登陆注册
14926100000009

第9章

Starting from nothing, the King is the maker of a compact State, containing the population of twenty-six millions, and then the most powerful in -Europe. - Throughout this interval he is at the head of the national defense. He is the liberator of the country against foreigners, against the Pope in the fourteenth century, against the English in the fifteenth, against the Spaniards in the sixteenth. In the interior, from the twelfth century onward, with the helmet on his brow, and always on the road, he is the great justiciary, demolishing the towers of the feudal brigands, repressing the excesses of the powerful, and protecting the oppressed.[14] He puts an end to private warfare; he establishes order and tranquility. This was an immense accomplishment, which, from Louis le Gros to St. Louis, from Philippe le Bel to Charles VII, continues uninterruptedly up to the middle of the eighteenth century in the edict against duels and in the "Grand Jours."[15] Meanwhile all useful projects carried out under his orders, or developed under his patronage, roads, harbors, canals, asylums, universities, academies, institutions of piety, of refuge, of education, of science, of industry, and of commerce, bears his imprint and proclaim the public benefactor.-Services of this character challenge a proportionate recompense; it is allowed that from father to son he is wedded to France; that she acts only through him; that he acts only for her; while every souvenir of the past and every present interest combine to sanction this union. The Church consecrates it at Rheims by a sort of eighth sacrament, accompanied with legends and miracles; he is the anointed of God.[16] The nobles, through an old instinct of military fealty, consider themselves his bodyguard, and down to August 10, 1789, rush forward to die for him on his staircase;he is their general by birth. The people, down to 1789, regard him as the redresser of abuses, the guardian of the right, the protector of the weak, the great almoner and the universal refuge. At the beginning of the reign of Louis XVI "shouts of Vive le roi, which began at six o'clock in the morning, continued scarcely interrupted until after sunset."[17] When the Dauphin was born the joy of France was that of a whole family. "People stopped each other in the streets, spoke together without any acquaintance, and everybody embraced everybody he knew."[18] Every one, through vague tradition, through immemorial respect, feels that France is a ship constructed by his hands and the hands of his ancestors. In this sense, the vessel is his property; it is his right to it is the same as that of each passenger to his private goods. The king's only duty consists in being expert and vigilant in guiding across the oceans and beneath his banner the magnificent ship upon which everyone's welfare depends.-Under the ascendancy of such an idea he was allowed to do everything. By fair means or foul, he so reduced ancient authorities as to make them a fragment, a pretense, a souvenir. The nobles are simply his officials or his courtiers. Since the Concordat he nominates the dignitaries of the Church. The States-General were not convoked for a hundred and seventy-five years; the provincial assemblies, which continue to subsist, do nothing but apportion the taxes; the parliaments are exiled when they risk a remonstrance. Through his council, his intendants, his sub-delegates, he intervenes in the most trifling of local matters. His revenue is four hundred and seventy-seven millions.[19] He disburses one-half of that of the Clergy. In short, he is absolute master, and he so declares himself.[20] -Possessions, freedom from taxation, the satisfactions of vanity, a few remnants of local jurisdiction and authority, are consequently all that is left to his ancient rivals; in exchange for these they enjoy his favors and marks of preference.-Such, in brief, is the history of the privileged classes, the Clergy, the Nobles, and the King. It must be kept in mind to comprehend their situation at the moment of their fall; having created France, they enjoy it. Let us see clearly what becomes of them at the end of the eighteenth century; what portion of their advantages they preserved; what services they still render, and what services they do not render.

Notes :

[1]. "Les Moines d'Occident," by Montalembert, I. 277. St. Lupicin before the Burgundian King Chilperic, II. 416. Saint Karileff before King Childebert. Cf. passim, Gregory of Tours and the Bollandist collection.

[2]. No legend is more frequently encountered; we find it as late as the twelfth century.

[3]. Chilperic, for example, acting under the advice of Fredegonde after the death of all their children.

[4]. Montalembert, ibid., II. book 8; and especially "Les Forêts de la France dans l'antiquité et au Moyen Age," by Alfred Maury. Spinoe et vepres is a phrase constantly recurring in the lives of the saints.

[5]. We find the same thing to day with the colonies of Trappists in Algiers.

[6]. "Polyptique d'Irminon," by Guérard. In this work we see the prosperity of the domain belonging to the Abbey of St. Germain des Près at the end of the eighth century. According to M. Guérard's statistics, the peasantry of Paliseau were about as prosperous in the time of Charlemagne as at the present day.

[7]. Taine's definition would also fit contemporary (1999) drugs and video entertainment which also provide mankind with both hope, pleasure and entertainment. (SR.)[8]. There are twenty-five thousand lives of the saints, between the sixth and the tenth centuries, collected by the Bollandists. - The last that are truly inspired are those of St. Francis of Assisi and his companions at the beginning of the fourteenth century. The same vivid sentiment extends down to the end of the fifteenth century in the works of Fra Angelico and Hans Memling. - The Sainte Chapelle in Paris, the upper church at Assisi, Dante's Paradise, and the Fioretti, furnish an idea of these visions. As regards modern literature, the state of a believer's soul in the middle ages is perfectly described in the "Pélerinage à Kevlaar," by Henri Heine, and in "Les Reliques vivantes," by Tourgueneff.

[9]. As, for example, Tertulle, founder of the Platagenet family, Rollo, Duke of Normandy, Hugues, Abbot of St. Martin of Tours and of St. Denis.

[10]. See the "Cantilenes" of the tenth century in which the "Chansons de Geste" are foreshadowed.

[11]. Laws governing the feudal system (1372) where the feudal lord is unable to transmit his property by testament but has to leave them to the next holder of the title. The "mainmortables" were serfs who belonged to the property. (SR.)[12]. See in the "Voyages du Caillaud," in Nubia and Abyssinia, the raids for slaves made by the Pacha's armies; Europe presented about the same spectacle between the years 800 and 900.

[13]. See the zeal of subjects for their lords in the historians of the middle ages; Gaston Phoebus, Comte de Foix, and Guy, Comte de Flandres in Froissart; Raymond de Béziers and Raymond de Toulouse, in the chronicle of Toulouse. This profound sentiment of small local patrimonics is apparent at each provincial assembly in Normandy, Brittany, Franche-Comté, etc.

[14]. Suger, Life of Louis VI.

[15]. "Les Grand Jours d'Auvergne," by Fléchier, ed. Chéruel. The last feudal brigand, the Baron of Plumartin, in Poitou, was taken, tried, and beheaded under Louis XV in 1756.

[16]. As late as Louis XV a procès verbal is made of a number of cures of the King's evil.

[17]. "Mémoires of Madame Campan," I. 89; II. 215.

[18]. In 1785 an Englishman visiting France boasts of the political liberty enjoyed in his country. As an offset to this the French reproach the English for having decapitated Charles I., and "glory in having always maintained an inviolable attachment to their own king; a fidelity, a respect which no excess or severity on his part has ever shaken." ("A Comparative View of the French and of the English Nation," by John Andrews, p.257.)[19]. Memoirs of D'Augeard, private secretary of the Queen, and a former farmer-general.

[20]. The following is the reply of Louis XV. to the Parliament of Paris, March 3, 1766, in a lit de justice : "The sovereign authority is vested in my person. . . The legislative power, without dependence and without division, exists in myself alone. Public security emanates wholly from myself; I am its supreme custodian. My people are one only with me; national rights and interests, of which an attempt is made to form a body separate from those of the monarch, are necessarily combined with my own, and rests only in my hands."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 权少盛宠:千金归来

    权少盛宠:千金归来

    前世继母不慈,夺了她叶家继承人的身份,拖油瓶姐姐不善,抢了她的未婚夫。再来一世,她不要做受人摆布的公主,她要做掌控自己命运的女王。继母想要叶家,做梦!这一次她绝不会将继承权拱手让人!拖油瓶姐姐抢她未婚夫?没关系,渣男贱女送一堆,打包收拾。只是不小心惹上了那以狠戾嗜血而闻名的妖孽。这妖孽貌美多金身手好,只是总爱追着她叫“夫人”,麻烦麻烦!某花烛夜,若宁被眼前美色迷了眼,反应过来时已被压在身下。“你不是说要在我身下的吗?”某宁不忿道。妖孽桃花眼中精光一闪,笑的邪魅:“夫人别急,我们一个一个动作来。”这是一个情商极低的伪御姐和一个腹黑妖孽之间不得不说的故事。
  • 真是如何修的

    真是如何修的

    看看主角如何穿越地球,拯救世界,修真,升级,召唤,灵术,斗气,魔法,样样精通,主角不仅拯救了世界,还拯救了这个宇宙,看主角如何升级练功,拯救宇宙。
  • 他们的青春十年

    他们的青春十年

    小说讲述几个好朋友,他们在最好的青春岁月的经历。没有跌宕起伏的情节,没有惊天动地的事迹。只有平淡生活中,所遇到的点点滴滴。那些喜怒哀乐,那些悲欢离合。所经历的美好与坎坷。那些生长在农村的孩子,经历着不一样的青春岁月......
  • Boss凶猛:娇妻,太难训

    Boss凶猛:娇妻,太难训

    三年前,因为一个错,她失去了他。三年后,他归来,她第一件事就是给自己下药,让他强来……事后他却不领情,冷冷的说:“苏雨晴,你要懂得自重!”她却妩媚一笑:“如果自重,三年前那次……”他大怒,甩手而去,根本看不到她嘴角的苦涩。
  • 宠溺无边:我的小王妃

    宠溺无边:我的小王妃

    他,神秘莫测,至高无上,却甘愿为她化百炼钢为绕指柔,她,绝美似仙,强大冷漠,却愿意去依赖他,愿一见你只如初见,凭一眼之缘,便心心相惜,我们都是有伤之人,在现世之中,相互依偎,彼此温暖,共同铸造属于我们的繁华盛世,惊才艳艳,终灼世人眼,可世人又怎知,于你我而言最重要的不过彼此。现世繁华,我只愿岁月静好...
  • 幸福之摩天轮

    幸福之摩天轮

    我爱你,没有一刻不想你;我恨你,没有一刻忘记你;请你,不要突然出现在我眼前,我会来不及,来不及微笑。当摩天轮转起,那么多漫天的幸福,却没有我的。那一天,如果,我吻了你,是否,你就真得不会离开?爱情,荡气回肠;故事,百转千回,不如,你一直在我身边。
  • 界系

    界系

    从21世纪开始,一场科技与自然带来的“基因变异”,从宇宙诞生那一刻开始隐藏的秘密,正在随着时间的流逝,逐渐浮出水面。
  • 夜武逆光

    夜武逆光

    天地万物,由生入死,由死而生,天地间,生与死,轮回不止,吾愿以死逆天地,笑天下,破苍穹,逆轮回,且看少年陈风如何破逆天地,笑傲苍穹。
  • 资源掠夺系统

    资源掠夺系统

    得系统相助,既然来到异界,周阳就发誓,一定要有所为!
  • 我爱的,时光和你

    我爱的,时光和你

    叶筱从小失去父亲,与母亲相依为命,以优异成绩考入津阳市凤凰一中,开始在这里度过自己的三年珍贵的高中生活,并与男主柯铭留下了一段难忘的时光……