons inhabiting our parish, 100 are reduced to mendicity, and besides these, thirty or forty a day come to us from neighboring parishes."[40] At Bolbone in Languedoc[41] daily at the convent gate is "general almsgiving to 300 or 400 poor people, independent of that for the aged and the sick, which is more numerously attended." At Lyons, in 1787, "30,000 workmen depend on public charity for subsistence;" at Rennes, in 1788, after an inundation, "two-thirds of the inhabitants are in a state of destitution;"[42] at Paris, out of 650,000 inhabitants, the census of 1791 counts 118,784 as indigent.[43] - Let frost or hail come, as in 1788, let a crop fail, let bread cost four sous a pound, and let a workman in the charity-workshops earn only twelve sous a day,[44] can one imagine that people will resign themselves to death by starvation? Around Rouen, during the winter of 1788, the forests are pillaged in open day, the woods at Baguères are wholly cut away, the fallen trees are publicly sold by the marauders[45]. Both the famished and the marauders go together, necessity making itself the accomplice of crime. From province to province we can follow up their tracks: four months later, in the vicinity of Etampes, fifteen brigands break into four farmhouses during the night, while the farmers, threatened by incendiaries, are obliged to give, one three hundred francs, another five hundred, all the money, probably, they have in their coffers[46].

"Robbers, convicts, the worthless of every species," are to form the advance guard of insurrections and lead the peasantry to the extreme of violence[47]. After the sack of the Reveillon house in Paris it is remarked that "of the forty ringleaders arrested, there was scarcely one who was not an old offender, and either flogged or branded."[48]

In every revolution the dregs of society come to the surface. Never had these been visible before; like badgers in the woods, or rats in the sewers, they had remained in their burrows or in their holes. They issue from these in swarms, and suddenly, in Paris, what figures![49]

"Never had any like them been seen in daylight. . . Where do they come from? Who has brought them out of their obscure hiding places? . . .

strangers from everywhere, armed with clubs, ragged, . . . some almost naked, others oddly dressed" in incongruous patches and "frightful to look at," constitute the riotous chiefs or their subordinates, at six francs per head, behind which the people are to march.

"At Paris," says Mercier,[50] "the people are weak, pallid, diminutive, stunted," maltreated, "and, apparently, a class apart from other classes in the country. The rich and the great who possess equipages, enjoy the privilege of crushing them or of mutilating them in the streets. . . There is no convenience for pedestrians, no side-walks. Hundred victims die annually under the carriage wheels." "Isaw," says Arthur Young, "a poor child run over and probably killed, and have been myself several times been covered from head to toe with the water from the gutter. Should young (English) noblemen drive along London streets without sidewalks, in the same manner as their equals in Paris, they would speedily and justly get very well thrashed and rolled in the gutter."Mercier grows uneasy in the face of the immense populace:

同类推荐
  • 元史纪事本末

    元史纪事本末

    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。
  • 太乙金镜式经

    太乙金镜式经

    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。
  • 伤寒来苏集

    伤寒来苏集

    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。
  • 大方广普贤所说经

    大方广普贤所说经

    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。
  • The Call of the Wild

    The Call of the Wild

    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。
热门推荐
  • 枭宠贵后

    枭宠贵后

    一代新后梓潇,一朝崩逝,竟成了叛国罪首,鞭尸示众。与此同时,柳巷重生一孤苦无依的孤女栾孑。从此以后,怯懦胆小的孤女性情大变。有人说她全靠魅惑上位。那就让嘴闲的人见识一下什么叫长袖善舞,什么叫棋艺卓绝。无事生非触她霉头的,一个都活不过三更。本来风生水起的新生活,总会遇见令人头疼的冤家。闲庭信步桂味香,吃个荔枝也要遇见他虎口夺食。夺就夺吧,一脸嫌弃是怎么回事?不管了,反正生来大度,一口还回去就是了。一朝帝王选妃,重登皇室门庭。紧随其后的冤家一路披荆斩棘。金殿之上捏着她的下巴威胁,“你想成后,那我便是这世上的王!只为一生枭宠无双。”——上一世,她苦心经营只为贤后名声,最终落得尸身受辱。这一世,她只为报仇而来。欠过她的,剥皮抽筋也要讨回。欺过她的,以眼还眼不足为过。辱过她的,削筋剔骨难平怒火。世人再对她有失公允,那就是一个字,死。【小剧场】……“主公,皇后召见男子了。”“阉掉。”……“主公,皇后想见您了。”“阉……不,为朕更衣。”
  • 墨易染雪,终不复白

    墨易染雪,终不复白

    莫千雪一直以为她是辛易墨唯一的人,但是直到辛易墨的未婚妻回国,莫千雪才知道她只是一个可有可无的人。那就离开吧!一别两宽,各自安好。但是为什么辛易墨却不让离开了呢!辛易墨只是觉得莫千雪很省心,便留在了身边,可是他看着莫千雪和别的男子说话为什么感觉这么难受呢!直到辛易墨失去之后才慢慢发现,原来不知什么时候,那份习惯和感动早就变成了爱,只是有些晚了!
  • 南山有只羊

    南山有只羊

    季铮本以为自己死了,却不曾想又活了,变成了一个跟自己同名同姓同废物的人身上。本以为自己可以继续废物下去,没事练练功法,混个百来八十年的终老一生,没想到有人不让!这就来了气了,混日子都没法混,整天有人哔哔歪,那只能打到闭嘴了!
  • 俞安文集

    俞安文集

    生活随感,人生随悟,随遇而安,安得自在。
  • 定位:企业利润的GPS导航

    定位:企业利润的GPS导航

    本书围绕定位的价值、如何定位以及定位的误区陷阱等问题对"定位"展开全面、详细地论述,并结合我国企业的现状问题进行分析,指出目前我国企业的问题及出路,强调当人们的选择越来越多时,企业必须找到自己独特的价值,区隔其他产品,并将自己的品牌"钉"入消费者心中,抢占消费者的心智资源,使自己的产品成为消费者的首选。定位,是将自己的品牌定在消费者首选的位置,是在消费者心中的定位,其关键是找到自己产品的独特价值。
  • 天错之合

    天错之合

    严封对我来说,是一个迷一样的男人。他再度出现在我面前的时候,已经即将成为我的妹夫。他说,白舒秋,我怎么可能会对你一个离过婚的女人再有兴趣。可他不断地出现在我的生活中,把我原本平静的生活打破,也让我忍不住一再陷入他布下的天罗地网……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 兰因·璧月

    兰因·璧月

    兰因璧月是世间至美之花。兰因璧月是武林至尊圣物。那是每一个向往权利与荣华的人梦寐以求的。有这么两个人,视那淡泊名利仁善侠义为至愚至昧之事,他们的理想,莫过于拥兰因璧月入怀,立于武林之巅,俯视天下英豪。
  • 王国与风云

    王国与风云

    在最初,我只是一个被利用的工具。但后来,有多少人会认为,一个北方王国小伯爵的小儿子,可以拥有现在这般庞大的影响力?将如今的局势搅动地天翻地覆?其实我更愿意在学院当个教书匠,而不是带领你们征服这广袤的旧世界。告诉我,神父,你喜欢看见南方那座城市燃烧的火光吗?……当老猪受难了,小猪会嚎叫,但我可以让他们安静下来。我不可能再去了解那个老爷子,把我带到这儿时究竟在想什么,或许他只是为了他的实验,或许只是……那半个包子?如今我坐在了这个位子上,成为了你们想要的样子。告诉我,索菲亚,我还是一个好人吧?————记载于《圣·罗兰护国公伊恩·赫拉什·冯·阿卡尔》
  • 清末民初历史演义(套装共5册)

    清末民初历史演义(套装共5册)

    《清末民初历史演义全集》以小说的形式触及到晚清所谓“庇护制网络结构”与王朝衰败之间的关系。正如费正清在《剑桥中国晚清史》中指出,“清代中国政治行为的特殊型式即庇护制网络结构的形成”,是导致清末官场招权纳贿、任人唯亲、裙带关系盛行和政治腐化的根源。《清末民初历史演义》通过记述一系列重要政治人物的逸闻轶事,揭露并谴责了晚清官员的丑态和官场黑幕,同时也从历史的角度反思了庇护制网络结构不断超出可控范围使政治体制沦为“私利”工具的这一历史现象。这也使得《清末民初历史演义》超出一般谴责小说的范畴而具有了更加深刻的意义。  
  • scp诡秘收容

    scp诡秘收容

    我们随时准备跑路。这是某个无良人员的冒险故事。