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zanoni-第79部分

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hatred of the excesses that tempt to love and wine; would; had he

died five years earlier; have left him the model for prudent

fathers and careful citizens to place before their sons。  Such

was the man who seemed to have no vice; till circumstance; that

hotbed; brought forth the two which; in ordinary times; lie ever

the deepest and most latent in a man's heart;Cowardice and

Envy。  To one of these sources is to be traced every murder that

master…fiend committed。  His cowardice was of a peculiar and

strange sort; for it was accompanied with the most unscrupulous

and determined WILL;a will that Napoleon reverenced; a will of

iron; and yet nerves of aspen。  Mentally; he was a hero;

physically; a dastard。  When the veriest shadow of danger

threatened his person; the frame cowered; but the will swept the

danger to the slaughter…house。  So there he sat; bolt upright;

his small; lean fingers clenched convulsively; his sullen eyes

straining into space; their whites yellowed with streaks of

corrupt blood; his ears literally moving to and fro; like the

ignobler animals'; to catch every sound;a Dionysius in his

cave; but his posture decorous and collected; and every formal

hair in its frizzled place。



〃Yes; yes;〃 he said in a muttered tone; 〃I hear them; my good

Jacobins are at their post on the stairs。  Pity they swear so!  I

have a law against oaths;the manners of the poor and virtuous

people must be reformed。  When all is safe; an example or two

amongst those good Jacobins would make effect。  Faithful fellows;

how they love me!  Hum!what an oath was that!they need not

swear so loud;upon the very staircase; too!  It detracts from

my reputation。  Ha! steps!〃



The soliloquist glanced at the opposite mirror; and took up a

volume; he seemed absorbed in its contents; as a tall fellow; a

bludgeon in his hand; a girdle adorned with pistols round his

waist; opened the door; and announced two visitors。  The one was

a young man; said to resemble Robespierre in person; but of a far

more decided and resolute expression of countenance。  He entered

first; and; looking over the volume in Robespierre's hand; for

the latter seemed still intent on his lecture; exclaimed;



〃What!  Rousseau's Heloise?  A love…tale!〃



〃Dear Payan; it is not the love;it is the philosophy that

charms me。  What noble sentiments!what ardour of virtue!  If

Jean Jacques had but lived to see this day!〃



While the Dictator thus commented on his favourite author; whom

in his orations he laboured hard to imitate; the second visitor

was wheeled into the room in a chair。  This man was also in what;

to most; is the prime of life;namely; about thirty…eight; but

he was literally dead in the lower limbs:  crippled; paralytic;

distorted; he was yet; as the time soon came to tell him;a

Hercules in Crime!  But the sweetest of human smiles dwelt upon

his lips; a beauty almost angelic characterised his features

(〃Figure d'ange;〃 says one of his contemporaries; in describing

Couthon。  The address; drawn up most probably by Payan (Thermidor

9); after the arrest of Robespierre; thus mentions his crippled

colleague:  〃Couthon; ce citoyen vertueux; QUI N'A QUE LE COEUR

ET LA TETE DE VIVANS; mais qui les a brulants de patriotisme〃

(Couthon; that virtuous citizen; who has but the head and the

heart of the living; yet possesses these all on flame with

patriotism。)); an inexpressible aspect of kindness; and the

resignation of suffering but cheerful benignity; stole into the

hearts of those who for the first time beheld him。  With the most

caressing; silver; flute…like voice; Citizen Couthon saluted the

admirer of Jean Jacques。



〃Nay;do not say that it is not the LOVE that attracts thee; it

IS the love! but not the gross; sensual attachment of man for

woman。  No! the sublime affection for the whole human race; and

indeed; for all that lives!〃



And Citizen Couthon; bending down; fondled the little spaniel

that he invariably carried in his bosom; even to the Convention;

as a vent for the exuberant sensibilities which overflowed his

affectionate heart。  (This tenderness for some pet animal was by

no means peculiar to Couthon; it seems rather a common fashion

with the gentle butchers of the Revolution。  M。 George Duval

informs us (〃Souvenirs de la Terreur;〃 volume iii page 183) that

Chaumette had an aviary; to which he devoted his harmless

leisure; the murderous Fournier carried on his shoulders a pretty

little squirrel; attached by a silver chain; Panis bestowed the

superfluity of his affections upon two gold pheasants; and Marat;

who would not abate one of the three hundred thousand heads he

demanded; REARED DOVES!  Apropos of the spaniel of Couthon; Duval

gives us an amusing anecdote of Sergent; not one of the least

relentless agents of the massacre of September。  A lady came to

implore his protection for one of her relations confined in the

Abbaye。  He scarcely deigned to speak to her。  As she retired in

despair; she trod by accident on the paw of his favourite

spaniel。  Sergent; turning round; enraged and furious; exclaimed;

〃MADAM; HAVE YOU NO HUMANITY?〃)



〃Yes; for all that lives;〃 repeated Robespierre; tenderly。  〃Good

Couthon;poor Couthon!  Ah; the malice of men!how we are

misrepresented!  To be calumniated as the executioners of our

colleagues!  Ah; it is THAT which pierces the heart!  To be an

object of terror to the enemies of our country;THAT is noble;

but to be an object of terror to the good; the patriotic; to

those one loves and reveres;THAT is the most terrible of human

tortures at least; to a susceptible and honest heart!〃  (Not to

fatigue the reader with annotations; I may here observe that

nearly every sentiment ascribed in the text to Robespierre is to

be found expressed in his various discourses。)



〃How I love to hear him!〃 ejaculated Couthon。



〃Hem!〃 said Payan; with some impatience。  〃But now to business!〃



〃Ah; to business!〃 said Robespierre; with a sinister glance from

his bloodshot eyes。



〃The time has come;〃 said Payan; 〃when the safety of the Republic

demands a complete concentration of its power。  These brawlers of

the Comite du Salut Public can only destroy; they cannot

construct。  They hated you; Maximilien; from the moment you

attempted to replace anarcy by institutions。  How they mock at

the festival which proclaimed the acknowledgment of a Supreme

Being:  they would have no ruler; even in heaven!  Your clear and

vigorous intellect saw that; having wrecked an old world; it

became necessary to shape a new one。  The first step towards

construction must be to destroy the destroyers。  While we

deliberate; your enemies act。  Better this very night to attack

the handful of gensdarmes that guard them; than to confront the

battalions they may raise to…morrow。〃



〃No;〃 said Robespierre; who recoiled before the determined spirit

of Payan; 〃I have a better and safer plan。  This is the 6th of

Thermidor; on the 10thon the 10th; the Convention go in a body

to the Fete Decadaire。  A mob shall form; the canonniers; the

troops of Henriot; the young pupils de l'Ecole de Mars; shall mix

in the crowd。  Easy; then; to strike the conspirators whom we

shall designate to our agents。  On the same day; too; Fouquier

and Dumas shall not rest; and a sufficient number of 'the

suspect' to maintain salutary awe; and keep up the revolutionary

excitement; shall perish by the glaive of the law。  The 10th

shall be the great day of action。  Payan; of these last culprits;

have you prepared a list?〃



〃It is here;〃 returned Payan; laconically; presenting a paper。



Robespierre glanced over it rapidly。  〃Collot d'Herbois!good!

Barrere!ay; it was Barrere who said; 'Let us strike:  the dead

alone never return。'  (〃Frappons! il n'y a que les morts qui ne

revient pas。〃Barrere。)  Vadier; the savage jester!goodgood!

Vadier of the Mountain。  He has called me 'Mahomet!'  Scelerat!

blasphemer!〃



〃Mahomet is coming to the Mountain;〃 said Couthon; with his

silvery accent; as he caressed his spaniel。



〃But how is this?  I do not see the name of Tallien?  Tallien;I

hate that man; that is;〃 said Robespierre; correcting himself

with the hypocrisy or self…deceit which those who formed the

council of this phrase…monger exhibited habitually; even among

themselves;〃that is; Virtue and our Country hate him!  There is

no man in the whole Convention who inspires me with the same

horror as Tallien。  Couthon; I see a thousand Dantons where

Tallien sits!〃



〃Tallien has the only head that belongs to this deformed body;〃

said Payan; whose ferocity and crime; like those of St。 Just;

were not unaccompanied by talents of no common order。  〃Were it

not better to draw away the head; to win; to buy him; for the

time; and dispose of him better when left alone?  He may hate

YOU; but he loves MONEY!〃



〃No;〃 said Robespierre; writing down the name of Jean Lambert

Tallie
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