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zanoni-第93部分

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Robespierre who ordains it。  Is there a new tax?it is

Robespierre who ruins you。  They call me tyrant!and why?

Because I have acquired some influence; but how?in speaking

truth; and who pretends that truth is to be without force in the

mouths of the Representatives of the French people?  Doubtless;

truth has its power; its rage; its despotism; its accents;

touching; terrible; which resound in the pure heart as in the

guilty conscience; and which Falsehood can no more imitate than

Salmoneus could forge the thunderbolts of Heaven。  What am I whom

they accuse?  A slave of liberty;a living martyr of the

Republic; the victim as the enemy of crime!  All ruffianism

affronts me; and actions legitimate in others are crimes in me。

It is enough to know me to be calumniated。  It is in my very zeal

that they discover my guilt。  Take from me my conscience; and I

should be the most miserable of men!〃



He paused; and Couthon wiped his eyes; and St。 Just murmured

applause as with stern looks he gazed on the rebellious Mountain;

and there was a dead; mournful; and chilling silence through the

audience。  The touching sentiment woke no echo。



The orator cast his eyes around。  Ho! he will soon arouse that

apathy。  He proceeds; he praises; he pities himself no more。  He

denounces;he accuses。  Overflooded with his venom; he vomits it

forth on all。  At home; abroad; finances; war;on all!  Shriller

and sharper rose his voice;



〃A conspiracy exists against the public liberty。  It owes its

strength to a criminal coalition in the very bosom of the

Convention; it has accomplices in the bosom of the Committee of

Public Safety。。。What is the remedy to this evil?  To punish the

traitors; to purify this committee; to crush all factions by the

weight of the National Authority; to raise upon their ruins the

power of Liberty and Justice。  Such are the principles of that

Reform。  Must I be ambitious to profess them?then the

principles are proscribed; and Tyranny reigns amongst us!  For

what can you object to a man who is in the right; and has at

least this knowledge;he knows how to die for his native land!

I am made to combat crime; and not to govern it。  The time; alas!

is not yet arrived when men of worth can serve with impunity

their country。  So long as the knaves rule; the defenders of

liberty will be only the proscribed。〃



For two hours; through that cold and gloomy audience; shrilled

the Death…speech。  In silence it began; in silence closed。  The

enemies of the orator were afraid to express resentment; they

knew not yet the exact balance of power。  His partisans were

afraid to approve; they knew not whom of their own friends and

relations the accusations were designed to single forth。  〃Take

care!〃 whispered each to each; 〃it is thou whom he threatens。〃

But silent though the audience; it was; at the first; wellnigh

subdued。  There was still about this terrible man the spell of an

overmastering will。  Alwaysthough not what is called a great

oratorresolute; and sovereign in the use of words; words seemed

as things when uttered by one who with a nod moved the troops of

Henriot; and influenced the judgment of Rene Dumas; grim

President of the Tribunal。  Lecointre of Versailles rose; and

there was an anxious movement of attention; for Lecointre was one

of the fiercest foes of the tyrant。  What was the dismay of the

Tallien faction; what the complacent smile of Couthon;when

Lecointre demanded only that the oration should be printed!  All

seemed paralyzed。  At length Bourdon de l'Oise; whose name was

doubly marked in the black list of the Dictator; stalked to the

tribune; and moved the bold counter…resolution; that the speech

should be referred to the two committees whom that very speech

accused。  Still no applause from the conspirators; they sat

torpid as frozen men。  The shrinking Barrere; ever on the prudent

side; looked round before he rose。  He rises; and sides with

Lecointre!  Then Couthon seized the occasion; and from his seat

(a privilege permitted only to the paralytic philanthropist) (M。

Thiers in his History; volume iv。 page 79; makes a curious

blunder:  he says; 〃Couthon s'elance a la tribune。'  (Couthon

darted towards the tribune。)  Poor Couthon! whose half body was

dead; and who was always wheeled in his chair into the

Convention; and spoke sitting。); and with his melodious voice

sought to convert the crisis into a triumph。



He demanded; not only that the harangue should be printed; but

sent to all the communes and all the armies。  It was necessary to

soothe a wronged and ulcerated heart。  Deputies; the most

faithful; had been accused of shedding blood。  〃Ah! if HE had

contributed to the death of one innocent man; he should immolate

himself with grief。〃  Beautiful tenderness!and while he spoke;

he fondled the spaniel in his bosom。  Bravo; Couthon!

Robespierre triumphs! The reign of Terror shall endure!  The old

submission settles dovelike back in the assembly!  They vote the

printing of the Death…speech; and its transmission to all the

municipalities。  From the benches of the Mountain; Tallien;

alarmed; dismayed; impatient; and indignant; cast his gaze where

sat the strangers admitted to hear the debates; and suddenly he

met the eyes of the Unknown who had brought to him the letter

from Teresa de Fontenai the preceding day。  The eyes fascinated

him as he gazed。  In aftertimes he often said that their regard;

fixed; earnest; half…reproachful; and yet cheering and

triumphant; filled him with new life and courage。  They spoke to

his heart as the trumpet speaks to the war…horse。  He moved from

his seat; he whispered with his allies:  the spirit he had drawn

in was contagious; the men whom Robespierre especially  had

denounced; and who saw the sword over their heads; woke from

their torpid trance。  Vadier; Cambon; Billaud…Varennes; Panis;

Amar; rose at once;all at once demanded speech。  Vadier is

first heard; the rest succeed。  It burst forth; the Mountain;

with its fires and consuming lava; flood upon flood they rush; a

legion of Ciceros upon the startled Catiline!  Robespierre

falters; hesitates;would qualify; retract。  They gather new

courage from his new fears; they interrupt him; they drown his

voice; they demand the reversal of the motion。  Amar moves again

that the speech be referred to the Committees; to the

Committees;to his enemies!  Confusion and noise and clamour!

Robespierre wraps himself in silent and superb disdain。  Pale;

defeated; but not yet destroyed; he stands;a storm in the midst

of storm!



The motion is carried。  All men foresee in that defeat the

Dictator's downfall。  A solitary cry rose from the galleries; it

was caught up; it circled through the hall; the audience:  〃A bas

le tyrant!  Vive la republique!〃  (Down with the tyrant!  Hurrah

for the republic!)





CHAPTER 7。XII。



Aupres d'un corps aussi avili que la Convention; il restait des

chances pour que Robespierre sortit vainqueur de cette lutte。

Lacretelle; volume xii。



(Amongst a body so debased as the Convention; there still

remained some chances that Robespierre would come off victor in

the struggle。)



As Robespierre left the hall; there was a dead and ominous

silence in the crowd without。  The herd; in every country; side

with success; and the rats run from the falling tower。  But

Robespierre; who wanted courage; never wanted pride; and the last

often supplied the place of the first; thoughtfully; and with an

impenetrable brow; he passed through the throng; leaning on St。

Just; Payan and his brother following him。



As they got into the open space; Robespierre abruptly broke the

silence。



〃How many heads were to fall upon the tenth?〃



〃Eighty;〃 replied Payan。



〃Ah; we must not tarry so long; a day may lose an empire:

terrorism must serve us yet!〃



He was silent a few moments; and his eyes roved suspiciously

through the street。



〃St。 Just;〃 he said abruptly; 〃they have not found this

Englishman whose revelations; or whose trial; would have crushed

the Amars and the Talliens。  No; no! my Jacobins themselves are

growing dull and blind。  But they have seized a woman;only a

woman!〃



〃A woman's hand stabbed Marat;〃 said St。 Just。  Robespierre

stopped short; and breathed hard。



〃St。 Just;〃 said he; 〃when this peril is past; we will found the

Reign of Peace。  There shall be homes and gardens set apart for

the old。  David is already designing the porticos。  Virtuous men

shall be appointed to instruct the young。  All vice and disorder

shall be NOT exterminatedno; no! only banished!  We must not

die yet。  Posterity cannot judge us till our work is done。  We

have recalled L'Etre Supreme; we must now remodel this corrupted

world。  All shall be love and brotherhood; andho!  Simon!

Simon!hold!  Your pencil; St。 Just!〃  And Robespierre wrote

hastily。  〃This to Citizen President Dumas。  Go with it quick;
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