III
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BACK
On May 28, 1849, the Legislative
National Assembly met. On December 2, 1851, it was dispersed. This
period covers the span of life of the constitutional, or
parliamentary, republic.
In the first French Revolution the rule of the Constitutionalists is
followed by the rule of the Girondists and the rule of the
Girondists by the rule of the Jacobins. Each of these parties relies
on the more progressive party for support. As soon as it has brought
the revolution far enough to be unable to follow it further, still
less to go ahead of it, it is thrust aside by the bolder ally that
stands behind it and sent to the guillotine. The revolution thus
moves along an ascending line.
It is the reverse with the Revolution of 1848. The proletarian party
appears as an appendage of the petty-bourgeois-democratic party. It
is betrayed and dropped by the latter on April 16, May 15, and in
the June days. The democratic party, in its turn, leans on the
shoulders of the bourgeois-republican party. The bourgeois
republicans no sooner believe themselves well established than they
shake off the troublesome comrade and support themselves on the
shoulders of the party of Order. The party of Order hunches its
shoulders, lets the bourgeois republicans tumble, and throws itself
on the shoulders of armed force. It fancies it is still sitting on
those shoulders when one fine morning it perceives that the
shoulders have transformed themselves into bayonets. Each party
kicks from behind at the one driving forward, and leans over in
front toward the party which presses backward. No wonder that in
this ridiculous posture it loses its balance and, having made the
inevitable grimaces, collapses with curious gyrations. The
revolution thus moves in a descending line. It finds itself in this
state of retrogressive motion before the last February barricade has
been cleared away and the first revolutionary authority constituted.
The period that we have before us comprises the most motley mixture
of crying contradictions: constitutionalists who conspire openly
against the constitution; revolutionists who are confessedly
constitutional; a National Assembly that wants to be omnipotent and
always remains parliamentary; a Montagne that finds its vocation in
patience and counters its present defeats by prophesying future
victories; royalists who form the patres conscripti [elders] of the
republic and are forced by the situation to keep the hostile royal
houses they adhere to abroad, and the republic, which they hate, in
France; an executive power that finds its strength in its very
weakness and its respectability in the contempt that it calls forth;
a republic that is nothing but the combined infamy of two
monarchies, the Restoration and the July Monarchy, with an imperial
label — alliances whose first proviso is separation; struggles whose
first law is indecision; wild, inane agitation in the name of
tranquillity, most solemn preaching of tranquillity in the name of
revolution — passions without truth, truths without passion; heroes
without heroic deeds, history without events; development, whose
sole driving force seems to be the calendar, wearying with constant
repetition of the same tensions and relaxations; antagonisms that
periodically seem to work themselves up to a climax only to lose
their sharpness and fall away without being able to resolve
themselves; pretentiously paraded exertions and philistine terror at
the danger of the world's coming to an end, and at the same time the
pettiest intrigues and court comedies played by the world redeemers,
who in their laisser aller [letting things take their course] remind
us less of the Day of Judgment than of the times of the Fronde [An
anti-royalist movement of 1648-53. — Ed.] — the official collective
genius of France brought to naught by the artful stupidity of a
single individual; the collective will of the nation, as often as it
speaks through universal suffrage, seeking its appropriate
expression through the inveterate enemies of the interests of the
masses, until at length it finds it in the self-will of a
filibuster. If any section of history has been painted gray on gray,
it is this. Men and events appear as reverse Schlemihls, as shadows
that have lost their bodies. The revolution itself paralyzes its own
bearers and endows only its adversaries with passionate
forcefulness. When the "red specter," continually conjured up and
exercised by the counterrevolutionaries finally appears, it appears
not with the Phrygian cap of anarchy on its head, but in the uniform
of order, in red breeches.
We have seen that the ministry which Bonaparte installed on December
20, 1848, on his Ascension Day, was a ministry of the party of
Order, of the Legitimist and Orleanist coalition. This
Barrot-Falloux Ministry had outlived the republican Constituent
Assembly, whose term of life it had more or less violently cut
short, and found itself still at the helm. Changarnier, the general
of the allied royalists, continued to unite in his person the
general command of the First Army Division and of the National Guard
of Paris. Finally, the general elections had secured the party of
Order a large majority in the National Assembly. Here the deputies
and peers of Louis Philippe encountered a hallowed host of
Legitimists, for whom many of the nation's ballots had become
transformed into admission cards to the political stage. The
Bonapartist representatives of the people were too sparse to be able
to form an independent parliamentary party. They appeared merely as
the mauvaise queue [evil appendage] of the party of Order. Thus the
party of Order was in possession of the governmental power, the army
and the legislative body, in short, of the whole of the state power;
it had been morally strengthened by the general elections, which
made its rule appear as the will of the people, and by the
simultaneous triumph of the counterrevolution on the whole continent
of Europe.
Never did a party open its campaign with greater resources or under
more favorable auspices.
The shipwrecked pure republicans found that they had melted down to
a clique of about fifty men in the Legislative National Assembly,
the African generals Cavaignac, Lamoriciere, and Bedeau at their
head. The great opposition party, however, was formed by the
Montagne. The social-democratic party had given itself this
parliamentary baptismal name. It commanded more than two hundred of
the seven hundred and fifty votes of the National Assembly and was
consequently at least as powerful as any one of the three factions
of the party of Order taken by itself. Its numerical inferiority
compared with the entire royalist coalition seemed compensated by
special circumstances. Not only did the elections in the departments
show that it had gained a considerable following among the rural
population. It counted in its ranks almost all the deputies from
Paris; the army had made a confession of democratic faith by the
election of three noncommissioned officers; and the leader of the
Montagne, Ledru-Rollin, in contradistinction to all the
representatives of the party of Order, had been raised to the
parliamentary peerage by five departments, which had pooled their
votes for him. In view of the inevitable clashes of the royalists
among themselves and of the whole party of Order with Bonaparte, the
Montagne thus seemed to have all the elements of success before it
on May 28, 1849. A fortnight later it had lost everything, honor
included.
Before we pursue parliamentary history further, some remarks are
necessary to avoid common misconceptions regarding the whole
character of the epoch that lies before us. Looked at with the eyes
of democrats, the period of the Legislative National Assembly is
concerned with what the period of the Constituent Assembly was
concerned with: the simple struggle between republicans and
royalists. The movement itself, however, they sum up in the one
shibboleth: "reaction" — night, in which all cats are gray and which
permits them to reel off their night watchman's commonplaces. And to
be sure, at first sight the party of Order reveals a maze of
different royalist factions which not only intrigue against each
other — each seeking to elevate its own pretender to the throne and
exclude the pretender of the opposing faction — but also all unite
in common hatred of, and common onslaughts on, the "republic." In
opposition to this royalist conspiracy the Montagne, for its part,
appears as the representative of the "republic." The party of Order
appears to be perpetually engaged in a "reaction," directed against
press, association, and the like, neither more nor less than in
Prussia, and, as in Prussia, carried out in the form of brutal
police intervention by the bureaucracy, the gendarmerie, and the law
courts. The Montagne, for its part, is just as continually occupied
in warding off these attacks and thus defending the "eternal rights
of man" as every so-called people's party has done, more or less,
for a century and a half. If one looks at the situation and the
parties more closely, however, this superficial appearance, which
veils the class struggle and the peculiar physiognomy of this
period, disappears.
Legitimists and Orleanists, as we have said, formed the two great
factions of the party of Order. Was what held these factions fast to
their pretenders and kept them apart from each other nothing but
fleur-de-lis and tricolor, House of Bourbon and House of Orleans,
different shades of royalism — was it at all the confession of faith
of royalism? Under the Bourbons, big landed property had governed,
with its priests and lackeys; under Orleans, high finance,
large-scale industry, large-scale trade, that is, capital, with its
retinue of lawyers, professors, and smooth-tongued orators. The
Legitimate Monarchy was merely the political expression of the
hereditary rule of the lords of the soil, as the July Monarchy was
only the political expression of the usurped rule of the bourgeois
parvenus. What kept the two factions apart, therefore, was not any
so-called principles, it was their material conditions of existence,
two different kinds of property; it was the old contrast between
town and country, the rivalry between capital and landed property.
That at the same time old memories, personal enmities, fears and
hopes, prejudices and illusions, sympathies and antipathies,
convictions, articles of faith and principles bound them to one or
the other royal house, who denies this? Upon the different forms of
property, upon the social conditions of existence, rises an entire
superstructure of distinct and peculiarly formed sentiments,
illusions, modes of thought, and views of life. The entire class
creates and forms them out of its material foundations and out of
the corresponding social relations. The single individual, who
derives them through tradition and upbringing, may imagine that they
form the real motives and the starting point of his activity. While
each faction, Orleanists and Legitimists, sought to make itself and
the other believe that it was loyalty to the two royal houses which
separated them, facts later proved that it was rather their divided
interests which forbade the uniting of the two royal houses. And as
in private life one differentiates between what a man thinks and
says of himself and what he really is and does, so in historical
struggles one must distinguish still more the phrases and fancies of
parties from their real organism and their real interests, their
conception of themselves from their reality. Orleanists and
Legitimists found themselves side by side in the republic, with
equal claims. If each side wished to effect the restoration of its
own royal house against the other, that merely signified that each
of the two great interests into which the bourgeoisie is split —
landed property and capital - sought to restore its own supremacy
and the subordination of the other. We speak of two interests of the
bourgeoisie, for large landed property, despite its feudal coquetry
and pride of race, has been rendered thoroughly bourgeois by the
development of modern society. Thus the Tories in England long
imagined that they were enthusiastic about monarchy, the church, and
the beauties of the old English Constitution, until the day of
danger wrung from them the confession that they are enthusiastic
only about ground rent.
The royalists in coalition carried on their intrigues against one
another in the press, in Ems, in Claremont, outside parliament.
Behind the scenes they donned their old Orleanist and Legitimist
liveries again and once more engaged in their old tourneys. But on
the public stage, in their grand performances of state as a great
parliamentary party, they put off their respective royal houses with
mere obeisances and adjourn the restoration of the monarchy in
infinitum. They do their real business as the party of Order, that
is, under a social, not under a political title; as representatives
of the bourgeois world order, not as knights of errant princesses;
as the bourgeois class against other classes, not as royalists
against the republicans. And as the party of Order they exercised
more unrestricted and sterner domination over the other classes of
society than ever previously under the Restoration or under the July
Monarchy, a domination which, in general, was possible only under
the form of the parliamentary republic, for only under this form
could the two great divisions of the French bourgeoisie unite, and
thus put the rule of their class instead of the regime of a
privileged faction of it on the order of the day. If they
nevertheless, as the party of Order, also insulted the republic and
expressed their repugnance to it, this happened not merely from
royalist memories. Instinct taught them that the republic, true
enough, makes their political rule complete, but at the same time
undermines its social foundation, since they must now confront the
subjugated classes and contend against them without mediation,
without the concealment afforded by the crown, without being able to
divert the national interest by their subordinate struggles among
themselves and with the monarchy. It was a feeling of weakness that
caused them to recoil from the pure conditions of their own class
rule and to yearn for the former more incomplete, more undeveloped,
and precisely on that account less dangerous forms of this rule. On
the other hand, every time the royalists in coalition come in
conflict with the pretender who confronts them, with Bonaparte,
every time they believe their parliamentary omnipotence endangered
by the executive power — every time, therefore, that they must
produce their political title to their rule — they come forward as
republicans and not as royalists, from the Orleanist Thiers, who
warns the National Assembly that the republic divides them least, to
the Legitimist Berryer, who on December 2, 1851, as a tribune
swathed in a tricolored sash, harangues the people assembled before
the town hall of the Tenth Arrondissement in the name of the
republic. To be sure, a mocking echo calls back to him: Henry V!
Henry V!
As against the coalesced bourgeoisie, a coalition between petty
bourgeois and workers had been formed, the so-called
Social-Democratic party. The petty bourgeois saw that they were
badly rewarded after the June days of 1848, that their material
interests were imperiled, and that the democratic guarantees which
were to insure the effectuation of these interests were called in
question by the counterrevolution. Accordingly they came closer to
the workers. On the other hand, their parliamentary representation,
the Montagne, thrust aside during the dictatorship of the bourgeois
republicans, had in the last half of the life of the Constituent
Assembly reconquered its lost popularity through the struggle with
Bonaparte and the royalist ministers. It had concluded an alliance
with the socialist leaders. In February, 1849, banquets celebrated
the reconciliation. A joint program was drafted, joint election
committees were set up and joint candidates put forward. The
revolutionary point was broken off and a democratic turn given to
the social demands of the proletariat; the purely political form was
stripped off the democratic claims of the petty bourgeoisie and
their socialist point thrust forward. Thus arose social-democracy.
The new Montagne, the result of this combination, contained, apart
from some supernumeraries from the working class and some socialist
sectarians, the same elements as the old Montagne, but numerically
stronger. However, in the course of development it had changed with
the class that it represented. The peculiar character of
social-democracy is epitomized in the fact that
democratic-republican institutions are demanded as a means, not of
doing away with two extremes, capital and wage labor, but of
weakening their antagonism and transforming it into harmony. However
different the means proposed for the attainment of this end may be,
however much it may be trimmed with more or less revolutionary
notions, the content remains the same. This content is the
transformation of society in a democratic way, but a transformation
within the bounds of the petty bourgeoisie. Only one must not get
the narrow-minded notion that the petty bourgeoisie, on principle,
wishes to enforce an egoistic class interest. Rather, it believes
that the special conditions of its emancipation are the general
conditions within whose frame alone modern society can be saved and
the class struggle avoided. Just as little must one imagine that the
democratic representatives are indeed all shopkeepers or
enthusiastic champions of shopkeepers. According to their education
and their individual position they may be as far apart as heaven and
earth. What makes them representatives of the petty bourgeoisie is
the fact that in their minds they do not get beyond the limits which
the latter do not get beyond in life, that they are consequently
driven, theoretically, to the same problems and solutions to which
material interest and social position drive the latter practically.
This is, in general, the relationship between the political and
literary representatives of a class and the class they represent.
After this analysis it is obvious that if the Montagne continually
contends with the party of Order for the republic and the so-called
rights of man, neither the republic nor the rights of man are its
final end, any more than an army which one wants to deprive of its
weapons and which resists has taken the field in order to remain in
possession of its own weapons.
Immediately, as soon as the National Assembly met, the party of
Order provoked the Montagne. The bourgeoisie now felt the necessity
of making an end of the democratic petty bourgeois, just as a year
before it had realized the necessity of settling with the
revolutionary proletariat. But the situation of the adversary was
different. The strength of the proletarian party lay in the streets,
that of the petty bourgeois in the National Assembly itself. It was
therefore a question of decoying them out of the National Assembly
into the streets and causing them to smash their parliamentary power
themselves, before time and circumstances could consolidate it. The
Montagne rushed headlong into the trap.
The bombardment of Rome by the French troops was the bait that was
thrown. It violated Article 5 of the constitution, which forbids the
French Republic to employ its military forces against the freedom of
another people. In addition to this, Article 54 prohibited any
declaration of war by the executive power without the assent of the
National Assembly, and by its resolution of May 8 the Constituent
Assembly had disapproved of the Roman expedition. On these grounds
Ledru-Rollin brought in a bill of impeachment against Bonaparte and
his ministers on June 11, 1849. Exasperated by the wasp stings of
Thiers, he actually let himself be carried away to the point of
threatening that he would defend the constitution by every means,
even with arms in hand. The Montagne rose to a man and repeated this
call to arms. On June 12 the National Assembly rejected the bill of
impeachment, and the Montagne left the parliament. The events of
June 13 are known: the proclamation issued by a section of the
Montagne declaring Bonaparte and his ministers "outside the
constitution"; the street procession of the democratic National
Guard, who, unarmed as they were, dispersed on encountering the
troops of Changarnier, etc., etc. A part of the Montagne fled
abroad; another part was arraigned before the High Court at Bourges;
and a parliamentary regulation subjected the remainder to the
schoolmasterly surveillance of the President of the National
Assembly. Paris was again declared in a state of siege and the
democratic part of its National Guard dissolved. Thus the influence
of the Montagne in parliament and the power of the petty bourgeois
in Paris were broken.
Lyon, where June 13 had given the signal for a bloody insurrection
of the workers, was, along with the five surrounding departments,
likewise declared in a state of siege, a condition that has
continued up to the present moment.
The bulk of the Montagne had left its vanguard in the lurch, having
refused to subscribe to its proclamation. The press had deserted,
only two journals having dared to publish the pronunciamento. The
petty bourgeois betrayed their representatives in that the National
Guard either stayed away or, where they appeared, hindered the
building of barricades. The representatives had duped the petty
bourgeois in that the alleged allies from the army were nowhere to
be seen. Finally, instead of gaining an accession of strength from
it, the democratic party had infected the proletariat with its own
weakness and, as usual with the great deeds of democrats, the
leaders had the satisfaction of being able to charge their "people"
with desertion, and the people the satisfaction of being able to
charge its leaders with humbugging it.
Seldom had an action been announced with more noise than the
impending campaign of the Montagne, seldom had an event been
trumpeted with greater certainty or longer in advance than the
inevitable victory of the democracy. Most assuredly the democrats
believe in the trumpets before whose blasts the walls of Jericho
fell down. And as often as they stand before the ramparts of
despotism, they seek to imitate the miracle. If the Montagne wished
to triumph in parliament it should not have called to arms. If it
called to arms in parliament it should not have acted in
parliamentary fashion in the streets. If the peaceful demonstration
was meant seriously, then it was folly not to foresee that it would
be given a warlike reception. If a real struggle was intended, then
it was a queer idea to lay down the weapons with which it would have
to be waged. But the revolutionary threats of the petty bourgeois
and their democratic representatives are mere attempts to intimidate
the antagonist. And when they have run into a blind alley, when they
have sufficiently compromised themselves to make it necessary to
activate their threats, then this is done in an ambiguous fashion
that avoids nothing so much as the means to the end and tries to
find excuses for succumbing. The blaring overture that announced the
contest dies away in a pusillanimous snarl as soon as the struggle
has to begin, the actors cease to take themselves au sorieux, and
the action collapses completely, like a pricked bubble.
No party exaggerates its means more than the democratic, none
deludes itself more light-mindedly over the situation. Since a
section of the army had voted for it, the Montagne was now convinced
that the army would revolt for it. And on what occasion? On an
occasion which, from the standpoint of the troops, had no other
meaning than that the revolutionists took the side of the Roman
soldiers against the French soldiers. On the other hand, the
recollections of June, 1848, were still too fresh to allow of
anything but a profound aversion on the part of the proletariat
toward the National Guard and a thoroughgoing mistrust of the
democratic chiefs on the part of the chiefs of the secret societies.
To iron out these differences, it was necessary for great common
interests to be at stake. The violation of an abstract paragraph of
the constitution could not provide these interests. Had not the
constitution been repeatedly violated, according to the assurance of
the democrats themselves? Had not the most popular journals branded
it as counterrevolutionary botchwork? But the democrat, because he
represents the petty bourgeoisie — that is, a transition class, in
which the interests of two classes are simultaneously mutually
blunted — imagines himself elevated above class antagonism
generally. The democrats concede that a privileged class confronts
them, but they, along with all the rest of the nation, form the
people. What they represent is the people's rights; what interests
them is the people's interests. Accordingly, when a struggle is
impending they do not need to examine the interests and positions of
the different classes. They do not need to weigh their own resources
too critically. They have merely to give the signal and the people,
with all its inexhaustible resources, will fall upon the oppressors.
Now if in the performance their interests prove to be uninteresting
and their potency impotence, then either the fault lies with
pernicious sophists, who split the indivisible people into different
hostile camps, or the army was too brutalized and blinded to
comprehend that the pure aims of democracy are the best thing for
it, or the whole thing has been wrecked by a detail in its
execution, or else an unforeseen accident has this time spoiled the
game. In any case, the democrat comes out of the most disgraceful
defeat just as immaculate as he was innocent when he went into it,
with the newly won conviction that he is bound to win, not that he
himself and his party have to give up the old standpoint, but, on
the contrary, that conditions have to ripen to suit him.
Therefore one must not imagine the Montagne, decimated and broken
though it was, and humiliated by the new parliamentary regulation,
as being particularly miserable. If June 13 had removed its chiefs,
it made room, on the other hand, for men of lesser caliber, whom
this new position flattered. If their impotence in parliament could
no longer be doubted, they were entitled now to confine their
actions to outbursts of moral indignation and blustering
declamation. If the party of Order affected to see embodied in them,
as the last official representatives of the revolution, all the
terrors of anarchy, they could in reality be all the more insipid
and modest. They consoled themselves, however, for June 13 with the
profound utterance: but if they dare to attack universal suffrage,
well then — then we'll show them what we are made of! Nous verrons!
[We shall see!]
So far as the Montagnards who fled abroad are concerned, it is
sufficient to remark here that Ledru-Rollin, because in barely a
fortnight he had succeeded in ruining irretrievably the powerful
party at whose head he stood, now found himself called upon to form
a French government in partibus; that to the extent that the level
of the revolution sank and the official bigwigs of official France
became more dwarf-like, his figure in the distance, removed from the
scene of action, seemed to grow in stature; that he could figure as
the republican pretender for 1852, and that he issued periodical
circulars to the Wallachians and other peoples in which the despots
of the Continent were threatened with the deeds of himself and his
confederates. Was Proudhon altogether wrong when he cried to these
gentlemen: "Vous n'etes que des blagueurs" ["you are nothing but
windbags"]?
On June 13 the party of Order had not only broken the Montagne, it
had effected the subordination of the constitution to the majority
decisions of the National Assembly. And it understood the republic
thus: that the bourgeoisie rules here in parliamentary forms,
without, as in a monarchy, encountering any barrier such as the veto
power of the executive or the right to dissolve parliament. This was
a parliamentary republic, as Thiers termed it. But whereas on June
13 the bourgeoisie secured its omnipotence within the house of
parliament, did it not afflict parliament itself, as against the
executive authority and the people, with incurable weakness by
expelling its most popular part? By surrendering numerous deputies
without further ado on the demand of the courts, it abolished its
own parliamentary immunity. The humiliating regulations to which it
subjected the Montagne exalted the President of the Republic in the
same measure as it degraded the individual representatives of the
people. By branding an insurrection for the protection of the
constitutional charter an anarchic act aiming at the subversion of
society, it precluded the possibility of its appealing to
insurrection should the executive authority violate the constitution
in relation to it. And by the irony of history, the general who on
Bonaparte's instructions bombarded Rome and thus provided the
immediate occasion for the constitutional revolt of June 13, that
very Oudinot had to be the man offered by the party of Order
imploringly and unfailingly to the people as general on behalf of
the constitution against Bonaparte on December 2, 1851. Another hero
of June 13, Vieyra, who was lauded from the tribune of the National
Assembly for the brutalities he committed in the democratic
newspaper offices at the head of a gang of National Guards belonging
to high finance circles — this same Vieyra had been initiated into
Bonaparte's conspiracy and he contributed substantially to depriving
the National Assembly in the hour of its death of any protection by
the National Guard.
June 13 had still another meaning. The Montagne had wanted to force
the impeachment of Bonaparte. Its defeat was therefore a direct
victory for Bonaparte, his personal triumph over his democratic
enemies. The party of Order gained the victory; Bonaparte had only
to cash in on it. He did so. On June 14 a proclamation could be read
on the walls of Paris in which the President, reluctantly, against
his will, compelled as it were by the sheer force of events, comes
forth from his cloistered seclusion and, posing as misunderstood
virtue, complains of the calumnies of his opponents and, while he
seems to identify his person with the cause of order, rather
identifies the cause of order with his person. Moreover, the
National Assembly had, it is true, subsequently approved the
expedition against Rome, but Bonaparte had taken the initiative in
the matter. After having reinstalled the High Priest Samuel in the
Vatican, he could hope to enter the Tuileries as King David. He had
won the priests over to his side.
The revolt of June 13 was confined, as we have seen, to a peaceful
street procession. No war laurels were therefore to be won against
it. Nevertheless, at a time as poor as this in heroes and events,
the party of Order transformed this bloodless battle into a second
Austerlitz. Platform and press praised the army as the power of
order, in contrast to the popular masses representing the impotence
of anarchy, and extolled Changarnier as the "bulwark of society," a
deception in which he himself finally came to believe.
Surreptitiously, however, the corps that seemed doubtful were
transferred from Paris, the regiments which had shown the most
democratic sentiments in the elections were banished from France to
Algiers; the turbulent spirits among the troops were relegated to
penal detachments; and finally the isolation of the press from the
barracks and of the barracks from bourgeois society was
systematically carried out.
Here we have reached the decisive turning point in the history of
the French National Guard. In 1830 it was decisive in the overthrow
of the Restoration. Under Louis Philippe every rebellion miscarried
in which the National Guard stood on the side of the troops. When in
the February days of 1848 it evinced a passive attitude toward the
insurrection and an equivocal one toward Louis Philippe, he gave
himself up for lost and actually was lost. Thus the conviction took
root that the revolution could not be victorious without the
National Guard, nor the army against it. This was the superstition
of the army in regard to civilian omnipotence. The June days of
1848, when the entire National Guard, with the troops of the line,
put down the insurrection, had strengthened the superstition. After
Bonaparte's assumption of office, the position of the National Guard
was to some extent weakened by the unconstitutional union, in the
person of Changarnier, of the command of its forces with the command
of the First Army Division.
Just as the command of the National Guard appeared here as an
attribute of the military commander in chief, so the National Guard
itself appeared as only an appendage of the troops of the line.
Finally, on June 13 its power was broken, and not only by its
partial disbandment, which from this time on was periodically
repeated all over France, until mere fragments of it were left
behind. The demonstration of June 13 was, above all, a demonstration
of the democratic National Guards. They had not, to be sure, borne
their arms, but had worn their uniforms against the army; precisely
in this uniform, however, lay the talisman. The army convinced
itself that this uniform was a piece of woolen cloth like any other.
The spell was broken. In the June days of 1848, bourgeoisie and
petty bourgeoisie had united as the National Guard with the army
against the proletariat; on June 13, 1849, the bourgeoisie let the
petty-bourgeois National Guard be dispersed by the army; on December
2, 1851, the National Guard of the bourgeoisie itself had vanished,
and Bonaparte merely registered this fact when he subsequently
signed the decree for its disbandment, Thus the bourgeoisie had
itself smashed its last weapon against the army; the moment the
petty bourgeoisie no longer stood behind it as a vassal, but before
it as a rebel, it had to smash it as in general it was bound to
destroy all its means of defense against absolutism with its own
hand as soon as it had itself become absolute.
Meanwhile, the party of Order celebrated the reconquest of a power
that seemed lost in 1848 only to be found again, freed from its
restraints, in 1849, celebrated by means of invectives against the
republic and the constitution, of curses on all future, present, and
past revolutions, including that which its own leaders had made, and
in laws by which the press was muzzled, association destroyed, and
the state of siege regulated as an organic institution. The National
Assembly then adjourned from the middle of August to the middle of
October, after having appointed a permanent commission for the
period of its absence. During this recess the Legitimists intrigued
with Ems, the Orleanists with Claremont, Bonaparte by means of
princely tours, and the Departmental Councils in deliberations on a
revision of the constitution: incidents which regularly recur in the
periodic recesses of the National Assembly and which I propose to
discuss only when they become events. Here it may merely be
remarked, in addition, that it was impolitic for the National
Assembly to disappear from the stage for considerable intervals and
leave only a single, albeit a sorry, figure to be seen at the head
of the republic, that of Louis Bonaparte, while to the scandal of
the public the party of Order fell asunder into its royalist
component parts and followed its conflicting desires for
restoration. As often as the confused noise of parliament grew
silent during these recesses and its body dissolved into the nation,
it became unmistakably clear that only one thing was still lacking
to complete the true form of this republic: to make the former's
recess permanent and replace the latter's inscription, Liberté,
Egilité, Fraternité, with the unambiguous words: infantry, cavalry,
artillery!
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