V
<
BACK
As soon as the revolutionary
crisis had been weathered and universal suffrage abolished, the
struggle between the National Assembly and Bonaparte broke out
again.
The constitution had fixed Bonaparte's salary at 600,000 francs.
Barely six months after his installation he succeeded in increasing
this sum to twice as much, for Odilon Barrot wrung from the
Constituent National Assembly an extra allowance of 600,000 francs a
year for so-called representation moneys. After June 13 Bonaparte
had caused similar requests to be voiced, this time without
eliciting response from Barrot. Now, after May 31, he at once
availed himself of the favorable moment and had his ministers
propose a Civil List of three millions in the National Assembly. A
long life of adventurous vagabondage had endowed him with the most
developed antennae for feeling out the weak moments when he might
squeeze money from his bourgeois. He practiced chantage [blackmail]
regularly. The National Assembly had violated the sovereignty of the
people with his assistance and his cognizance. He threatened to
denounce its crime to the tribunal of the people unless it loosened
its purse strings and purchased his silence with three million a
year. It had robbed three million Frenchmen of their franchise. He
demanded, for every Frenchman out of circulation, a franc in
circulation, precisely three million francs. He, the elect of six
millions, claimed damages for the votes which he said he had
retrospectively been cheated out of. The Commission of the National
Assembly refused the importunate man. The Bonapartist press
threatened. Could the National Assembly break with the President of
the Republic at a moment when in principle it had definitely broken
with the mass of the nation? It rejected the annual Civil List, it
is true, but it granted, for this once, an extra allowance of
2,160,000 francs. It thus rendered itself guilty of the double
weakness of granting the money and of showing at the same time by
its vexation that it granted it unwillingly. We shall see later for
what purpose Bonaparte needed the money. After this vexatious
aftermath, which followed on the heels of the abolition of universal
suffrage and in which Bonaparte exchanged his humble attitude during
the crisis of March and April for challenging impudence to the
usurpatory parliament, the National Assembly adjourned for three
months, from August 11 to November 11. In its place it left behind a
Permanent Commission of twenty-eight members, which contained no
Bonapartists but did contain some moderate republicans. The
Permanent Commission of 1849 had included only Order men and
Bonapartists. But at that time the party of Order declared itself
permanently against the revolution. This time the parliamentary
republic declared itself permanently against the President. After
the law of May 31, this was the only rival that still confronted the
party of Order.
When the National Assembly met once more in November, 1850, it
seemed that, instead of the petty skirmishes it had hitherto had
with the President, a great and ruthless struggle, a life-and-death
struggle between the two powers, had become inevitable.
As in 1849 so during this year's parliamentary recess — the party of
Order had broken up into its separate factions, each occupied with
its own restoration intrigues, which had obtained fresh nutriment
through the death of Louis Philippe. The Legitimist king, Henry V,
had even nominated a formal ministry which resided in Paris and in
which members of the Permanent Commission held seats. Bonaparte, in
his turn, was therefore entitled to make tours of the French
departments, and according to the disposition of the town he favored
with his presence, now more or less covertly, now more or less
overtly, to divulge his own restoration plans and canvass votes for
himself. On these processions, which the great official Moniteur and
the little private Moniteurs of Bonaparte naturally had to celebrate
as triumphal processions, he was constantly accompanied by persons
affiliated with the Society of December 10. This society dates from
the year 1849. On the pretext of founding a benevolent society, the
lumpen proletariat of Paris had been organized into secret sections,
each section led by Bonapartist agents, with a Bonapartist general
at the head of the whole. Alongside decayed roués with dubious means
of subsistence and of dubious origin, alongside ruined and
adventurous offshoots of the bourgeoisie, were vagabonds, discharged
soldiers, discharged jailbirds, escaped galley slaves, swindlers,
mountebanks, lazzaroni, pickpockets, tricksters, gamblers,
maquereaux [pimps], brothel keepers, porters, literati, organ
grinders, ragpickers, knife grinders, tinkers, beggars — in short,
the whole indefinite, disintegrated mass, thrown hither and thither,
which the French call la bohème; from this kindred element Bonaparte
formed the core of the Society of December 10. A "benevolent
society" - insofar as, like Bonaparte, all its members felt the need
of benefiting themselves at the expense of the laboring nation. This
Bonaparte, who constitutes himself chief of the lumpen proletariat,
who here alone rediscovers in mass form the interests which he
personally pursues, who recognizes in this scum, offal, refuse of
all classes the only class upon which he can base himself
unconditionally, is the real Bonaparte, the Bonaparte sans phrase.
An old, crafty roué, he conceives the historical life of the nations
and their performances of state as comedy in the most vulgar sense,
as a masquerade in which the grand costumes, words, and postures
merely serve to mask the pettiest knavery. Thus his expedition to
Strasbourg, where the trained Swiss vulture played the part of the
Napoleonic eagle. For his irruption into Boulogne he puts some
London lackeys into French uniforms. They represent the army. In his
Society of December 10 he assembles ten thousand rascals who are to
play the part of the people as Nick Bottom [A character in
Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's Dream. -- Ed.] that of the lion. At
a moment when the bourgeoisie itself played the most complete
comedy, but in the most serious manner in the world, without
infringing any of the pedantic conditions of French dramatic
etiquette, and was itself half deceived, half convinced of the
solemnity of its own performance of state, the adventurer, who took
the comedy as plain comedy, was bound to win. Only when he has
eliminated his solemn opponent, when he himself now takes his
imperial role seriously and under the Napoleonic mask imagines he is
the real Napoleon, does he become the victim of his own conception
of the world, the serious buffoon who no longer takes world history
for a comedy but his comedy for world history. What the national
ateliers were for the socialist workers, what the Guards mobile were
for the bourgeois republicans, the Society of December 10 was for
Bonaparte, the party fighting force peculiar to him. On his journeys
the detachments of this society packing the railways had to
improvise a public for him, stage popular enthusiasm, roar Vive
l'Empereur, insult and thrash republicans, under police protection,
of course. On his return journeys to Paris they had to form the
advance guard, forestall counter-demonstrations or disperse them.
The Society of December 10 belonged to him, it was his work, his
very own idea. Whatever else he appropriates is put into his hands
by the force of circumstances; whatever else he does, the
circumstances do for him or he is content to copy from the deeds of
others. But Bonaparte with official phrases about order, religion,
family, and property in public, before the citizens, and with the
secret society of the Schufterles and Spiegelbergs, the society of
disorder, prostitution, and theft, behind him — that is Bonaparte
himself as the original author, and the history of the Society of
December 10 is his own history.
Now it had happened by way of exception that people's
representatives belonging to the party of Order came under the
cudgels of the Decembrists. Still more. Yon, the police commissioner
assigned to the National Assembly and charged with watching over its
safety, acting on the deposition of a certain Allais, advised the
Permanent Commission that a section of the Decembrists had decided
to assassinate General Changarnier and Dupin, the President of the
National Assembly, and had already designated the individuals who
were to perpetrate the deed. One comprehends the terror of M. Dupin.
A parliamentary inquiry into the Society of December 10 — that is,
the profanation of the Bonapartist secret world — seemed inevitable.
Just before the meeting of the National Assembly Bonaparte
providently disbanded his society, naturally only on paper, for in a
detailed memoir at the end of 1851 Police Prefect Carlier still
sought in vain to move him to really break up the Decembrists.
The Society of December 10 was to remain the private army of
Bonaparte until he succeeded in transforming the public army into a
Society of December 10. Bonaparte made the first attempt at this
shortly after the adjournment of the National Assembly, and
precisely with the money just wrested from it. As a fatalist, he
lives in the conviction that there are certain higher powers which
man, and the soldier in particular, cannot withstand. Among these
powers he counts, first and foremost, cigars and champagne, cold
poultry and garlic sausage. Accordingly, to begin with, he treats
officers and non-commissioned officers in his Elysee apartments to
cigars and champagne, cold poultry and garlic sausage. On October 3
he repeats this maneuver with the mass of the troops at the St. Maur
review, and on October 10 the same maneuver on a still larger scale
at the Satory army parade. The uncle remembered the campaigns of
Alexander in Asia, the nephew the triumphal marches of Bacchus in
the same land. Alexander was a demigod, to be sure. But Bacchus was
a god and moreover the tutelary deity of the Society of December 10.
After the review of October 3, the Permanent Commission summoned War
Minister Hautpoul. He promised that these breaches of discipline
would not recur. We know how on October 10 Bonaparte kept Hautpoul's
word. As commander in chief of the Paris army, Changarnier had
commanded at both reviews. At once a member of the Permanent
Commission, chief of the National Guard, the "savior" of January 29
and June 13, the "bulwark of society," the candidate of the party of
Order for presidential honors, the suspected monk of two monarchies,
he had hitherto never acknowledged himself as the subordinate of the
War Minister, had always openly derided the republican constitution,
and had pursued Bonaparte with an ambiguous lordly protection. Now
he was consumed with zeal for discipline against the War Minister
and for the constitution against Bonaparte. While on October 10 a
section of the cavalry raised the shout: "Vive Napoléon! Vivent les
saucissons!" Changarnier arranged that at least the infantry
marching past under the command of his friend Neumayer should
preserve an icy silence. As a punishment, the War Minister relieved
General Neumayer of his post in Paris at Bonaparte's instigation, on
the pretext of appointing him commanding general of the Fourteenth
and Fifteenth divisions. Neumayer refused this exchange of posts and
so had to resign. Changarnier, for his part, published an order of
the day on November 2 in which he forbade the troops to indulge in
political outcries or demonstrations of any kind while under arms.
The Elysee newspapers attacked Changarnier; the papers of the party
of Order attacked Bonaparte; the Permanent Commission held repeated
secret sessions in which it was repeatedly proposed to declare the
country in danger; the army seemed divided into two hostile camps,
with two hostile general staffs, one in the Elysee, where Bonaparte
resided, the other in the Tuileries, the quarters of Changarnier. It
seemed that only the meeting of the National Assembly was needed to
give the signal for battle. The French public judged this friction
between Bonaparte and Changarnier like the English journalist who
characterized it in these words:
"The political housemaids of France are sweeping away the glowing
lava of the revolution with old brooms and wrangle with one another
while they do their work."
Meanwhile, Bonaparte hastened to remove the War Minister Hautpoul,
to pack him off in all haste to Algiers, and to appoint General
Schramm War Minister in his place. On November 12 he sent to the
National Assembly a message of American prolixity, overloaded with
detail, redolent of order, desirous of reconciliation,
constitutionally acquiescent, treating of all and sundry, but not of
the questions brulantes [burning questions] of the moment. As if in
passing, he made the remark that according to the express provisions
of the constitution the President alone could dispose of the army.
The message closed with the following words of great solemnity:
"Above all things, France demands tranquillity.... But bound by an
oath, I shall keep within the narrow limits that it has set for
me.... As far as I am concerned, elected by the people and owing my
power to it alone, I shall always bow to its lawfully expressed
will. Should you resolve at this session on a revision of the
constitution, a Constituent Assembly will regulate the position of
the executive power. If not, then the people will solemnly pronounce
its decision in 1852. But whatever the solutions of the future may
be, let us come to an understanding, so that passion, surprise, or
violence may never decide the destiny of a great nation.... What
occupies my attention, above all, is not who will rule France in
1852, but how to employ the time which remains at my disposal so
that the intervening period may pass by without agitation or
disturbance. I have opened my heart to you with sincerity; you will
answer my frankness with your trust, my good endeavors with your
cooperation, and God will do the rest."
The respectable, hypocritically moderate, virtuously commonplace
language of the bourgeoisie reveals its deepest meaning in the mouth
of the autocrat of the Society of December 10 and the picnic hero of
St. Maur and Satory.
The burgraves of the party of Order did not delude themselves for a
moment concerning the trust that this opening of the heart deserved.
About oaths they had long been blasé they numbered in their midst
veterans and virtuosos of political perjury. Nor had they failed to
hear the passage about the army. They observed with annoyance that
in its discursive enumeration of lately enacted laws the message
passed over the most important law, the electoral law, in studied
silence, and moreover, in the event of there being no revision of
the constitution, left the election of the President in 1852 to the
people. The electoral law was the lead ball chained to the feet of
the party of Order, which prevented it from walking and so much the
more from storming forward! Moreover, by the official disbandment of
the Society of December 10 and the dismissal of War Minister
Hautpoul, Bonaparte had with his own hand sacrificed the scapegoats
on the altar of the country. He had blunted the edge of the expected
collision. Finally, the party of Order itself anxiously sought to
avoid, to mitigate, to gloss over any decisive conflict with the
executive power. For fear of losing their conquests over the
revolution, they allowed their rival to carry off the fruits
thereof. "Above all things, France demands tranquillity." This was
what the party of Order had cried to the revolution since February,
this was what Bonaparte's message cried to the party of Order.
"Above all things, France demands tranquillity." Bonaparte committed
acts that aimed at usurpation, but the party of Order committed
"unrest" if it raised a row about these acts and construed them
hypochondriacally. The sausages of Satory were quiet as mice when no
one spoke of them. "Above all things, France demands tranquillity."
Bonaparte demanded, therefore, that he be left in peace to do as he
liked and the parliamentary party was paralyzed by a double fear,
the fear of again evoking revolutionary unrest and the fear of
itself appearing as the instigator of unrest in the eyes of its own
class, in the eyes of the bourgeoisie. Consequently, since France
demanded tranquillity above all things, the party of Order dared not
answer "war" after Bonaparte had talked "peace" in his message. The
public, which had anticipated scenes of great scandal at the opening
of the National Assembly, was cheated of its expectations. The
opposition deputies, who demanded the submission of the Permanent
Commission's minutes on the October events, were out-voted by the
majority. On principle, all debates that might cause excitement were
eschewed. The proceedings of the National Assembly during November
and December, 1850, were without interest.
At last, toward the end of December, guerrilla warfare began over a
number of prerogatives of parliament. The movement got bogged down
in petty squabbles about the prerogatives of the two powers, since
the bourgeoisie had done away with the class struggle for the moment
by abolishing universal suffrage.
A judgment for debt had been obtained from the court against Mauguin,
one of the people's representatives. In answer to the inquiry of the
president of the court, the Minister of Justice, Rouher, declared
that a capias should be issued against the debtor without further
ado. Mauguin was thus thrown into debtors' prison. The National
Assembly flared up when it learned of the assault. Not only did it
order his immediate release, but it even had him fetched forcibly
from Clichy the same evening, by its clerk. In order, however, to
confirm its faith in the sanctity of private property and with the
idea at the back of its mind of opening, in case of need, a place of
safekeeping for Montagnards who had become troublesome, it declared
imprisonment of people's representatives for debt permissible when
its consent had been previously obtained. It forgot to decree that
the President might also be locked up for debt. It destroyed the
last semblance of the immunity that enveloped the members of its own
body.
It will be remembered that, acting on the information given by a
certain Allais, Police Commissioner Yon had denounced a section of
the Decembrists for planning the murders of Dupin and Changarnier.
In reference to this, at the very first session the quaestors made
the proposal that parliament should form a police force of its own,
paid out of the private budget of the National Assembly and
absolutely independent of the police prefect. The Minister of the
Interior, Baroche, protested against this invasion of his domain. A
miserable compromise on this matter was concluded, according to
which, true, the police commisioner of the Assembly was to be paid
out of its private budget and to be appointed and dismissed by its
quaestors, but only after previous agreement with the Minister of
the Interior. Meanwhile the government had started criminal
proceedings against Alais, and here it was easy to represent his
information as a hoax and through the mouth of the public prosecutor
to cast ridicule upon Dupin, Changarnier, Yon, and the whole
National Assembly. Thereupon, on December 29, Minister Baroche
writes a letter to Dupin in which he demands Yon's dismissal. The
bureau of the Assembly, alarmed by its violence in the Mauguin
affair and accustomed when it has ventured a blow at the executive
power to receive two blows from it in return, does not sanction this
decision. It dismisses Yon as a reward for his official zeal and
robs itself of a parliamentary prerogative indispensable against a
man who does not decide by night in order to execute by day, but
decides by day and executes by night.
We have seen how on great and striking occasions during the months
of November and December the National Assembly avoided or quashed
the struggle with the executive power. Now we see it compelled to
take up the struggle on the pettiest occasions. In the Mauguin
affair it confirms the principle of imprisoning people's
representatives for debt, but reserves the right to have it applied
only to representatives obnoxious to itself and wrangles over this
infamous privilege with the Minister of justice. Instead of availing
itself of the alleged murder plot to decree an inquiry into the
Society of December 10 and irredeemably unmasking Bonaparte before
France and Europe in his true character of chief of the Paris lumpen
proletariat, it lets the conflict be degraded to a point where the
only issue between it and the Minister of the Interior is which of
them has the authority to appoint and dismiss a police commissioner.
Thus during the whole of this period we see the party of Order
compelled by its equivocal position to dissipate and disintegrate
its struggle with the executive power in petty jurisdictional
squabbles, pettifoggery, legalistic hairsplitting, and
delimitational disputes, and to make the most ridiculous matters of
form the substance of its activity. It does not dare take up the
conflict at the moment when this has significance from the
standpoint of principle, when the executive power has really exposed
itself and the cause of the National Assembly would be the cause of
the nation. By so doing it would give the nation its marching
orders, and it fears nothing more than that the nation should move.
On such occasions it accordingly rejects the motions of the Montagne
and proceeds to the order of the day. The question at issue in its
large aspects having thus been dropped, the executive power calmly
waits for the time when it can again take up the same question on
petty and insignificant occasions, when this is, so to speak, of
only local parliamentary interest. Then the repressed rage of the
party of Order breaks out, then it tears the curtain away from the
coulisses, then it denounces the President, then it declares the
republic in danger, but then, also, its fervor appears absurd and
the occasion for the struggle seems a hypocritical pretext or
altogether not worth fighting about. The parliamentary storm becomes
a storm in a teacup, the fight becomes an intrigue, the conflict a
scandal. While the revolutionary classes gloat with malicious joy
over the humiliation of the National Assembly, for they are just as
enthusiastic about the parliamentary prerogatives of this Assembly
as the latter is about the public liberties, the bourgeoisie outside
parliament does not understand how the bourgeoisie inside parliament
can waste time over such petty squabbles and imperil tranquillity by
such pitiful rivalries with the President. It becomes confused by a
strategy that makes peace at the moment when all the world is
expecting battles, and attacks at the moment when all the world
believes peace has been made.
On December 20 Pascal Duprat interpellated the Minister of the
Interior concerning the Gold Bars Lottery. This lottery was a
"daughter of Elysium." Bonaparte with his faithful followers had
brought her into the world and Police Prefect Carlier had placed her
under his official protection, although French law forbids all
lotteries except raffles for charitable purposes. Seven million
lottery tickets at a franc-a-piece, the profits ostensibly to be
devoted to shipping Parisian vagabonds to California. On the one
hand, golden dreams were to supplant the socialist dreams of the
Paris proletariat, the seductive prospect of the first prize the
doctrinaire right to work. Naturally the Paris workers did not
recognize in the glitter of the California gold bars the
inconspicuous francs that were enticed out of their pockets. In the
main, however, the matter was nothing short of a downright swindle.
The vagabonds who wanted to open California gold mines without
troubling to leave Paris were Bonaparte himself and his debt-ridden
Round Table. The three millions voted by the National Assembly had
been squandered in riotous living; in one way or another coffers had
to be replenished. In vain had Bonaparte opened a national
subscription for the building of so-called cites ouvrieres [workers'
cities], and headed the list himself with a considerable sum. The
hard-hearted bourgeois waited mistrustfully for him to pay up his
share, and since this naturally did not ensue, the speculation in
socialist castles in the air immediately fell to the ground. The
gold bars proved a better draw. Bonaparte & Co. were not content to
pocket part of the excess of the seven millions over the bars to be
allotted in prizes; they manufactured false lottery tickets; they
issued ten, fifteen, and even twenty tickets with the same number —
a financial operation in the spirit of the Society of December 10!
Here the National Assembly was confronted not with the fictitious
President of the Republic but with Bonaparte in the flesh. Here it
could catch him in the act, in conflict not with the constitution
but with the Code penal. If after Duprat's interpellation it
proceeded to the order of the day, this did not happen merely
because Girardin's motion that it should declare itself "satisfied"
reminded the party of Order of its own systematic corruption. The
bourgeois, and above all the bourgeois inflated into a statesman,
supplements his practical meanness by theoretical extravagance. As a
statesman he becomes, like the state power that confronts him, a
higher being that can be fought only in a higher, consecrated
fashion.
Bonaparte, who precisely because he was a bohemian, a princely
lumpen proletarian, had the advantage over a rascally bourgeois in
that he could conduct the struggle meanly, now saw, after the
Assembly guided him with its own hand across the slippery ground of
the military banquets, the reviews, the Society of December 10, and
finally the Code penal, that the moment had come when he could pass
from an apparent defensive to the offensive. The minor defeats
meanwhile sustained by the Minister of Justice, the Minister of War,
the Minister of the Navy, and the Minister of Finance, through which
the National Assembly signified its snarling displeasure, troubled
him little. He not only prevented the ministers from resigning and
thus recognizing the sovereignty of parliament over the executive
power, but could now consummate what he had begun during the recess
of the National Assembly: the severance of the military power from
parliament, the removal of Changarnier.
An Elysee paper published an order of the day alleged to have been
addressed during the month of May to the First Army Division, and
therefore proceeding from Changarnier, in which the officers were
urged, in the event of an insurrection, to give no quarter to the
traitors in their own ranks, but to shoot them immediately, and to
refuse troops to the National Assembly if it should requisition
them. On January 3, 1851, the cabinet was interpellated concerning
this order of the day. For the investigation of this matter it
requests a breathing space, first of three months, then of a week,
finally of only twenty-four hours. The Assembly insists on an
immediate explanation. Changarnier rises and declares that there
never was such an order of the day. He adds that he will always
hasten to comply with the demands of the National Assembly and that
in case of a clash it can count on him. It receives his declaration
with indescribable applause and passes a vote of confidence in him.
It abdicates, it decrees its own impotence and the omnipotence of
the army by placing itself under the private protection of a
general; but the general deceives himself when he puts at its
command against Bonaparte a power that he holds only as a fief from
the same Bonaparte, and when, in his turn, he expects to be
protected by this parliament, his own protege in need of protection.
Changarnier, however, believes in the mysterious power with which
the bourgeoisie has endowed him since January 29, 1849. He considers
himself the third power, existing side by side with both the other
state powers. He shares the fate of the rest of this epoch's heroes,
or rather saints, whose greatness consists precisely in the biased
great opinion of them that their party creates in its own interests
and who shrink to everyday figures as soon as circumstances call on
them to perform miracles. Unbelief is, in general, the mortal enemy
of these reputed heroes who are really saints. Hence their
majestically moral indignation at the dearth of enthusiasm displayed
by wits and scoffers.
That same evening the ministers were summoned to the Elysee.
Bonaparte insists on the dismissal of Changarnier; five ministers
refuse to sign; the Moniteur announces a ministerial crisis, and the
press of the party of Order threatens to form a parliamentary army
under Changarnier's command. The party of Order had constitutional
authority to take this step. It merely had to appoint Changarnier
president of the National Assembly and requisition any number of
troops it pleased for its protection. It could do so all the more
safely as Changarnier still actually stood at the head of the army
and the Paris National Guard and was only waiting to be
requisitioned together with the army. The Bonapartist press did not
as yet even dare to question the right of the National Assembly to
requisition troops directly, a legal scruple that in the given
circumstances did not look promising. That the army would have
obeyed the order of the National Assembly is probable when one bears
in mind that Bonaparte had to search all Paris for eight days in
order, finally, to find two generals — Baraguay d'Hilliers and
Saint-Jean d'Angely — who declared themselves ready to countersign
Changarnier's dismissal. That the party of Order, however, would
have found in its own ranks and in parliament the necessary number
of votes for such a resolution is more than doubtful, when one
considers that eight days later two hundred and eighty-six votes
detached themselves from the party and that in December, 1851, at
the last hour of decision, the Montagne still rejected a similar
proposal. Nevertheless, the burgraves might, perhaps, still have
succeeded in spurring the mass of their party to a heroism that
consisted in feeling themselves secure behind a forest of bayonets
and accepting the services of an army that had deserted to their
camp. Instead of this, on the evening of January 6, Messrs. the
Burgraves betook themselves to the Elysee to make Bonaparte desist
from dismissing Changarnier by using statesmanlike phrases and
urging considerations of state. Whomever one seeks to persuade, one
acknowledges as master of the situation. On January 12, Bonaparte,
assured by this step, appoints a new ministry in which the leaders
of the old ministry, Fould and Baroche, remain. Saint-Jean D'Angely
becomes War Minister, the Moniteur publishes the decree dismissing
Changarnier, and his command is divided between Baraguay d'Hilliers,
who receives the First Army Division, and Perrot, who receives the
National Guard. The bulwark of society has been discharged, and
while this does not cause any tiles to fall from the roofs,
quotations on the Bourse are, on the other hand, going up.
By repulsing the army, which places itself in the person of
Changarnier at its disposal, and so surrendering the army
irrevocably to the President, the party of Order declares that the
bourgeoisie has forfeited its vocation to rule. A parliamentary
ministry no longer existed. Having now indeed lost its grip on the
army and the National Guard, what forcible means remained to it with
which simultaneously to maintain the usurped authority of parliament
over the people and its constitutional authority against the
President? None. Only the appeal to impotent principles remained to
it now, to principles that it had itself always interpreted merely
as general rules, which one prescribes for others in order to be
able to move all the more freely oneself. The dismissal of
Changarnier and the falling of the military power into Bonaparte's
hands closes the first part of the period we are considering, the
period of struggle between the party of Order and the executive
power. War between the two powers has now been openly declared, is
openly waged, but only after the party of Order has lost both arms
and soldiers. Without the ministry, without the army, without the
people, without public opinion, after its electoral law of May 3i no
longer the representative of the sovereign nation, sans eyes, sans
ears, sans teeth, sans everything, the National Assembly had
undergone a gradual transformation into an ancient French parliament
that has to leave action to the government and content itself with
growling remonstrances post festum [belatedly].
The party of Order receives the new ministry with a storm of
indignation. General Bedeau recalls to mind the mildness of the
Permanent Commission during the recess, and the excessive
consideration it showed by waiving the publication of its minutes.
The Minister of the Interior himself now insists on the publication
of these minutes, which by this time have naturally become as dull
as ditch water, disclose no fresh facts, and have not the slightest
effect on the blasé public. Upon Remusat's proposal the National
Assembly retires into its office and appoints a "Committee for
Extraordinary Measures." Paris departs the less from the rut of its
everyday routine because at this moment trade is prosperous,
factories are busy, corn prices low, foodstuffs overflowing, and the
savings banks receiving fresh deposits daily. The "extraordinary
measures" that parliament has announced with so much noise fizzle
out on January 18 in a no-confidence vote against the ministry
without General Changarnier ever being mentioned. The party of Order
was forced to frame its motion in this way to secure the votes of
the republicans, since of all the ministry's measures, Changarnier's
dismissal was precisely the only one the republicans approved of,
while the party of Order was in fact not in a position to Censure
the other ministerial acts, which it had itself dictated.
The no-confidence vote of January 18 was passed by four hundred and
fifteen votes to two hundred and eighty-six. Thus, it was carried
only by a coalition of the extreme Legitimists and Orleanists with
the pure republicans and the Montagne. Thus it proved that the party
of Order had lost in conflicts with Bonaparte not only the ministry,
not only the army, but also its independent parliamentary majority;
that a squad of representatives had deserted its camp, out of
fanaticism for conciliation, out of fear of the struggle, out of
lassitude, out of family regard for the state salaries so near and
dear to them, out of speculation about ministerial posts becoming
vacant (Odilon Barrot), out of sheer egoism, which makes the
ordinary bourgeois always inclined to sacrifice the general interest
of his class for this or that private motive. From the first, the
Bonapartist representatives adhered to the party of Order only in
the struggle against revolution. The leader of the Catholic party,
Montalembert, had already at that time thrown his influence into the
Bonapartist scale, since he despaired of the parliamentary party's
prospects of life. Lastly, the leaders of this party, Thiers and
Berryer, the Orleanist and the Legitimist, were compelled openly to
proclaim themselves republicans, to confess that their hearts were
royalist but their heads republican, that the parliamentary republic
was the sole possible form for the rule of the bourgeoisie as a
whole. Thus they were compelled, before the eyes of the bourgeois
class itself, to stigmatize the restoration plans, which they
continued indefatigably to pursue behind parliament's back, as an
intrigue as dangerous as it was brainless.
The no-confidence vote of January 18 hit the ministers and not the
President. But it was not the ministry, it was the President who had
dismissed Changarnier. Should the party of Order impeach Bonaparte
himself? Because of his restoration desires? The latter merely
supplemented their own. Because of his conspiracy in connection with
the military reviews and the Society of December 10? They had buried
these themes long since under routine orders of the day. Because of
the dismissal of the hero of January 29 and June 13, the man who in
May, 1850, threatened to set fire to all four corners of Paris in
the event of a rising? Their allies of the Montagne and Cavaignac
did not even allow them to raise the fallen bulwark of society by
means of an official attestation of sympathy. They themselves could
not deny the President the constitutional authority to dismiss a
general. They only raged because he made an unparliamentary use of
his constitutional right. Had they not continually made an
unconstitutional use of their parliamentary prerogative,
particularly in regard to the abolition of universal suffrage? They
were therefore reduced to moving within strictly parliamentary
limits. And it took that peculiar malady which since 1848 has raged
all over the Continent, parliamentary cretinism, which holds those
infected by it fast in an imaginary world and robs them of all
sense, all memory, all understanding of the rude external world — it
took this parliamentary cretinism for those who had destroyed all
the conditions of parliamentary power with their own hands, and were
bound to destroy them in their struggle with the other classes,
still to regard their parliamentary victories as victories and to
believe they hit the President by striking at his ministers. They
merely gave him the opportunity to humiliate the National Assembly
afresh in the eyes of the nation. On January 20 the Moniteur
announced that the resignation of the entire ministry had been
accepted. On the pretext that no parliamentary party any longer had
a majority — as the vote of January 18, this fruit of the coalition
between Montagne and royalists, proved — and pending the formation
of a new ministry, of which not one member was an Assembly
representative, all being absolutely unknown and insignificant
individuals; a ministry of mere clerks and copyists. The party of
Order could now work to exhaustion playing with these marionettes;
the executive power no longer thought it worth while to be seriously
represented in the National Assembly. The more his ministers were
pure dummies, the more obviously Bonaparte concentrated the whole
executive power in his own person and the more scope he had to
exploit it for his own ends.
In coalition with the Montagne, the party of Order revenged itself
by rejecting the grant to the President of 1,800,000 francs which
the chief of the Society of December 10 had compelled his
ministerial clerks to propose. This time a majority of only a
hundred and two votes decided the matter; thus twenty-seven fresh
votes had fallen away since January 18; the dissolution of the party
of Order was progressing. At the same time, so there might not for a
moment be any mistake about the meaning of its coalition with the
Montagne, it scorned even to consider a proposal signed by a hundred
and eighty-nine members of the Montagne calling for a general
amnesty of political offenders. It sufficed for the Minister of the
Interior, a certain Vaisse, to declare that the tranquillity was
only apparent, that in secret great agitation prevailed, that in
secret ubiquitous societies were being organized, the democratic
papers were preparing to come out again, the reports from the
departments were unfavorable, the Geneva refugees were directing a
conspiracy spreading by way of Lyon all over the South of France,
France was on the verge of an industrial and commercial crisis, the
manufacturers of Roubaix had reduced working hours, the prisoners of
Belle Isle were in revolt — it sufficed for even a mere Vaisse to
conjure up the red specter and the party of Order rejected without
discussion a motion that would certainly have won the National
Assembly immense popularity and thrown Bonaparte back into its arms.
Instead of letting itself be intimidated by the executive power with
the prospect of fresh disturbances, it ought rather to have allowed
the class struggle a little elbow room, so as to keep the executive
power dependent on it. But it did not feel equal to the task of
playing with fire.
Meanwhile the so-called transition ministry continued to vegetate
until the middle of April. Bonaparte wearied and befooled the
National Assembly with continual new ministerial combinations. Now
he seemed to want to form a republican ministry with Lamartine and
Billault, now a parliamentary one with the inevitable Odilon Barrot,
whose name is never missing when a dupe is necessary, then a
Legitimist ministry with Vatimesnil and Benoit d'Azy, and then again
an Orleanist one with Maleville. While he thus kept the different
factions of the party of Order in tension against one another, and
alarmed them as a whole by the prospect of a republican ministry and
the consequent inevitable restoration of universal suffrage, he at
the same time engendered in the bourgeoisie the conviction that his
honest efforts to form a parliamentary ministry were being
frustrated by the irreconcilability of the royalist factions. The
bourgeoisie, however, cried out all the louder for a "strong
government"; it found it all the more unpardonable to leave France
"without administration," the more a general commercial crisis
seemed now to be approaching, and won recruits for socialism in the
towns just as the ruinously low price of corn did in the
countryside. Trade daily became slacker, the number of unemployed
increased perceptibly; ten thousand workers, at least, were
breadless in Paris, innumerable factories stood idle in Rouen,
Mulhouse, Lyon, Roubaix, Tourcoing, St. Ettienne, Elbeuf, etc. Under
these circumstances Bonaparte could venture, on April 11, to restore
the ministry of January 18: Messrs. Rouher, Fould, Baroche, etc.,
reinforced by M. Leon Faucher, whom the Constituent Assembly during
its last days had, with the exception of five votes cast by
ministers, unanimously stigmatized by a vote of no confidence for
sending out false telegrams. The National Assembly had therefore
gained a victory over the ministry on January 18, had struggled with
Bonaparte for three months, only to have Fould and Baroche on April
11 admit the puritan Faucher as a third party into their ministerial
alliance.
In November, 1849, Bonaparte had contented himself with an
unparliamentary ministry, in January, 1851, with an
extra-parliamentary one, and on April 11 he felt strong enough to
form an anti-parliamentary ministry, which harmoniously combined in
itself the no-confidence votes of both Assemblies, the Constituent
and the Legislative, the republican and the royalist. This gradation
of ministries was the thermometer with which parliament could
measure the decrease of its own vital heat. By the end of April the
latter had fallen so low that Persigny, in a personal interview,
could urge Changarnier to go over to the camp of the President.
Bonaparte, he assured him, regarded the influence of the National
Assembly as completely destroyed, and the proclamation was already
prepared that was to be published after the coup d'etat, which was
kept steadily in view but was by chance again postponed. Changarnier
informed the leaders of the party of Order of the obituary notice,
but who believes that bedbug bites are fatal? And parliament,
stricken, disintegrated, and death-tainted as it was, could not
prevail upon itself to see in its duel with the grotesque chief of
the Society of December 10 anything but a duel with a bedbug. But
Bonaparte answered the party of Order as Agesilaus did King Agis: "I
seem to thee an ant, but one day I shall be a lion."
<
BACK
|