VI
<
BACK
The coalition with the Montagne
and the pure republicans, to which the party of Order saw itself
condemned in its unavailing efforts to maintain possession of the
military power and to reconquer supreme control of the executive
power, proved incontrovertibly that it had forfeited its independent
parliamentary majority. On May 28 the mere power of the calendar, of
the hour hand of the clock, gave the signal for its complete
disintegration. With May 28, the last year of the life of the
National Assembly began. It now had to decide for continuing the
constitution unaltered or for revising it. But revision of the
constitution — that implied not only rule of the bourgeoisie or of
the petty-bourgeois democracy, democracy or proletarian anarchy,
parliamentary republic or Bonaparte, it implied at the same time
Orleans or Bourbon! Thus fell in the midst of parliament the apple
of discord that was bound to inflame openly the conflict of
interests which split the party of Order into hostile factions. The
party of Order was a combination of heterogeneous social substances.
The question of revision generated a political temperature at which
the product again decomposed into its original components.
The Bonapartists' interest in a revision was simple. For them it was
above all a question of abolishing Article 45, which forbade
Bonaparte's reelection and the prolongation of his authority. No
less simple appeared the position of the republicans. They
unconditionally rejected any revision; they saw in it a universal
conspiracy against the republic. Since they commanded more than a
quarter of the votes in the National Assembly, and according to the
constitution three-quarters of the votes were required for a
resolution for revision to be legally valid and for the convocation
of a revising Assembly, they needed only to count their votes to be
sure of victory. And they were sure of victory.
As against these clear positions, the party of Order found itself
inextricably caught in contradictions. If it should reject revision,
it would imperil the status quo, since it would leave Bonaparte only
one way out, that of force; and since on the second Sunday in May,
1852, at the decisive moment, it would be surrendering France to
revolutionary anarchy, with a President who had lost his authority,
with a parliament which for a long time had not possessed it, and
with a people that meant to reconquer it. If it voted for
constitutional revision, it knew that it voted in vain and would be
bound to fail constitutionally because of the republicans' veto. If
it unconstitutionally declared a simple majority vote to be binding,
it could hope to dominate the revolution only if it subordinated
itself unconditionally to the sovereignty of the executive power;
then it would make Bonaparte master of the constitution, of its
revision, and of the party itself. A partial revision, which would
prolong the authority of the President, would pave the way for
imperial usurpation. A general revision, which would shorten the
existence of the republic, would bring the dynastic claims into
unavoidable conflict, for the conditions of a Bourbon and an
Orleanist restoration were not only different, they were mutually
exclusive.
The parliamentary republic was more than the neutral territory on
which the two factions of the French bourgeoisie, Legitimists and
Orleanists, large landed property and industry, could dwell side by
side with equality of rights. It was the unavoidable condition of
their common rule, the sole form of state in which their general
class interest subjected to itself at the same time both the claims
of their particular factions and all the remaining classes of
society. As royalists they fell back into their old antagonism, into
the struggle for the supremacy of landed property or of money, and
the highest expression of this antagonism, its personification, was
their kings themselves, their dynasties. Hence the resistance of the
party of Order to the recall of the Bourbons.
The Orleanist and people's representative Creton had in 1849, 1850,
and 1851 periodically introduced a motion for the revocation of the
decree exiling the royal families. Just as regularly, parliament
presented the spectacle of an Assembly of royalists that obdurately
barred the gates through which their exiled kings might return home.
Richard III murdered Henry VI, remarking that he was too good for
this world and belonged in heaven. The royalists declared France too
bad to possess her kings again. Constrained by force of
circumstances, they had become republicans and repeatedly sanctioned
the popular decision that banished their kings from France.
A revision of the constitution — and circumstances compelled taking
that into consideration — called in question, along with the
republic, the common rule of the two bourgeois factions, and
revived, with the possibility of a monarchy, the rivalry of the
interests which the monarchy had predominantly represented by turns,
the struggle for the supremacy of one faction over the other. The
diplomats of the party of Order believed they could settle the
struggle by an amalgamation of the two dynasties, by a so-called
fusion of the royalist parties and their royal houses. The real
fusion of the Restoration and the July Monarchy was the
parliamentary republic, in which Orleanist and Legitimist colors
were obliterated and the various species of bourgeois disappeared
into the bourgeois as such, the bourgeois genus. Now, however,
Orleanist was to become Legitimist and Legitimist Orleanist.
Royalty, in which their antagonism was personified, was to embody
their unity, the expression of their exclusive factional interests
was to become the expression of their common class interest, the
monarchy was to do what only the abolition of two monarchies, the
republic, could do and had done. This was the philosopher's stone,
to produce which the doctors of the party of Order racked their
brains. As if the Legitimist monarchy could ever become the monarchy
of the industrial bourgeois or the bourgeois monarchy ever become
the monarchy of the hereditary landed aristocracy. As if landed
property and industry could fraternize under one crown, when the
crown could descend to only one head, the head of the elder brother
or of the younger. As if industry could come to terms with landed
property at all, so long as landed property itself does not decide
to become industrial. If Henry V should die tomorrow, the Count of
Paris would not on that account become the king of the Legitimists
unless he ceased to be the king of the Orleanists. The philosophers
of fusion, however, who became more vociferous in proportion as the
question of revision came to the fore, who had provided themselves
with an official daily organ in the Assemblee Nationale, and who are
again at work even at this very moment (February, 1852), considered
the whole difficulty to be due to the opposition and rivalry of the
two dynasties. The attempts to reconcile the Orleans family with
Henry V, begun since the death of Louis Philippe, but, like the
dynastic intrigues generally, played at only while the National
Assembly was in recess, during the entr'actes, behind the scenes —
sentimental coquetry with the old superstition rather than seriously
meant business — now became grand performances of state, enacted by
the party of Order on the public stage, instead of in amateur
theatricals as before. The couriers sped from Paris to Venice, from
Venice to Claremont, from Claremont to Paris. The Count of Chambord
issues a manifesto in which "with the help of all the members of his
family" he announces not his, but the "national" restoration. The
Orleanist Salvandy throws himself at the feet of Henry V. The
Legitimist chiefs, Berryer, Benoit d'Azy, Saint-Priest, travel to
Claremont to persuade the Orleans set, but in vain. The fusionists
perceive too late that the interests of the two bourgeois factions
neither lose exclusiveness nor gain pliancy when they become
accentuated in the form of family interests, the interests of two
royal houses. If Henry V were to recognize the Count of Paris as his
heir - the sole success that the fusion could achieve at best — the
House of Orleans would not win any claim that the childlessness of
Henry V had not already secured to it, but it would lose all the
claims it had gained through the July Revolution. It would waive its
original claims, all the titles it had wrested from the older branch
of the Bourbons in almost a hundred years of struggle; it would
barter away its historical prerogative, the prerogative of the modem
kingdom, for the prerogative of its genealogical tree. The fusion,
therefore, would be nothing but a voluntary abdication of the House
of Orleans, its resignation to Legitimacy, repentant withdrawal from
the Protestant state church into the Catholic. A withdrawal,
moreover, that would not even bring it to the throne it had lost,
but to the steps of the throne where it had been born. The old
Orleanist ministers, Guizot, Duchatel, etc., who likewise hastened
to Claremont to advocate the fusion, in fact represented merely the
Katzenjammer over the July Revolution, the despair about the
bourgeois kingdom and the kingliness of the bourgeois, the
superstitious belief in Legitimacy as the last charm against
anarchy. Imagining themselves mediators between Orleans and
Bourbons, they were in reality merely Orleanist renegades, and the
Prince of Joinville received them as such. On the other hand, the
viable, bellicose section of the Orleanists, Thiers, Baze, etc.,
convinced Louis Philippe's family all the more easily that if any
directly monarchist restoration presupposed the fusion of the two
dynasties, and if any such fusion presupposed abdication of the
House of Orleans, it was, on the contrary, wholly in accord with the
tradition of their forefathers to recognize the republic for the
moment and wait until events permitted the conversion of the
presidential chair into a throne. Rumors of Joinville's candidature
were circulated, public curiosity was kept in suspense, and a few
months later, in September, after the rejection of revision, his
candidature was publicly proclaimed.
The attempt at a royalist fusion of Orleanists with Legitimists had
thus not only failed; it had destroyed their parliamentary fusion,
their common republican form, and had broken up the party of Order
into its original component parts; but the more the estrangement
between Claremont and Venice grew, the more their settlement
collapsed and the Joinville agitation gained ground, so much the
more eager and earnest became the negotiations between Bonaparte's
minister Faucher and the Legitimists.
The disintegration of the party of Order did not stop at its
original elements. Each of the two great factions, in its turn,
decomposed all over again. It was as if all the old shadings that
had formerly fought and jostled one another within each of the two
circles, whether Legitimist or Orleanist, had thawed out again like
dry Infusoria on contact with water, as if they had acquired anew
sufficient vital energy to form groups of their own and independent
antagonisms. The Legitimists dreamed they were back among the
controversies between the Tuileries and the Pavillon Marsan, between
Villele and Polignac. The Orleanists relived the golden days of the
tourney between Guizot, Mole, Broglie, Thiers, and Odilon Barrot.
The section of the party of Order that was eager for revision, but
was divided again on the limits to revisions — a section composed of
the Legitimists led by Berryer and Falloux, on the one hand, and by
La Rochejaquelein, on the other, and of the conflict-weary
Orleanists led by Mole, Broglie, Montalembert and Odilon Barrot —
agreed with the Bonapartist representatives on the following
indefinite and broadly framed motion: "With the object of restoring
to the nation the full exercise of its sovereignty, the undersigned
representatives move that the constitution be revised."
At the same time, however, they unanimously declared through their
reporter Tocqueville that the National Assembly had no right to move
the abolition of the republic, that this right was vested solely in
the Revising Chamber. For the rest, the constitution might be
revised only in a "legal" manner, hence only if the constitutionally
prescribed three-quarters of the number of votes were cast in favor
of revision. On July 19, after six days of stormy debate, revision
was rejected, as was to be anticipated. Four hundred and forty-six
votes were cast for it, but two hundred and seventy-eight against.
The extreme Orleanists, Thiers, Changarnier, etc., voted with the
republicans and the Montagne.
Thus the majority of parliament declared against the constitution,
but this constitution itself declared for the minority and that its
vote was binding. But had not the party of Order subordinated the
constitution to the parliamentary majority on May 31, 1850, and on
June 13, 1849? Up to now, was not its whole policy based on the
subordination of the paragraphs of the constitution to the decisions
of the parliamentary majority? Had it not left to the democrats the
antediluvian superstitious belief in the letter of the law, and
castigated the democrats for it? At the present moment, however,
revision of the constitution meant nothing but continuation of the
presidential authority, just as continuation of the constitution
meant nothing but Bonaparte's deposition. Parliament had declared
for him, but the constitution declared against parliament. He
therefore acted in the sense of parliament when he tore up the
constitution and acted in the sense of the constitution when he
adjourned parliament.
Parliament had declared the constitution and, with the latter, its
own rule to be "beyond the majority"; by its vote it had abolished
the constitution and prolonged the term of presidential power, while
declaring at the same time that neither could the one die nor the
other live so long as the Assembly itself continued to exist. Those
who were to bury it were standing at the door. While it debated on
revision, Bonaparte removed General Baraguay d'Hilliers, who had
proved irresolute, from the command of the First Army Division and
appointed in his place General Magnan, the victor of Lyon, the hero
of the December days, one of his creatures, who under Louis Philippe
had already more or less compromised himself in Bonaparte's favor on
the occasion of the Boulogne expedition.
The party of Order proved by its decision on revision that it knew
neither how to rule nor how to serve; neither how to live nor how to
die; neither how to suffer the republic nor how to overthrow it;
neither how to uphold the constitution nor how to throw it
overboard; neither how to cooperate with the President nor how to
break with him. To whom, then, did it look for the solution of all
the contradictions? To the calendar, to the course of events. It
ceased to presume to sway them. It therefore challenged events to
assume sway over it, and thereby challenged the power to which, in
the struggle against the people, it had surrendered one attribute
after another until it stood impotent before this power. In order
that the head of the executive power might be able the more
undisturbedly to draw up his plan of campaign against it, strengthen
his means of attack, select his tools, and fortify his positions, it
resolved precisely at this critical moment to retire from the stage
and adjourn for three months, from August 10 to November 4.
The parliamentary party was not only dissolved into its two great
factions, each of these factions was not only split up within
itself, but the party of Order in parliament had fallen out with the
party of Order outside parliament. The spokesmen and scribes of the
bourgeoisie, its platform and its press — in short, the ideologists
of the bourgeoisie and the bourgeoisie itself, the representatives
and the represented — faced one another in estrangement and no
longer understood one another.
The Legitimists in the provinces, with their limited horizon and
unlimited enthusiasm, accused their parliamentary leaders, Berryer
and Falloux, of deserting to the Bonapartist camp and of defection
from Henry V. Their fleur-de-lis minds believed in the fall of man,
but not in diplomacy.
Far more fateful and decisive was the breach of the commercial
bourgeoisie with its politicians. It reproached them not as the
Legitimists reproached theirs, with having abandoned their
principles, but on the contrary, with clinging to principles that
had become useless.
I have indicated above that since Fould's entry into the ministry
the section of the commercial bourgeoisie which had held the lion's
share of power under Louis Philippe, namely, the aristocracy of
finance, had become Bonapartist. Fould not only represented
Bonaparte's interests in the Bourse, he represented at the same time
the interests of the Bourse before Bonaparte. The position of the
aristocracy of finance is most strikingly depicted in a passage from
its European organ, the London Economist. In the issue of February
1, 1851, its Paris correspondent writes:
"Now we have it stated from numerous quarters that above all things
France demands tranquillity. The President declares it in his
message to the Legislative Assembly; it is echoed from the tribune;
it is asserted in the journals; it is announced from the pulpit, it
is demonstrated by the sensitiveness of the public funds at the
least prospect of disturbance, and their firmness the instant it is
made manifest that the executive is victorious."
In its issue of November 29, 1851, the Economist declares in its own
name:
"The President is the guardian of order, and is now recognized as
such on every stock exchange of Europe."
The aristocracy of finance, therefore, condemned the parliamentary
struggle of the party of Order with the executive power as a
disturbance of order, and celebrated every victory of the President
over its ostensible representatives as a victory of order. By the
aristocracy of finance must here be understood not merely the great
loan promoters and speculators in public funds, in regard to whom it
is immediately obvious that their interests coincide with the
interests of the state power. All modern finance, the whole of the
banking business, is interwoven in the closest fashion with public
credit. A part of their business capital is necessarily invested and
put out at interest in quickly convertible public funds. Their
deposits, the capital placed at their disposal and distributed by
them among merchants and industrialists, are partly derived from the
dividends of holders of government securities. If in every epoch the
stability of the state power signified Moses and the prophets to the
entire money market and to the priests of this money market, why not
all the more so today, when every deluge threatens to sweep away the
old states, and the old state debts with them?
The industrial bourgeoisie too, in its fanaticism for order, was
angered by the squabbles of the parliamentary party of Order with
the executive power. After their vote of January 18 on the occasion
of Changarnier's dismissal, Thiers, Angles, Sainte-Beuve, etc.,
received from their constituents, in precisely the industrial
districts, public reproofs in which their coalition with the
Montagne was especially scourged as high treason to order. If, as we
have seen, the boastful taunts, the petty intrigues which marked the
struggle of the party of Order with the President merited no better
reception, then on the other hand this bourgeois party, which
required its representatives to allow the military power to pass
from its own parliament to an adventurous pretender without offering
resistance, was not even worth the intrigues that were squandered in
its interests. It proved that the struggle to maintain its public
interests, its own class interests, its political power, only
troubled and upset it, as it disturbed private business.
With barely an exception the bourgeois dignitaries of the
departmental towns, the municipal authorities, the judges of the
commercial courts, etc., everywhere received Bonaparte on his tours
in the most servile manner, even when, as in Dijon, he made an
unrestrained attack on the National Assembly, and especially on the
party of Order.
When trade was good, as it still was at the beginning of 1851, the
commercial bourgeoisie raged against any parliamentary struggle,
lest trade be put out of humor. When trade was bad, as it
continually was from the end of February, 1851, the commercial
bourgeoisie accused the parliamentary struggles of being the cause
of stagnation and cried out for them to stop so that trade could
start again. The revision debates came on just in this bad period.
Since the question here was whether the existing form of state was
to be or not to be, the bourgeoisie felt all the more justified in
demanding from its representatives the ending of this torturous
provisional arrangement and at the same time the maintenance of the
status quo. There was no contradiction in this. By the end of the
provisional arrangement it understood precisely its continuation,
the postponement to a distant future of the moment when a decision
had to be reached. The status quo could be maintained in only two
ways: prolongation of Bonaparte's authority or his constitutional
retirement and the election of Cavaignac. A section of the
bourgeoisie desired the latter solution and knew no better advice to
give its representatives than to keep silent and leave the burning
question untouched. They were of the opinion that if their
representatives did not speak, Bonaparte would not act. They wanted
an ostrich parliament that would hide its head in order to remain
unseen. Another section of the bourgeoisie desired, because
Bonaparte was already in the presidential chair, to leave him
sitting in it, so that everything could remain in the same old rut.
They were indignant because their parliament did not openly infringe
the constitution and abdicate without ceremony.
The Department Councils, those provincial representative bodies of
the big bourgeoisie, which met from August 25 on during the recess
of the National Assembly, declared almost unanimously for revision,
and thus against parliament and in favor of Bonaparte.
Still more unequivocally than in its falling out with its
parliamentary representatives, the bourgeoisie displayed its wrath
against its literary representatives, its own press. The sentences
to ruinous fines and shameless terms of imprisonment, on the
verdicts of bourgeois juries, for every attack of bourgeois
journalists on Bonaparte's usurpationist desires, for every attempt
of the press to defend the political rights of the bourgeoisie
against the executive power, astonished not merely France, but all
Europe.
While the parliamentary party of Order, by its clamor for
tranquillity, as I have shown, committed itself to quiescence, while
it declared the political rule of the bourgeoisie to be incompatible
with the safety and existence of the bourgeoisie — by destroying
with its own hands, in the struggle against the other classes of
society, all the conditions for its own regime, the parliamentary
regime — the extraparliamentary mass of the bourgeoisie, on the
other hand, by its servility toward the President, by its
vilification of parliament, by its brutal maltreatment of its own
press, invited Bonaparte to suppress and annihilate its speaking and
writing section, its politicians and its literati, its platform and
its press, so it would then be able to pursue its private affairs
with full confidence in the protection of a strong and unrestricted
government. It declared unequivocally that it longed to get rid of
its own political rule in order to get rid of the troubles and
dangers of ruling.
And this extraparliamentary bourgeoisie, which had already rebelled
against the purely parliamentary and literary struggle for the rule
of its own class, and had betrayed the leaders of this struggle, now
dares after the event to indict the proletariat for not having risen
in a bloody struggle, a life-and-death struggle on its behalf! This
bourgeoisie, which every moment sacrificed its general class
interests, that is, its political interests, to the narrowest and
most sordid private interests, and demanded a similar sacrifice from
its representatives, now moans that the proletariat has sacrificed
its ideal political interests to its material interests. It poses as
a lovely creature that has been misunderstood and deserted in the
decisive hour by the proletariat, misled by socialists. And it finds
a general echo in the bourgeois world. Naturally, I do not speak
here of German shyster politicians and riff-raff of the same
persuasion. I refer, for example, to the already quoted Economist,
which as late as November 29, 1851, that is, four days prior to the
coup d'etat, declared Bonaparte to be the "guardian of order" but
Thiers and Berryer to be "anarchists," and on December 27, 1851,
after Bonaparte had quieted these "anarchists," is already
vociferous about the treason to "the skill, knowledge, discipline,
spiritual insight, intellectual resources, and moral weight of the
middle and upper ranks" committed by the masses of "ignorant,
untrained, and stupid proletaires." The stupid, ignorant, and vulgar
mass was none other than the bourgeois mass itself.
In the year 1851, France, to be sure, had passed through a kind of
minor trade crisis. The end of February showed a decline in exports
compared with 1850; in March trade suffered and factories closed
down; in April the position of the industrial departments appeared
as desperate as after the February days; in May business had still
not revived; as late as June 28 the holdings of the Bank of France
showed, by the enormous growth of deposits and the equally great
decrease in advances on bills of exchange, that production was at a
standstill, and it was not until the middle of October that a
progressive improvement of business again set in. The French
bourgeoisie attributed this trade stagnation to purely political
causes, to the struggle between parliament and the executive power,
to the precariousness of a merely provisional form of state, to the
terrifying prospect of the second Sunday in May of 1852. I will not
deny that all these circumstances had a depressing effect on some
branches of industry in Paris and the departments. But in any case
the influence of political conditions was only local and
inconsiderable. Does this require further proof than the fact that
the improvement of trade set in toward the middle of October, at the
very moment when the political situation grew worse, the political
horizon darkened, and a thunderbolt from Elysium was expected at any
moment? For the rest, the French bourgeois, whose "skill, knowledge,
spiritual insight, and intellectual resources" reach no further than
his nose, could throughout the period of the Industrial Exhibition
in London have found the cause of his commercial misery right under
his nose. While in France factories were closed down, in England
commercial bankruptcies broke out. While in April and May the
industrial panic reached a climax in France, in April and May the
commercial panic reached a climax in England. Like the French woolen
industry, the English woolen industry suffered, and as French silk
manufacture, so did English silk manufacture. True, the English
cotton mills continued working, but no longer at the same profits as
in 1849 and 1850. The only difference was that the crisis in France
was industrial, in England commercial; that while in France the
factories stood idle, in England they extended operations, but under
less favorable conditions than in preceding years; that in France it
was exports, in England imports which were hardest hit. The common
cause, which is naturally not to be sought within the bounds of the
French political horizon, was obvious. The years 1849 and 1850 were
years of the greatest material prosperity and of an overproduction
that appeared as such only in 1851. At the beginning of this year it
was given a further special impetus by the prospect of the
Industrial Exhibition. In addition there were the following special
circumstances: first, the partial failure of the cotton crop in 1850
and 1851, then the certainty of a bigger cotton crop than had been
expected; first the rise, then the sudden fall — in short, the
fluctuations in the price of cotton. The crop of raw silk, in France
at least, had turned out to be even below the average yield. Woolen
manufacture, finally, had expanded so much since 1848 that the
production of wool could not keep pace with it and the price of raw
wool rose out of all proportion to the price of woolen manufactures.
Here, then, in the raw material of three industries for the world
market, we already have three-fold material for a stagnation in
trade. Apart from these special circumstances, the apparent crisis
of 1851 was nothing else but the halt which overproduction and
overspeculation invariably make in completing the industrial cycle,
before they summon all their strength in order to rush feverishly
through the final phase of this cycle and arrive once more at their
starting point, the general trade crisis. During such intervals in
the history of trade, commercial bankruptcies break out in England,
while in France industry itself is reduced to idleness, partly
forced into retreat by the competition, just then becoming
intolerable, of the English in all markets, and partly singled out
for attack as a luxury industry by every business stagnation. Thus
besides the general crisis France goes through national trade crises
of her own, which are nevertheless determined and conditioned far
more by the general state of the world market than by French local
influences. It will not be without interest to contrast the judgment
of the English bourgeois with the prejudice of the French bourgeois.
In its annual trade report for 1851, one of the largest Liverpool
houses writes:
"Few years have more thoroughly belied the anticipations formed at
their commencement than the one just closed; instead of the great
prosperity which was almost unanimously looked for it has proved one
of the most discouraging that has been seen for the last quarter of
a century — this, of course, refers to the mercantile, not to the
manufacturing classes. And yet there certainly were grounds for
anticipating the reverse at the beginning of the year — stocks of
produce were moderate, money was abundant, and food was cheap, a
plentiful harvest well secured, unbroken peace on the Continent, and
no political or fiscal disturbances at home; indeed, the wings of
commerce were never more unfettered.... To what source, then, is
this disastrous result to be attributed? We believe to overtrading
in both imports and exports. Unless our merchants will put more
stringent limits to their freedom of action, nothing but a triennial
panic can keep us in check."
Now picture to yourself the French bourgeois, how in the throes of
this business panic his trade-crazy brain is tortured, set in a
whirl, and stunned by rumors of coups d'etat and the restoration of
universal suffrage, by the struggle between parliament and the
executive power, by the Fronde war between Orleanists and
Legitimists, by the communist conspiracies in the south of France,
by alleged Jacqueries in the departments of Nievre and Cher, by the
advertisements of the different candidates for the presidency, by
the cheapjack solutions offered by the journals, by the threats of
the republicans to uphold the constitution and universal suffrage by
force of arms, by the gospel-preaching emigre heroes in partibus,
who announced that the world would come to an end on the second
Sunday in May, 1852 — think of all this and you will comprehend why
in this unspeakable, deafening chaos of fusion, revision,
prorogation, constitution, conspiration, coalition, emigration,
usurpation, and revolution, the bourgeois madly snorts at his
parliamentary republic:
"Rather an end with terror than terror without end!"
Bonaparte understood this cry. His power of comprehension was
sharpened by the growing turbulence of creditors, who with each
sunset which brought settling day, the second Sunday in May, 1852,
nearer, saw a movement of the stars protesting their earthly bills
of exchange. They had become veritable astrologers. The National
Assembly had blighted Bonaparte's hopes of a constitutional
prolongation of his authority; the candidature of the Prince of
Joinville forbade further vacillation.
If ever an event has, well in advance of its coming, cast its shadow
before, it was Bonaparte's coup d'etat. As early as January 29,
1849, barely a month after his election, he had made a proposal
about it to Changarnier. In the summer of 1849 his own Prime
Minister, Odilon Barrot, had covertly denounced the policy of coups
d'etat; in the winter of 1850 Thiers had openly done so. In May,
1851, Persigny had sought once more to win Changarnier for the coup;
the Messager de l'Assemblee had published an account of these
negotiations. During every parliamentary storm the Bonapartist
journals threatened a coup d'etat, and the nearer the crisis drew,
the louder their tone became. In the orgies that Bonaparte kept up
every night with men and women of the "swell mob," as soon as the
hour of midnight approached and copious potations had loosened
tongues and fired imaginations, the coup d'etat was fixed for the
following morning. Swords were drawn, glasses clinked, the
representatives were thrown out the window, the imperial mantle fell
upon Bonaparte's shoulders, until the following morning banished the
ghost once more and astonished Paris learned, from vestals of little
reticence and from indiscreet paladins, of the danger it had once
again escaped. During the months of September and October rumors of
a coup d'etat followed fast, one after the other. Simultaneously the
shadow took on color, like a variegated daguerreotype. Look up the
September and October copies of the organs of the European daily
press and you will find, word for word, intimations like the
following: "Paris is full of rumors of a coup d'etat. The capital is
to be filled with troops during the night, and the next morning is
to bring decrees which will dissolve the National Assembly, declare
the Department of the Seine in a state of siege, restore universal
suffrage, and appeal to the people. Bonaparte is said to be seeking
ministers for the execution of these illegal decrees." The
dispatches that bring these tidings always end with the fateful word
"postponed." The coup d'etat was ever the fixed idea of Bonaparte.
With this idea he had again set foot on French soil. He was so
obsessed by it that he continually betrayed it and blurted it out.
He was so weak that, just as continually, he gave it up again. The
shadow of the coup d'etat had become so familiar to the Parisians as
a specter that they were not willing to believe in it when it
finally appeared in the flesh. What allowed the coup d'etat to
succeed was therefore neither the reticent reserve of the chief of
the Society of December 10 nor the fact that the National Assembly
was caught unawares. If it succeeded, it succeeded despite its
indiscretion and with its foreknowledge, a necessary, inevitable
result of antecedent developments.
On October 10 Bonaparte announced to his ministers his decision to
restore universal suffrage; on the sixteenth they handed in their
resignations; on the twenty-sixth Paris learned of the formation of
the Thorigny Ministry. Police Prefect Carlier was simultaneously
replaced by Maupas; the head of the First Military Division, Magnan,
concentrated the most reliable regiments in the capital. On November
4 the National Assembly resumed its sessions. It had nothing better
to do than to recapitulate in a short, succinct form the course it
had gone through and to prove that it was buried only after it had
died.
The first post it forfeited in the struggle with the executive power
was the ministry. It had solemnly to admit this loss by accepting at
full value the Thorigny Ministry, a mere shadow cabinet. The
Permanent Commission had received M. Giraud with laughter when he
presented himself in the name of the new ministers. Such a weak
ministry for such strong measures as the restoration of universal
suffrage! Yet the precise object was to get nothing through in
parliament, but everything against parliament.
On the very first day of its reopening, the National Assembly
received the message from Bonaparte in which he demanded the
restoration of universal suffrage and the abolition of the law of
May 31, 1850. The same day his ministers introduced a decree to this
effect. The National Assembly at once rejected the ministry's motion
of urgency and rejected the law itself on November 13 by three
hundred and fifty-five votes to three hundred and forty-eight. Thus,
it tore up its mandate once more; it once more confirmed the fact
that it had transformed itself from the freely elected
representatives of the people into the usurpatory parliament of a
class; it acknowledged once more that it had itself cut in two the
muscles which connected the parliamentary head with the body of the
nation.
If by its motion to restore universal suffrage the executive power
appealed from the National Assembly to the people, the legislative
power appealed by its Quaestors' Bill from the people to the army.
This Quaestors' Bill was to establish its right of directly
requisitioning troops, of forming a parliamentary army. While it
thus designated the army as the arbitrator between itself and the
people, between itself and Bonaparte, while it recognized the army
as the decisive state power, it had to confirm, on the other hand,
the fact that it had long given up its claim to dominate this power.
By debating its right to requisition troops, instead of
requisitioning them at once, it betrayed its doubts about its own
powers. By rejecting the Quaestors' Bill, it made public confession
of its impotence. This bill was defeated, its proponents lacking a
hundred and eight votes of a majority. The Montagne thus decided the
issue. It found itself in the position of Buridan's ass — not,
indeed, between two bundles of hay with the problem of deciding
which was the more attractive, but between two showers of blows with
the problem of deciding which was the harder. On the one hand, there
was the fear of Changarnier; on the other, the fear of Bonaparte. It
must be confessed that the position was not a heroic one.
On November 18 an amendment was moved to the law on municipal
elections introduced by the party of Order, to the effect that
instead of three years', one year's domicile should suffice for
municipal electors. The amendment was lost by a single vote, but
this one vote immediately proved to be a mistake. By splitting up
into its hostile factions, the party of Order had long ago forfeited
its independent parliamentary majority. It showed now that there was
no longer any majority at all in parliament. The National Assembly
had become incapable of transacting business. Its atomic
constituents were no longer held together by any force of cohesion;
it had drawn its last breath; it was dead.
Finally, a few days before the catastrophe, the extra-parliamentary
mass of the bourgeoisie was solemnly to confirm once more its breach
with the bourgeoisie in parliament. Thiers, as a parliamentary hero
infected more than the rest with the incurable disease of
parliamentary cretinism, had, after the death of parliament, hatched
out, together with the Council of State, a new parliamentary
intrigue, a Responsibility Law by which the President was to be
firmly held within the limits of the constitution. Just as, on
laying the foundation stone of the new market halls in Paris on
September 15, Bonaparte, like a second Masaniello, had enchanted the
dames des balles, the fishwives - to be sure, one fishwife
outweighed seventeen burgraves in real power - just as after the
introduction of the Quaestors' Bill he enraptured the lieutenants
whom he regaled in the Elysee, so now, on November 25, he swept off
their feet the industrial bourgeoisie, which had gathered at the
circus to receive at his hands prize medals for the London
Industrial Exhibition.
I shall give the significant portion of his speech as reported in
the Journal des Debats:
"'With such unhoped-for successes, I am justified in reiterating how
great the French Republic would be if it were permitted to pursue
its real interests and reform its institutions, instead of being
constantly disturbed by demagogues, on the one hand, and by
monarchist hallucinations, on the other.' (Loud, stormy and repeated
applause from every part of the amphitheater.) 'The monarchist
hallucinations hinder all progress and all important branches of
industry. In place of progress nothing but struggle. One sees men
who were formerly the most zealous supporters of the royal authority
and prerogative become partisans of a Convention merely in order to
weaken the authority that has sprung from universal suffrage.' (Loud
and repeated applause.) 'We see men who have suffered most from the
Revolution, and have deplored it most, provoke a new one, and merely
in order to fetter the nation's will.... I promise you tranquillity
for the future,' etc., etc. (Bravo, bravo, a storm of bravos.) "
Thus the industrial bourgeoisie applauds with servile bravos the
coup d'etat of December 2, the annihilation of parliament, the
downfall of its own rule, the dictatorship of Bonaparte. The thunder
of applause on November 25 had its answer in the thunder of cannon
on December 4, and it was on the house of Monsieur Sallandrouze, who
had clapped most, that they clapped most of the bombs.
Cromwell, when he dissolved the Long Parliament, went alone into its
midst, took out his watch so that it should not continue to exist a
minute after the time limit he had fixed, and drove out each one of
the members of Parliament with hilariously humorous taunts.
Napoleon, smaller than his prototype, at least betook himself on the
eighteenth Brumaire to the legislative body and read out to it,
though in a faltering voice, its sentence of death. The second
Bonaparte, who, moreover, found himself in possession of an
executive power very different from that of Cromwell or Napoleon,
sought his model not in the annals of world history but in the
annals of the Society of December 10, in the annals of the criminal
courts. He robs the Bank of France of twenty-five million francs,
buys General Magnan with a million, the soldiers with fifteen francs
apiece and liquor, comes together with his accomplices secretly like
a thief in the night, has the houses of the most dangerous
parliamentary leaders broken into, and Cavaignac, Lamoriciere, Le
Flo, Changarnier, Charras, Thiers, Baze, etc., dragged from their
beds and put in prison, the chief squares of Paris and the
parliamentary building occupied by troops, and cheapjack placards
posted early in the morning on all the walls, proclaiming the
dissolution of the National Assembly and the Council of State, the
restoration of universal suffrage, and the placing of the Seine
Department in a state of siege. In like manner he inserted a little
later in the Moniteur a false document which asserted that
influential parliamentarians had grouped themselves around him and
formed a state consulta.
The rump parliament, assembled in the mairie building of the Tenth
Arrondissement and consisting mainly of Legitimists and Orleanists,
votes the deposition of Bonaparte amid repeated cries of "Long live
the Republic," unfailingly harangues the gaping crowds before the
building, and is finally led off in the custody of African
sharpshooters, first to the d'Orsay barracks, and later packed into
prison vans and transported to the prisons of Mazas, Ham, and
Vincennes. Thus ended the party of Order, the Legislative Assembly,
and the February Revolution.
Before hastening to close, let us briefly summarize the latter's
history:
1. First period. From February 24 to May 4, 1848. February period.
Prologue. Universal-brotherhood swindle.
2. Second period. Period of constituting the republic and of the
Constituent National Assembly.
a. May 4 to June 25, 1848. Struggle of all classes against the
proletariat. Defeat of the proletariat in the June days.
b. June 25 to December 10, 1848. Dictatorship of the pure bourgeois
republicans. Drafting of the constitution. Proclamation of a state
of siege in Paris. The bourgeois dictatorship set aside on December
10 by the election of Bonaparte as President.
c. December 20, 1848, to May 28, 1849. Struggle of the Constituent
Assembly with Bonaparte and with the party of Order in alliance with
him. Passing of the Constituent Assembly. Fall of the republican
bourgeoisie.
3. Third period. Period of the constitutional republic and of the
Legislative National Assembly.
a. May 28, 1849, to June 13, 1849. Struggle of the petty bourgeoisie
with the bourgeoisie and with Bonaparte. Defeat of the
petty-bourgeois democracy.
b. June 13, 1849, to May 31, 1850. Parliamentary dictatorship of the
party of Order. It completes its rule by abolishing universal
suffrage, but loses the parliamentary ministry.
c. May 31, 1850, to December 2, 1851. Struggle between the
parliamentary bourgeoisie and Bonaparte.
(1) May 31, 1850, to January 12, 1851. The Assembly loses the
supreme command of the army.
(2) January 12 to April 11, 1851. It is worsted in its attempts to
regain the administrative power. The party of Order loses its
independent parliamentary majority. It forms a coalition with the
republicans and the Montagne.
(3) April 11, 1851, to October 9, 1851. Attempts at revision,
fusion, prorogation. The party of Order decomposes into its separate
constituents. The breach between the bourgeois parliament and press
and the mass of the bourgeoisie becomes definite.
(4) October 9 to December 2, 1851. Open breach between parliament
and the executive power. The Assembly performs its dying act and
succumbs, left in the lurch by its own class, by the army, and by
all the remaining classes. Passing of the parliamentary regime and
of bourgeois rule. Victory of Bonaparte. Parody of restoration of
empire.
<
BACK
|