the origins of contemporary france-5-第93节
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even of all France that could read; it might hamper the prefect and
diminish his ascendancy。 From now on; it is the prefect alone who
replies to these questions; and of which the government gives an
analysis or tables of statistics;'38' then; the publication of these
ceases; decidedly; printing always has its drawbacks … manuscript
reports are much better; local affairs are no longer transacted
outside the bureaus; and are managed with closed doors; any report
that might spread outside the prefect's cabinet or that of the
minister; is carefully toned down or purposely stifled; and; under the
prefect's thumb; the general council becomes an automaton。
In private; dealing directly with the Emperor's representative; it
appears as if one is dealing directly with the Emperor。 Consider these
few words … in the presence of the Emperor; they carry an immeasurable
weight in the scales of contemporaries。 For them; he has every
attribute of Divinity; not only omnipotence and omnipresence; but
again omniscience; and; if he speaks to them; what they feel far
surpasses what they imagine。 When he visits a town and confers with
the authorities of the place on the interests of the commune or
department; his interlocutors are bewildered; they find him as well
informed as themselves; and more clear…sighted; it is he who explains
their affairs to them。 On arriving the evening before; he calls for
the summaries of facts and figures; every positive and technical
detail of information; reduced and classified according to the method
taught by himself and prescribed to his administrators。'39' During
the night he has read all this over and mastered it; in the morning;
at dawn; he has taken his ride on horseback; with extraordinary
promptness and accuracy; his topographical glance has discerned 〃the
best direction for the projected canal; the best site for the
construction of a factory; a harbor; or a dike。〃'40' To the
difficulties which confuse the best brains in the country; to much
debated; seemingly insoluble; questions; he at once presents the sole
practical solution; there it is; ready at hand; and the members of the
local council had not seen it; he makes them touch it with their
fingers。 They stand confounded and agape before the universal
competence of this wonder genius。 〃He's more than a man〃 exclaimed the
administrators of Dusseldorf to Beugnot。'41' 〃Yes;〃 replied Beugnot;
〃he's the devil!〃 In effect; he adds to mental ascendancy the
ascendancy of force; we always see beyond the great man in him the
terror…striking dominator; admiration begins or ends in fear; the soul
is completely subjugated; enthusiasm and servility; under his eye;
melt together into one sentiment of impassioned obedience and
unreserved submission。'42' Voluntarily and involuntarily; through
conviction; trembling; and fascinated; men abdicate their freedom of
will to his advantage。 The magical impression remains in their minds
after he has departed。 Even absent; even with those who have never
seen him; he maintains his prestige and communicates it to all who
command in his name。 Before the prefect; the baron; the count; the
councilor of state; the senator in embroidered uniform; gilded and
garnished with decorations; every municipal or general council loses
his free will and becomes incapable of saying no; only too glad if not
obliged to say yes 〃inopportunely;〃 to enter upon odious and
disagreeable undertakings; to simulate at one's own expense; and that
of others; excessive zeal and voluntary self…sacrifice; to vote for
and hurrah at patriotic subscriptions of which it must contribute the
greatest portion and for supplementary conscriptions'43' which seize
their sons that are except or bought out of service。'44' It allows
itself to be managed; it is simply one of the many wheels of our
immense machine; one which receives its impulsion elsewhere; and from
above; through the interposition of the prefect。 … But; except in rare
cases; when the interference of the government applies it to violent
and oppressive schemes; it is serviceable; fixed in position; and
confining itself to turning regularly and noiselessly in its little
circle; it may; in general; still render the double service demanded
of it in the year IX; by a patriotic minister。 According to the
definition which Chaptal then gave the general councils; fixing their
powers and competence; they exist for two purposes and only two:'45'
they must first 〃insure to the governed impartiality in the assessment
of taxes along with the verification of the use of the latest levies
in the payment of local expenses;〃 and next; they must; with
discretion and modesty; 〃obtain for the government the information
which alone enables it to provide for the necessities of each
department and improve the entire working of the public
administration。〃
VIII。 Excellence of Local Government after Napoleon。
The institution remains intact under the Restoration。 … Motives of the
governors。 … Excellence of the machine。 … Abdication of the
administrator。
Such is the spirit of the institution and such is its form。 After 1814
and 1815; after the fall of the Empire and the Restoration; the
institution subsists and remains as it was before in form and in
spirit: it is always the government which appoints and directs all the
representatives of local society; in the department; in the commune;
and in the intermediate circumscriptions; the prefect; sub…prefects;
mayors and assistants; the councilors of the department; of the
arrondissement and of the commune。 Whatever the ruling power may be it
is repugnant to any change; never does it voluntarily restrict itself
in its faculty of bestowing or withholding offices; authority;
consideration; influence; or salaries; every desirable and every
desired good thing; as far as it can; it retains these in its own
hands to distribute them as it pleases; and in its own interest to
bestow them on its partisans and to deprive its adversaries of them;
to attract clients and create minions。 The four thousand offices of
prefect; sub…prefect; and councilors of the prefecture; department;
and arrondissement; the four hundred thousand offices of mayor;
assistants; and municipal councilors; and added to these; the
innumerable salaried employments of auxiliary or secondary agents;
from the secretary…general of the prefecture down to the secretary of
the mayor; from the scribes and clerks of the prefecture and sub…
prefecture down to the staff of the municipal police and of the octroi
in the towns; from the city or department architect down to the lowest
road…surveyor; from the watchmen and superintendents of a canal or
harbor down to the field…guards and stone…breakers or the highway;
directly or indirectly; the constitutional government disposes of them
in the same fashion as the imperial government; with the same
interference in the most trifling details and in the most trifling
affair。 Commune or department; such local society remains under the
second Régime what it was under the first one; an extension of the
central society; an appendix of the State; an adjunct of the great
establishment of which the seat is at Paris。 In these adjuncts;
controlled from above; nothing is changed; neither the extent and
limits of the circumscription; nor the source and hierarchy of powers;
nor the theoretic framework; nor the practical mechanism; not even the
names。'46' After the prefects of Empire come the prefects of the
Restoration; the same in title and uniform; installed in the same
mansion; to do the same work; with equal zeal; that is to say; with
dangerous zeal; to such an extent that; on taking leave of their final
audience; on setting out for their department; M。 de Talleyrand; who
knows men and institutions profoundly; gives them; as his last
injunction; the following admirable order: 〃And; especially; no zeal!
〃 … According to the recommendation of Fouché; 〃the Bourbons slept in
the bed of Napoleon;〃 which was the bed of Louis XIV。; but larger and
more comfortable; widened by the Revolution and the Empire; adapted to
the figure of its latest occupant; and enlarged by him so as to spread
over the whole of France。 When; after twenty…five years of exile; one
returns home; it is pleasant to find such a bed in the house ready
made; taking down and remaking the old one would give double trouble;
moreover; in the old one; one was less at his ease; let us profit by
all that rebels and the usurper have done that was good。 In this
particular; not alone the king; but again the most antiquated of the
Bourbons are revolutionaries and Bonapartists; despotic traditionally;
and monopolists through their situation; they accept with no regrets
the systematic demolition effected by the Constituent Assembly; and
the systematic centralization instituted by the First Consul。 The Duc
d'Angoulême; when; in 1815; he was paraded about the countr