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第26节

bureaucracy-第26节

小说: bureaucracy 字数: 每页4000字

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Dutocq。 〃I must first see how the land lays in the bureau; we will

talk about it later〃 'goes off'。



Bixiou 'alone in the corridor'。 〃That fish; for he's more a fish than

a bird; that Dutocq has a good idea in his headI'm sure I don't know

where he stole it。 If Baudoyer should succeed La Billardiere it would

be fun; more than funprofit!〃 'Returns to the office。' 〃Gentlemen; I

announce glorious changes; papa La Billardiere is dead; really dead;

no nonsense; word of honor! Godard is off on business for our

excellent chief Baudoyer; successor presumptive to the deceased。〃

'Minard; Desroys; and Colleville raise their heads in amazement; they

all lay down their pens; and Colleville blows his nose。' 〃Every one of

us is to be promoted! Colleville will be under…head…clerk at the very

least。 Minard may have my place as chief clerkwhy not? he is quite

as dull as I am。 Hey; Minard; if you should get twenty…five hundred

francs a…year your little wife would be uncommonly pleased; and you

could buy yourself a pair of boots now and then。〃



Colleville。 〃But you don't get twenty…five hundred francs。〃



Bixiou。 〃Monsieur Dutocq gets that in Rabourdin's office; why

shouldn't I get it this year? Monsieur Baudoyer gets it。〃



Colleville。 〃Only through the influence of Monsieur Saillard。 No other

chief clerk gets that in any of the divisions。〃



Paulmier。 〃Bah! Hasn't Monsieur Cochin three thousand? He succeeded

Monsieur Vavasseur; who served ten years under the Empire at four

thousand。 His salary was dropped to three when the King first

returned; then to two thousand five hundred before Vavasseur died。 But

Monsieur Cochin; who succeeded him; had influence enough to get the

salary put back to three thousand。〃



Colleville。 〃Monsieur Cochin signs E。 A。 L。 Cochin (he is named Emile…

Adolphe…Lucian); which; when anagrammed; gives Cochineal。 Now observe;

he's a partner in a druggist's business in the rue des Lombards; the

Maison Matifat; which made its fortune by that identical colonial

product。〃



Baudoyer 'entering'。 〃Monsieur Chazelle; I see; is not here; you will

be good enough to say I asked for him; gentlemen。〃



Bixiou 'who had hastily stuck a hat on Chazelle's chair when he heard

Baudoyer's step'。 〃Excuse me; Monsieur; but Chazelle has gone to the

Rabourdins' to make an inquiry。〃



Chazelle 'entering with his hat on his head; and not seeing Baudoyer'。

〃La Billardiere is done for; gentlemen! Rabourdin is head of the

division and Master of petitions; he hasn't stolen HIS promotion;

that's very certain。〃



Baudoyer 'to Chazelle'。 〃You found that appointment in your second

hat; I presume〃 'points to the hat on the chair'。 〃This is the third

time within a month that you have come after nine o'clock。 If you

continue the practice you will get onelsewhere。〃 'To Bixiou; who is

reading the newspaper。' 〃My dear Monsieur Bixiou; do pray leave the

newspapers to these gentlemen who are going to breakfast; and come

into my office for your orders for the day。 I don't know what Monsieur

Rabourdin wants with Gabriel; he keeps him to do his private errands;

I believe。 I've rung three times and can't get him。〃 'Baudoyer and

Bixiou retire into the private office。'



Chazelle。 〃Damned unlucky!〃



Paulmier 'delighted to annoy Chazelle'。 〃Why didn't you look about

when you came into the room? You might have seen the elephant; and the

hat too; they are big enough to be visible。〃



Chazelle 'dismally'。 〃Disgusting business! I don't see why we should

be treated like slaves because the government gives us four francs and

sixty…five centimes a day。〃



Fleury 'entering'。 〃Down with Baudoyer! hurrah for Rabourdin!that's

the cry in the division。〃



Chazelle 'getting more and more angry'。 〃Baudoyer can turn off me if

he likes; I sha'n't care。 In Paris there are a thousand ways of

earning five francs a day; why; I could earn that at the Palais de

Justice; copying briefs for the lawyers。〃



Paulmier 'still prodding him'。 〃It is very easy to say that; but a

government place is a government place; and that plucky Colleville;

who works like a galley…slave outside of this office; and who could

earn; if he lost his appointment; more than his salary; prefers to

keep his place。 Who the devil is fool enough to give up his

expectations?〃



Chazelle 'continuing his philippic'。 〃You may not be; but I am! We

have no chances at all。 Time was when nothing was more encouraging

than a civil…service career。 So many men were in the army that there

were not enough for the government work; the maimed and the halt and

the sick ones; like Paulmier; and the near…sighted ones; all had their

chance of a rapid promotion。 But now; ever since the Chamber invented

what they called special training; and the rules and regulations for

civil…service examiners; we are worse off than common soldiers。 The

poorest places are at the mercy of a thousand mischances because we

are now ruled by a thousand sovereigns。〃



Bixiou 'returning'。 〃Are you crazy; Chazelle? Where do you find a

thousand sovereigns?not in your pocket; are they?〃



Chazelle。 〃Count them up。 There are four hundred over there at the end

of the pont de la Concorde (so called because it leads to the scene of

perpetual discord between the Right and Left of the Chamber); three

hundred more at the end of the rue de Tournon。 The court; which ought

to count for the other three hundred; has seven hundred parts less

power to get a man appointed to a place under government than the

Emperor Napoleon had。〃



Fleury。 〃All of which signifies that in a country where there are

three powers you may bet a thousand to one that a government clerk who

has no influence but his own merits to advance him will remain in

obscurity。〃



Bixiou 'looking alternately at Chazelle and Fleury'。 〃My sons; you

have yet to learn that in these days the worst state of life is the

state of belonging to the State。〃



Fleury。 〃Because it has a constitutional government。〃



Colleville。 〃Gentlemen; gentlemen! no politics!〃



Bixiou。 〃Fleury is right。 Serving the State in these days is no longer

serving a prince who knew how to punish and reward。 The State now is

EVERYBODY。 Everybody of course cares for nobody。 Serve everybody; and

you serve nobody。 Nobody is interested in nobody; the government clerk

lives between two negations。 The world has neither pity nor respect;

neither heart nor head; everybody forgets to…morrow the service of

yesterday。 Now each one of you may be; like Monsieur Baudoyer; an

administrative genius; a Chateaubriand of reports; a Bossouet of

circulars; the Canalis of memorials; the gifted son of diplomatic

despatches; but I tell you there is a fatal law which interferes with

all administrative genius;I mean the law of promotion by average。

This average is based on the statistics of promotion and the

statistics of mortality combined。 It is very certain that on entering

whichever section of the Civil Service you please at the age of

eighteen; you can't get eighteen hundred francs a year till you reach

the age of thirty。 Now there's no free and independent career in

which; in the course of twelve years; a young man who has gone through

the grammar…school; been vaccinated; is exempt from military service;

and possesses all his faculties (I don't mean transcendent ones) can't

amass a capital of forty…five thousand francs in centimes; which

represents a permanent income equal to our salaries; which are; after

all; precarious。 In twelve years a grocer can earn enough to give him

ten thousand francs a year; a painter can daub a mile of canvas and be

decorated with the Legion of honor; or pose as a neglected genius。 A

literary man becomes professor of something or other; or a journalist

at a hundred francs for a thousand lines; he writes 〃feuilletons;〃 or

he gets into Saint…Pelagie for a brilliant article that offends the

Jesuits;which of course is an immense benefit to him and makes him a

politician at once。 Even a lazy man; who does nothing but make debts;

has time to marry a widow who pays them; a priest finds time to become

a bishop 〃in partibus。〃 A sober; intelligent young fellow; who begins

with a small capital as a money…changer; soon buys a share in a

broker's business; and; to go even lower; a petty clerk becomes a

notary; a rag…picker lays by two or three thousand francs a year; and

the poorest workmen often become manufacturers; whereas; in the

rotatory movement of this present civilization; which mistakes

perpetual division and redivision for progress; an unhappy civil

service clerk; like Chazelle for instance; is forced to dine for

twenty…two sous a meal; struggles with his tailor and bootmaker; gets

into debt; and is an absolute nothing; worse than that; he becomes an

idiot! Come; gentlemen; now's the time to make a stand! Let us all

give in our resignations! Fleury; Chazelle; fling yourselves into

other employme

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