登陆注册
5288300000028

第28章 V(4)

The burgraves of the party of Order did not for a moment deceive themselves on the confidence that this unbosoming deserved. They were long blase on oaths; they numbered among themselves veterans and virtuosi of perjury. The passage about the army did not, however, escape them. They observed with annoyance that the message, despite its prolix enumeration of the lately enacted laws, passed, with affected silence, over the most important of all, the election law, and, moreover, in case no revision of the Constitution was held, left the choice of the President, in 1852, with the people. The election law was the ball-and-chain to the feet of the party of Order, that hindered them from walking, and now assuredly from storming. Furthermore, by the official disbandment of the "Society of December 10," and the dismissal of the Minister of War, d'Hautpoul, Bonaparte had, with his own hands, sacrificed the scapegoats on the altar of the fatherland. He had turned off the expected collision. Finally, the party of Order itself anxiously sought to avoid every decisive conflict with the Executive, to weaken and to blur it over. Fearing to lose its conquests over the revolution, it let its rival gather the fruits thereof. "France demands, above all things, peace," with this language had the party of Order been apostrophizing the revolution, since February; with this language did Bonaparte's message now apostrophize the party of Order:

"France demands, above all things, peace." Bonaparte committed acts that aimed at usurpation, but the party of Order committed a "disturbance of the peace," if it raised the hue and cry, and explained them hypochrondriacally. The sausages of Satory were mouse-still when nobody talked about them;--France demands, above all things, peace."

Accordingly, Bonaparte demanded that he be let alone; and the parliamentary party was lamed with a double fear: the fear of re-conjuring up the revolutionary disturbance of the peace, and the fear of itself appearing as the disturber of the peace in the eyes of its own class, of the bourgeosie. Seeing that, above all things, France demanded peace, the party of Order did not dare, after Bonaparte had said "peace" in his message, to answer "war." The public, who had promised to itself the pleasure of seeing great scenes of scandal at the opening of the National Assembly, was cheated out of its expectations.

The opposition deputies, who demanded the submission of the minutes of the Permanent Committee over the October occurrences, were outvoted.

All debate that might excite was fled from on principle. The labors of the National Assembly during November and December, 1850, were without interest.

Finally, toward the end of December, began a guerilla warfare about certain prerogatives of the parliament. The movement sank into the mire of petty chicaneries on the prerogative of the two powers, since, with the abolition of universal suffrage, the bourgeoisie had done away with the class struggle.

A judgment for debt had been secured against Mauguin, one of the Representatives. Upon inquiry by the President of the Court, the Minister of Justice, Rouher, declared that an order of arrest should be made out without delay. Manguin was, accordingly, cast into the debtors' prison. The National Assembly bristled up when it heard of the "attentat." It not only ordered his immediate release, but had him forcibly taken out of Clichy the same evening by its own greffier. In order, nevertheless, to shield its belief in the "sacredness of private property," and also with the ulterior thought of opening, in case of need, an asylum for troublesome Mountainers, it declared the imprisonment of a Representative for debt to be permissible upon its previous consent. It forgot to decree that the President also could be locked up for debt. By its act, it wiped out the last semblance of inviolability that surrounded the members of its own body.

It will be remembered that, upon the testimony of one Allais, Police Commissioner Yon had charged a Section of Decembrists with a plan to murder Dupin and Changarnier. With an eye upon that, the questors proposed at the very first session, that the parliament organize a police force of its own, paid for out of the private budget of the National Assembly itself, and wholly independent of the Police Prefects.

The Minister of the Interior, Baroche, protested against this trespass on his preserves. A miserable compromise followed, according to which the Police Commissioner of the Assembly was to be paid out of its own private budget and was to be subject to the appointment and dismissal of its own questors, but only upon previous agreement with the Minister of the Interior. In the meantime Allais had been prosecuted by the Government. It was an easy thing in Court, to present his testimony in the light of a mystification, and, through the mouth of the Public Prosecutor, to throw Dupin, Changarnier, Yon, together with the whole National Assembly, into a ridiculous light. Thereupon, on December 29, Minister Baroche writes a letter to Dupin, in which he demands the dismissal of Yon. The Committee of the National Assembly decides to keep Yon in office; nevertheless, the National Assembly, frightened by its own violence in the affair of Mauguin, and accustomed, every time it has shied a blow at the Executive, to receive back from it two in exchange, does not sanction this decision. It dismisses Yon in reward for his zeal in office, and robs itself of a parliamentary prerogative, indispensable against a person who does not decide by night to execute by day, but decides by day and executes by night.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 金箓祈祷晚朝仪

    金箓祈祷晚朝仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 凤临天下:皇后有点坏

    凤临天下:皇后有点坏

    没钱,没权,没势力,还没老爹自生自灭十五载,还被当做礼物送人骆含烟一睁眼面对的就是这一幕很好,你们不仁也别怪我不义骆含玉:“含烟妹妹,我来送送你,虽是做人第三十八房小妾,不过好歹也算有名分,生出来的孩子也不是野种、杂种之类的啊!”一双素手撩开轿帘,一道玉影缓缓而下:“姐姐说得对极了,做妹妹的我怎么能不成全姐姐的心愿呢?”“啊……”女子头一载,晕倒在地,骆含烟一脚把她踢进了轿子里,拍拍手扬长而去!某男:“含烟,你是我见过最美的女人,第一次见面我就不由自主的爱上了你!”某女:“你记得清楚这是你对第几百个女人说这话了吗?”某男:“烟,你真没一点浪漫细胞!”某女:“浪漫?浪漫一斤值多少钱,饿了能挡饱,寒了等当衣吗?你这点伎俩,还是去骗骗无知小女孩吧!”某男:“含烟,请你相信我,我是真心……啊,你敢打我!你知道我是谁吗?”“滚开!”一黑衣男子长身玉立,双眼喷火,扛起骆含烟流星踏步般走了!“女人,你在挑战我的耐性!”天都城暗香楼,宾客云集一曼妙少女玉身而立,口吐狂言:“男人什么滴都是浮云,食之无味,弃之可惜,可偶尔玩玩兮!”“女人,胆子可真大,看来我昨晚真的太放纵你了!”一道不怒而威的声音在她背后响起,接着一个浑身充满了凌厉气势的黑衣男子出现在茶楼门口。骆含烟一回头,暗叫一声糟了,头一扭,身子一个燕子翻身,往后一偏,朝着二楼的窗口往下一跃,遁了!本文不虐,一对一,求收藏,求包养!推荐好友文文《老婆,谁说你是我妹!》在移动手机阅读平台上使用的名称为《凤临天下:皇后有点坏》
  • 迷失在一六二九

    迷失在一六二九

    你!没错,就是你,看看你自己,你能做什么?你会做什么?把你丢到公元1629年,大明崇祯二年,那个李自成和皇太极的年代,你能生存吗?没有金手指,没有主角命,完全靠自己的专业和知识,你能生存吗?唯一幸运的是,你不是一个人在战斗,你的背后,有一个集体,一个现代人的集体。来,试试看吧。-----------------------------本人新书《仙路桃花传》本月正式上架,眼下正是最需要成绩的时候,还请一六二九的老读者,老朋友们给予支持,订阅。如果方便的话,月票,推荐票请投给新书吧,可以加更的。新书期头一个月,每100月票即加更一次!
  • 我只知道人是什么

    我只知道人是什么

    “文学包罗万象,但最重要的是什么?就是人。”《我只知道人是什么》是著名作家余华亲自编选的一本最新杂文集。本书正是他近年来所发表的杂文结集,余华充满睿智又真诚地分享了他的观察和思考,内容包罗万象,从往事到现实,从自我到时代,既漫谈生活体验,也谈及创作心得,他生动回忆了他和福贵、许三观等笔下人物的相遇,也讲述了走访世界时和勇敢的波兰农民、意大利精神病院病友的相遇……有时候他们千千万万,有时候他们就像是同一个人。这些对人性宽广与丰富的探究,展现出一位优秀作家对生活的深刻洞察,而命运无常中凝练出的一个个故事,不仅连接着我们的过去与未来,也最终指向了所有文学和艺术创作中最根本的力量来源。
  • 成语故事(语文新课标课外读物)

    成语故事(语文新课标课外读物)

    这套课外读物收编了大家喜闻乐见的广博知识,把阅读名著与掌握知识结合起来,扩大阅读的深度和范围,这正是设计本套读物的最大特色。因此,本套课外读物有着极强的广泛性、知识性、阅读性、趣味性和基础性,是广大中小学生阅读和收藏的最佳版本。
  • 初唐一道人

    初唐一道人

    唐,一个不朽的朝代,看一道长在初唐,是还俗,入朝堂搅动风雨,还是出世,静看云卷云舒……
  • 江城名迹

    江城名迹

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 弃后,惹不起!

    弃后,惹不起!

    前世,她荣华尽享,却惨遭毒手,含恨而死。今生,她携子归来,风光无限……小萌娃:“娘亲,你不是说不要父皇了吗?为什么又怀了小宝宝?”某男:“嗯,因为你娘亲昨日刚给我喝了迷魂药。”小萌娃:“娘亲,那您给父皇多喝几碗,给我再多添几个妹妹。”苏子诩:“……”
  • 捡个校草带回家

    捡个校草带回家

    路见不平拔刀相助,爱财如命的杨一一上演了一场美女救英雄之后,家里就多了一个拖油瓶,原本想要仗着自己是房东,可劲的欺负消遣人家的,不料,却被对方扮猪吃老虎,从此陷入了暗无天日之中。斩她桃花,灭她情人。封去她所有的退路,只留下通向他怀抱的那一条最终的情深爱恋之路。
  • 寸心爱

    寸心爱

    一段校园的恋情,两颗真心的呵护,能否于沧海桑田变化中存下?倾玖玖:“他喜欢我,他不喜欢我,他喜欢我,他不喜欢我……”晨烨:“我不喜欢你。”倾玖玖:“晨烨!!!你给我滚!!!”晨烨:“我从来都不喜欢你,我只是爱你!”倾玖玖:“晨烨,如果可以的话,我希望你能忘了我。”晨烨:“玖玖,我会在家等着你。我不会忘了你!”半夏微凉,时光荏苒,愿此情不变,天慈地悯。