The History of French Revolution. Taine Hippolyte

The History of French Revolution - Taine Hippolyte


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workmen, merchants, old and infirm men, are massacred in their houses; some, "who have been bedridden for many years, are dragged to the sills of their doors to be shot." Others are hung on the esplanade and at the Cours Neuf, while others have their noses, ears, feet, and hands cut off; and are hacked to pieces with sabers and scythes. Horrible stories, as is commonly the case, provoke the most atrocious acts.

      Thus do the violent measures of political and religious discord come to an end. The victor stops the mouth of the law when it is about to speak in his adversary's behalf; and, under the legal iniquity of an administration which he has himself established, he crushes those whom the illegal force of his own strong hand has stricken down.

      II.—Passion Supreme.

       Table of Contents

      Dread of hunger its most acute form.—The non-circulation of

       grain.—Intervention and usurpations of the electoral

       assemblies.—The rural code in Nivernais.—The four central

       provinces in 1790.—Why high prices are kept up.—Anxiety

       and insecurity.—Stagnation of the grain market.—The

       departments near Paris in 1791.—The supply and price of

       grain regulated by force.—The mobs in 1792.—Village armies

       of Eure and of the lower Seine and of Aisne.—Aggravation of

       the disorder after August 10th.—The dictatorship of

       unbridled instinct.—Its practical and political expedients.

      Passions of this stamp are the product of human cultivation, and break loose only within narrow bounds. Another passion exists which is neither historic nor local, but natural and universal, the most indomitable, most imperious, and most formidable of all, namely, the fear of hunger. There is no such thing with this passion as delay, or reflection, or looking beyond itself. Each commune or canton wants its bread, and a sure and unlimited supply of it. Our neighbor may provide for himself as best he can, but let us look out for ourselves first and then for other people. Each group of people, accordingly, through its own decrees, or by main force, keeps for itself whatever subsistence it possesses, or takes from others the subsistence which it does not possess. ii


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