Maximilien
Robespierre:
Justification
of the Use of Terror
Maximilien Robespierre (1758 1794) was the leader
of the twelveman Committee of Public Safety elected by the National
Convention, and which effectively governed France at the height of the radical
phase of the revolution. He had once been a fairly straightforward liberal
thinker - reputedly he slept with a copy of Rousseau's Social Contract at his
side. But his own purity of belief led him to impatience with others.
The committee was among the most creative executive
bodies ever seen - and rapidly put into effect policies which stabilized the
French economy and began the formation of the very successful French army. It
also directed it energies against counter-revolutionary uprisings, especially
in the south and west of France. In doing so it unleashed the reign of terror.
Here Robespierre, in his speech of February 5,1794, from which excerpts are
given here, discussed this issue. The figures behind this speech indicate that
in the five months from September, 1793, to February 5, 1794, the revolutionary
tribunal in Paris convicted and executed 238 men and 31 women and acquitted 190
persons, and that on February 5 there were 5,434 individuals in the prisons in
Paris awaiting trial.
Robespierre was frustrated with the progress of the
revolution. After issuing threats to the National Convention, he himself was
arrested in July 1794. He tried to shoot himslef but missed, and spent his last
few hours with his jaw hanging off. He was guillotined, as a victim of the
terror, on July 28, 1794.
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… But, to found and
consolidate democracy, to achieve the peaceable reign of the constitutional
laws, we must end the war of liberty against tyranny and pass safely across the
storms of the revolution: such is the aim of the revolutionary system that you
have enacted. Your conduct, then, ought also to be regulated by the stormy
circumstances in which the republic is placed; and the plan of your
administration must result from the spirit of the revolutionary government
combined with the general principles of democracy.
Now, what is the
fundamental principle of the democratic or popular government-that is, the
essential spring which makes it move? It is virtue; I am speaking of the public
virtue which effected so many prodigies in Greece and Rome and which ought to
produce much more surprising ones in republican France; of that virtue which is
nothing other than the love of country and of its laws.
But as the essence of the
republic or of democracy is equality, it follows that the love of country
necessarily includes the love of equality.
It is also true that this
sublime sentiment assumes a preference for the public interest over every
particular interest; hence the love of country presupposes or produces all the
virtues: for what are they other than that spiritual strength which renders one
capable of those sacrifices? And how could the slave of avarice or ambition,
for example, sacrifice his idol to his country?
Not only is virtue the
soul of democracy; it can exist only in that government ....
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Republican virtue can be
considered in relation to the people and in relation to the government; it is
necessary in both. When only the government lacks virtue, there remains a
resource in the people's virtue; but when the people itself is corrupted,
liberty is already lost.
Fortunately virtue is
natural to the people, notwithstanding aristocratic prejudices. A nation is
truly corrupted when, having by degrees lost its character and its liberty, it
passes from democracy to aristocracy or to monarchy; that is the decrepitude
and death of the body politic....
But when, by prodigious
efforts of courage and reason, a people breaks the chains of despotism to make
them into trophies of liberty; when by the force of its moral temperament it
comes, as it were, out of the arms of the death, to recapture all the vigor of
youth; when by tums it is sensitive and proud, intrepid and docile, and can be
stopped neither by impregnable ramparts nor by the innumerable armies of the
tyrants armed against it, but stops of itself upon confronting the law's image;
then if it does not climb rapidly to the summit of its destinies, this can only
be the fault of those who govern it.
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From all this let us
deduce a great truth: the characteristic of popular government is confidence in
the people and severity towards itself.
The whole development of
our theory would end here if you had only to pilot the vessel of the Republic
through calm waters; but the tempest roars, and the revolution imposes on you
another task.
This great purity of the
French revolution's basis, the very sublimity of its objective, is precisely
what causes both our strength and our weakness. Our strength, because it gives
to us truth's ascendancy over imposture, and the rights of the public interest
over private interests; our weakness, because it rallies all vicious men
against us, all those who in their hearts contemplated despoiling the people
and all those who intend to let it be despoiled with impunity, both those who
have rejected freedom as a personal calamity and those who have embraced the
revolution as a career and the Republic as prey. Hence the defection of so many
ambitious or greedy men who since the point of departure have abandoned us along
the way because they did not begin the journey with the same destination in
view. The two opposing spirits that have been represented in a struggle to rule
nature might be said to be fighting in this great period of human history to
fix irrevocably the world's destinies, and France is the scene of this fearful
combat. Without, all the tyrants encircle you; within, all tyranny's friends
conspire; they will conspire until hope is wrested from crime. We must smother
the internal and external enemies of the Republic or perish with it; now in
this situation, the first maxim of your policy ought to be to lead the people
by reason and the people's enemies by terror.
If the spring of popular
government in time of peace is virtue, the springs of popular government in
revolution are at once virtue and terror: virtue, without which terror is
fatal; terror, without which virtue is powerless. Terror is nothing other than
justice, prompt, severe, inflexible; it is therefore an emanation of virtue; it
is not so much a special principle as it is a consequence of the general
principle of democracy applied to our country's most urgent needs.
It has been said that
terror is the principle of despotic government. Does your government therefore
resemble despotism? Yes, as the sword that gleams in the hands of the heroes of
liberty resembles that with which the henchmen of tyranny are armed. Let the
despot govern by terror his brutalized subjects; he is right, as a despot. Subdue by terror the enemies of liberty, and
you will be right, as founders of the Republic. The government of the
revolution is liberty's despotism against tyranny. Is force made only to
protect crime? And is the thunderbolt not destined to strike the heads of the
proud?
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. . . Indulgence for the
royalists, cry certain men, mercy for the villains! No! mercy for the innocent,
mercy for the weak, mercy for the unfortunate, mercy for humanity.
Society owes protection
only to peaceable citizens; the only citizens in the Republic are the
republicans. For it, the royalists, the conspirators are only strangers or,
rather, enemies. This terrible war waged by liberty against tyranny- is it not
indivisible? Are the enemies within not the allies of the enemies without? The
assassins who tear our country apart, the intriguers who buy the consciences
that hold the people's mandate; the traitors who sell them; the mercenary
pamphleteers hired to dishonor the people's cause, to kill public virtue, to
stir up the fire of civil discord, and to prepare political counterrevolution
by moral counterrevolution-are all those men less guilty or less dangerous than
the tyrants whom they serve?
Source: Robespierre: On the Moral and Political Principles of Domestic Policy
This text is part of the Internet Modern History Sourcebook.
The Sourcebook is a collection of public domain and copy-permitted texts for
introductory level classes in modern European and World history.
(From:http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/robespierre-terror.html
12/6/2000)