Bureaucracy
BureaucracyCHAPTER I. THE RABOURDIN HOUSEHOLDCHAPTER II. MONSIEUR DES LUPEAULXCHAPTER III. THE TEREDOS NAVALIS, OTHERWISE CALLED SHIP-WORMCHAPTER IV. THREE-QUARTER LENGTH PORTRAITS OF CERTAIN GOVERNMENTCHAPTER V. THE MACHINE IN MOTIONCHAPTER VI. THE WORMS AT WORKCHAPTER VII. SCENES FROM DOMESTIC LIFECHAPTER VIII. FORWARD, MOLLUSKS!CHAPTER IX. THE RESIGNATIONCopyright
Bureaucracy
Honoré de Balzac
CHAPTER I. THE RABOURDIN HOUSEHOLD
In Paris, where men of thought and study bear a certain
likeness to one another, living as they do in a common centre, you
must have met with several resembling Monsieur Rabourdin, whose
acquaintance we are about to make at a moment when he is head of a
bureau in one of our most important ministries. At this period he
was forty years old, with gray hair of so pleasing a shade that
women might at a pinch fall in love with it for it softened a
somewhat melancholy countenance, blue eyes full of fire, a skin
that was still fair, though rather ruddy and touched here and there
with strong red marks; a forehead and nose a la Louis XV., a
serious mouth, a tall figure, thin, or perhaps wasted, like that of
a man just recovering from illness, and finally, a bearing that was
midway between the indolence of a mere idler and the thoughtfulness
of a busy man. If this portrait serves to depict his character, a
sketch of this man's dress will bring it still further into relief.
Rabourdin wore habitually a blue surcoat, a white cravat, a
waistcoat crossed a la Robespierre, black trousers without straps,
gray silk stockings and low shoes. Well-shaved, and with his
stomach warmed by a cup of coffee, he left home at eight in the
morning with the regularity of clock-work, always passing along the
same streets on his way to the ministry: so neat was he, so formal,
so starched that he might have been taken for an Englishman on the
road to his embassy.From these general signs you will readily discern a family
man, harassed by vexations in his own household, worried by
annoyances at the ministry, yet philosopher enough to take life as
he found it; an honest man, loving his country and serving it, not
concealing from himself the obstacles in the way of those who seek
to do right; prudent, because he knew men; exquisitely courteous
with women, of whom he asked nothing,—a man full of acquirements,
affable with his inferiors, holding his equals at great distance,
and dignified towards his superiors. At the epoch of which we
write, you would have noticed in him the coldly resigned air of one
who has buried the illusions of his youth and renounced every
secret ambition; you would have recognized a discouraged, but not
disgusted man, one who still clings to his first projects,—more
perhaps to employ his faculties than in the hope of a doubtful
success. He was not decorated with any order, and always accused
himself of weakness for having worn that of the Fleur-de-lis in the
early days of the Restoration.The life of this man was marked by certain mysterious
peculiarities. He had never known his father; his mother, a woman
to whom luxury was everything, always elegantly dressed, always on
pleasure bent, whose beauty seemed to him miraculous and whom he
very seldom saw, left him little at her death; but she had given
him that too common and incomplete education which produces so much
ambition and so little ability. A few days before his mother's
death, when he was just sixteen, he left the Lycee Napoleon to
enter as supernumerary a government office, where an unknown
protector had provided him with a place. At twenty-two years of age
Rabourdin became under-head-clerk; at twenty-five, head-clerk, or,
as it was termed, head of the bureau. From that day the hand that
assisted the young man to start in life was never felt again in his
career, except as to a single circumstance; it led him, poor and
friendless, to the house of a Monsieur Leprince, formerly an
auctioneer, a widower said to be extremely rich, and father of an
only daughter. Xavier Rabourdin fell desperately in love with
Mademoiselle Celestine Leprince, then seventeen years of age, who
had all the matrimonial claims of a dowry of two hundred thousand
francs. Carefully educated by an artistic mother, who transmitted
her own talents to her daughter, this young lady was fitted to
attract distinguished men. Tall, handsome, and finely-formed, she
was a good musician, drew and painted, spoke several languages, and
even knew something of science,—a dangerous advantage, which
requires a woman to avoid carefully all appearance of pedantry.
Blinded by mistaken tenderness, the mother gave the daughter false
ideas as to her probable future; to the maternal eyes a duke or an
ambassador, a marshal of France or a minister of State, could alone
give her Celestine her due place in society. The young lady had,
moreover, the manners, language, and habits of the great world. Her
dress was richer and more elegant than was suitable for an
unmarried girl; a husband could give her nothing more than she now
had, except happiness. Besides all such indulgences, the foolish
spoiling of the mother, who died a year after the girl's marriage,
made a husband's task all the more difficult. What coolness and
composure of mind were needed to rule such a woman! Commonplace
suitors held back in fear. Xavier Rabourdin, without parents and
without fortune other than his situation under government, was
proposed to Celestine by her father. She resisted for a long time;
not that she had any personal objection to her suitor, who was
young, handsome, and much in love, but she shrank from the plain
name of Madame Rabourdin. Monsieur Leprince assured his daughter
that Xavier was of the stock that statesmen came of. Celestine
answered that a man named Rabourdin would never be anything under
the government of the Bourbons, etc. Forced back to his
intrenchments, the father made the serious mistake of telling his
daughter that her future husband was certain of becoming Rabourdin
"de something or other" before he reached the age of admission to
the Chamber. Xavier was soon to be appointed Master of petitions,
and general-secretary at his ministry. From these lower steps of
the ladder the young man would certainly rise to the higher ranks
of the administration, possessed of a fortune and a name bequeathed
to him in a certain will of which he, Monsieur Leprince, was
cognizant. On this the marriage took place.Rabourdin and his wife believed in the mysterious protector
to whom the auctioneer alluded. Led away by such hopes and by the
natural extravagance of happy love, Monsieur and Madame Rabourdin
spent nearly one hundred thousand francs of their capital in the
first five years of married life. By the end of this time
Celestine, alarmed at the non-advancement of her husband, insisted
on investing the remaining hundred thousand francs of her dowry in
landed property, which returned only a slender income; but her
future inheritance from her father would amply repay all present
privations with perfect comfort and ease of life. When the worthy
auctioneer saw his son-in-law disappointed of the hopes they had
placed on the nameless protector, he tried, for the sake of his
daughter, to repair the secret loss by risking part of his fortune
in a speculation which had favourable chances of success. But the
poor man became involved in one of the liquidations of the house of
Nucingen, and died of grief, leaving nothing behind him but a dozen
fine pictures which adorned his daughter's salon, and a few
old-fashioned pieces of furniture, which she put in the
garret.Eight years of fruitless expectation made Madame Rabourdin at
last understand that the paternal protector of her husband must
have died, and that his will, if it ever existed, was lost or
destroyed. Two years before her father's death the place of chief
of division, which became vacant, was given, over her husband's
head, to a certain Monsieur de la Billardiere, related to a deputy
of the Right who was made minister in 1823. It was enough to drive
Rabourdin out of the service; but how could he give up his salary
of eight thousand francs and perquisites, when they constituted
three fourths of his income and his household was accustomed to
spend them? Besides, if he had patience for a few more years he
would then be entitled to a pension. What a fall was this for a
woman whose high expectations at the opening of her life were more
or less warranted, and one who was admitted on all sides to be a
superior woman.Madame Rabourdin had justified the expectations formed of
Mademoiselle Leprince; she possessed the elements of that apparent
superiority which pleases the world; her liberal education enabled
her to speak to every one in his or her own language; her talents
were real; she showed an independent and elevated mind; her
conversation charmed as much by its variety and ease as by the
oddness and originality of her ideas. Such qualities, useful and
appropriate in a sovereign or an ambassadress, were of little
service to a household compelled to jog in the common round. Those
who have the gift of speaking well desire an audience; they like to
talk, even if they sometimes weary others. To satisfy the
requirements of her mind Madame Rabourdin took a weekly
reception-day and went a great deal into society to obtain the
consideration her self-love was accustomed to enjoy. Those who know
Parisian life will readily understand how a woman of her
temperament suffered, and was martyrized at heart by the scantiness
of her pecuniary means. No matter what foolish declarations people
make about money, they one and all, if they live in Paris, must
grovel before accounts, do homage to figures, and kiss the forked
hoof of the golden calf. What a problem was hers! twelve thousand
francs a year to defray the costs of a household consisting of
father, mother, two children, a chambermaid and cook, living on the
second floor of a house in the rue Duphot, in an apartment costing
two thousand francs a year. Deduct the dress and the carriage of
Madame before you estimate the gross expenses of the family, for
dress precedes everything; then see what remains for the education
of the children (a girl of eight and a boy of nine, whose
maintenance must cost at least two thousand francs besides) and you
will find that Madame Rabourdin could barely afford to give her
husband thirty francs a month. That is the position of half the
husbands in Paris, under penalty of being thought
monsters.Thus it was that this woman who believed herself destined to
shine in the world was condemned to use her mind and her faculties
in a sordid struggle, fighting hand to hand with an account-book.
Already, terrible sacrifice of pride! she had dismissed her
man-servant, not long after the death of her father. Most women
grow weary of this daily struggle; they complain but they usually
end by giving up to fate and taking what comes to them; Celestine's
ambition, far from lessening, only increased through difficulties,
and led her, when she found she could not conquer them, to sweep
them aside. To her mind this complicated tangle of the affairs of
life was a Gordian knot impossible to untie and which genius ought
to cut. Far from accepting the pettiness of middle-class existence,
she was angry at the delay which kept the great things of life from
her grasp,—blaming fate as deceptive. Celestine sincerely believed
herself a superior woman. Perhaps she was right; perhaps she would
have been great under great circumstances; perhaps she was not in
her right place. Let us remember there are as many varieties of
woman as there are of man, all of which society fashions to meet
its needs. Now in the social order, as in Nature's order, there are
more young shoots than there are trees, more spawn than full-grown
fish, and many great capacities (Athanase Granson, for instance)
which die withered for want of moisture, like seeds on stony
ground. There are, unquestionably, household women, accomplished
women, ornamental women, women who are exclusively wives, or
mothers, or sweethearts, women purely spiritual or purely material;
just as there are soldiers, artists, artisans, mathematicians,
poets, merchants, men who understand money, or agriculture, or
government, and nothing else. Besides all this, the eccentricity of
events leads to endless cross-purposes; many are called and few are
chosen is the law of earth as of heaven. Madame Rabourdin conceived
herself fully capable of directing a statesman, inspiring an
artist, helping an inventor and pushing his interests, or of
devoting her powers to the financial politics of a Nucingen, and
playing a brilliant part in the great world. Perhaps she was only
endeavouring to excuse to her own mind a hatred for the laundry
lists and the duty of overlooking the housekeeping bills, together
with the petty economies and cares of a small establishment. She
was superior only in those things where it gave her pleasure to be
so. Feeling as keenly as she did the thorns of a position which can
only be likened to that of Saint-Laurence on his grid-iron, is it
any wonder that she sometimes cried out? So, in her paroxysms of
thwarted ambition, in the moments when her wounded vanity gave her
terrible shooting pains, Celestine turned upon Xavier Rabourdin.
Was it not her husband's duty to give her a suitable position in
the world? If she were a man she would have had the energy to make
a rapid fortune for the sake of rendering an adored wife happy! She
reproached him for being too honest a man. In the mouth of some
women this accusation is a charge of imbecility. She sketched out
for him certain brilliant plans in which she took no account of the
hindrances imposed by men and things; then, like all women under
the influence of vehement feeling, she became in thought as
Machiavellian as Gondreville, and more unprincipled than Maxime de
Trailles. At such times Celestine's mind took a wide range, and she
imagined herself at the summit of her ideas.When these fine visions first began Rabourdin, who saw the
practical side, was cool. Celestine, much grieved, thought her
husband narrow-minded, timid, unsympathetic; and she acquired,
insensibly, a wholly false opinion of the companion of her life. In
the first place, she often extinguished him by the brilliancy of
her arguments. Her ideas came to her in flashes, and she sometimes
stopped him short when he began an explanation, because she did not
choose to lose the slightest sparkle of her own mind. From the
earliest days of their marriage Celestine, feeling herself beloved
and admired by her husband, treated him without ceremony; she put
herself above conjugal laws and the rules of private courtesy by
expecting love to pardon all her little wrong-doings; and, as she
never in any way corrected herself, she was always in the
ascendant. In such a situation the man holds to the wife very much
the position of a child to a teacher when the latter cannot or will
not recognize that the mind he has ruled in childhood is becoming
mature. Like Madame de Stael, who exclaimed in a room full of
people, addressing, as we may say, a greater man than herself, "Do
you know you have really said something very profound!" Madame
Rabourdin said of her husband: "He certainly has a good deal of
sense at times." Her disparaging opinion of him gradually appeared
in her behavior through almost imperceptible motions. Her attitude
and manners expressed a want of respect. Without being aware of it
she injured her husband in the eyes of others; for in all countries
society, before making up its mind about a man, listens for what
his wife thinks of him, and obtains from her what the Genevese term
"pre-advice."When Rabourdin became aware of the mistakes which love had
led him to commit it was too late,—the groove had been cut; he
suffered and was silent. Like other men in whom sentiments and
ideas are of equal strength, whose souls are noble and their brains
well balanced, he was the defender of his wife before the tribunal
of his own judgment; he told himself that nature doomed her to a
disappointed life through his fault; HIS; she was like a
thoroughbred English horse, a racer harnessed to a cart full of
stones; she it was who suffered; and he blamed himself. His wife,
by dint of constant repetition, had inoculated him with her own
belief in herself. Ideas are contagious in a household; the ninth
thermidor, like so many other portentous events, was the result of
female influence. Thus, goaded by Celestine's ambition, Rabourdin
had long considered the means of satisfying it, though he hid his
hopes, so as to spare her the tortures of uncertainty. The man was
firmly resolved to make his way in the administration by bringing a
strong light to bear upon it. He intended to bring about one of
those revolutions which send a man to the head of either one party
or another in society; but being incapable of so doing in his own
interests, he merely pondered useful thoughts and dreamed of
triumphs won for his country by noble means. His ideas were both
generous and ambitious; few officials have not conceived the like;
but among officials as among artists there are more miscarriages
than births; which is tantamount to Buffon's saying that "Genius is
patience."Placed in a position where he could study French
administration and observe its mechanism, Rabourdin worked in the
circle where his thought revolved, which, we may remark
parenthetically, is the secret of much human accomplishment; and
his labor culminated finally in the invention of a new system for
the Civil Service of government. Knowing the people with whom he
had to do, he maintained the machine as it then worked, so it still
works and will continue to work; for everybody fears to remodel it,
though no one, according to Rabourdin, ought to be unwilling to
simplify it. In his opinion, the problem to be resolved lay in a
better use of the same forces. His plan, in its simplest form, was
to revise taxation and lower it in a way that should not diminish
the revenues of the State, and to obtain, from a budget equal to
the budgets which now excite such rabid discussion, results that
should be two-fold greater than the present results. Long practical
experience had taught Rabourdin that perfection is brought about in
all things by changes in the direction of simplicity. To economize
is to simplify. To simplify means to suppress unnecessary
machinery; removals naturally follow. His system, therefore,
depended on the weeding out of officials and the establishment of a
new order of administrative offices. No doubt the hatred which all
reformers incur takes its rise here. Removals required by this
perfecting process, always ill-understood, threaten the well-being
of those on whom a change in their condition is thus forced. What
rendered Rabourdin really great was that he was able to restrain
the enthusiasm that possesses all reformers, and to patiently seek
out a slow evolving medium for all changes so as to avoid shocks,
leaving time and experience to prove the excellence of each reform.
The grandeur of the result anticipated might make us doubt its
possibility if we lose sight of this essential point in our rapid
analysis of his system. It is, therefore, not unimportant to show
through his self-communings, however incomplete they might be, the
point of view from which he looked at the administrative horizon.
This tale, which is evolved from the very heart of the Civil
Service, may also serve to show some of the evils of our present
social customs.Xavier Rabourdin, deeply impressed by the trials and poverty
which he witnessed in the lives of the government clerks,
endeavored to ascertain the cause of their growing deterioration.
He found it in those petty partial revolutions, the eddies, as it
were, of the storm of 1789, which the historians of great social
movements neglect to inquire into, although as a matter of fact it
is they which have made our manners and customs what they are
now.Formerly, under the monarchy, the bureaucratic armies did not
exist. The clerks, few in number, were under the orders of a prime
minister who communicated with the sovereign; thus they directly
served the king. The superiors of these zealous servants were
simply called head-clerks. In those branches of administration
which the king did not himself direct, such for instance as the
"fermes" (the public domains throughout the country on which a
revenue was levied), the clerks were to their superior what the
clerks of a business-house are to their employer; they learned a
science which would one day advance them to prosperity. Thus, all
points of the circumference were fastened to the centre and derived
their life from it. The result was devotion and confidence. Since
1789 the State, call it the Nation if you like, has replaced the
sovereign. Instead of looking directly to the chief magistrate of
this nation, the clerks have become, in spite of our fine patriotic
ideas, the subsidiaries of the government; their superiors are
blown about by the winds of a power called "the administration,"
and do not know from day to day where they may be on the morrow. As
the routine of public business must go on, a certain number of
indispensable clerks are kept in their places, though they hold
these places on sufferance, anxious as they are to retain them.
Bureaucracy, a gigantic power set in motion by dwarfs, was
generated in this way. Though Napoleon, by subordinating all things
and all men to his will, retarded for a time the influence of
bureaucracy (that ponderous curtain hung between the service to be
done and the man who orders it), it was permanently organized under
the constitutional government, which was, inevitably, the friend of
all mediocrities, the lover of authentic documents and accounts,
and as meddlesome as an old tradeswoman. Delighted to see the
various ministers constantly struggling against the four hundred
petty minds of the Elected of the Chamber, with their ten or a
dozen ambitious and dishonest leaders, the Civil Service officials
hastened to make themselves essential to the warfare by adding
their quota of assistance under the form of written action; they
created a power of inertia and named it "Report." Let us explain
the Report.When the kings of France took to themselves ministers, which
first happened under Louis XV., they made them render reports on
all important questions, instead of holding, as formerly, grand
councils of state with the nobles. Under the constitutional
government, the ministers of the various departments were
insensibly led by their bureaus to imitate this practice of kings.
Their time being taken up in defending themselves before the two
Chambers and the court, they let themselves be guided by the
leading-strings of the Report. Nothing important was ever brought
before the government that a minister did not say, even when the
case was urgent, "I have called for a report." The Report thus
became, both as to the matter concerned and for the minister
himself, the same as a report to the Chamber of Deputies on a
question of laws,—namely, a disquisition in which the reasons for
and against are stated with more or less partiality. No real result
is attained; the minister, like the Chamber, is fully as well
prepared before as after the report is rendered. A determination,
in whatever matter, is reached in an instant. Do what we will, the
moment comes when the decision must be made. The greater the array
of reasons for and against, the less sound will be the judgment.
The finest things of which France can boast have been accomplished
without reports and where decisions were prompt and spontaneous.
The dominant law of a statesman is to apply precise formula to all
cases, after the manner of judges and physicians.Rabourdin, who said to himself: "A minister should have
decision, should know public affairs, and direct their course," saw
"Report" rampant throughout France, from the colonel to the
marshal, from the commissary of police to the king, from the
prefects to the ministers of state, from the Chamber to the courts.
After 1818 everything was discussed, compared, and weighed, either
in speech or writing; public business took a literary form. France
went to ruin in spite of this array of documents; dissertations
stood in place of action; a million of reports were written every
year; bureaucracy was enthroned! Records, statistics, documents,
failing which France would have been ruined, circumlocution,
without which there could be no advance, increased, multiplied, and
grew majestic. From that day forth bureaucracy used to its own
profit the mistrust that stands between receipts and expenditures;
it degraded the administration for the benefit of the
administrators; in short, it spun those lilliputian threads which
have chained France to Parisian centralization,—as if from 1500 to
1800 France had undertaken nothing for want of thirty thousand
government clerks! In fastening upon public offices, like a
mistletoe on a pear-tree, these officials indemnified themselves
amply, and in the following manner.The ministers, compelled to obey the princes or the Chambers
who impose upon them the distribution of the public moneys, and
forced to retain the workers in office, proceeded to diminish
salaries and increase the number of those workers, thinking that if
more persons were employed by government the stronger the
government would be. And yet the contrary law is an axiom written
on the universe; there is no vigor except where there are few
active principles. Events proved in July, 1830, the error of the
materialism of the Restoration. To plant a government in the hearts
of a nation it is necessary to bind INTERESTS to it, not MEN. The
government-clerks being led to detest the administrations which
lessened both their salaries and their importance, treated them as
a courtesan treats an aged lover, and gave them mere work for
money; a state of things which would have seemed as intolerable to
the administration as to the clerks, had the two parties dared to
feel each other's pulse, or had the higher salaries not succeeded
in stifling the voices of the lower. Thus wholly and solely
occupied in retaining his place, drawing his pay, and securing his
pension, the government official thought everything permissible
that conduced to these results. This state of things led to
servility on the part of the clerks and to endless intrigues within
the various departments, where the humbler clerks struggled vainly
against degenerate members of the aristocracy, who sought positions
in the government bureaus for their ruined sons.Superior men could scarcely bring themselves to tread these
tortuous ways, to stoop, to cringe, and creep through the mire of
these cloacas, where the presence of a fine mind only alarmed the
other denizens. The ambitious man of genius grows old in obtaining
his triple crown; he does not follow in the steps of Sixtus the
Fifth merely to become head of a bureau. No one comes or stays in
the government offices but idlers, incapables, or fools. Thus the
mediocrity of French administration has slowly come about.
Bureaucracy, made up entirely of petty minds, stands as an obstacle
to the prosperity of the nation; delays for seven years, by its
machinery, the project of a canal which would have stimulated the
production of a province; is afraid of everything, prolongs
procrastination, and perpetuates the abuses which in turn
perpetuate and consolidate itself. Bureaucracy holds all things and
the administration itself in leading strings; it stifles men of
talent who are bold enough to be independent of it or to enlighten
it on its own follies. About the time of which we write the pension
list had just been issued, and on it Rabourdin saw the name of an
underling in office rated for a larger sum than the old colonels,
maimed and wounded for their country. In that fact lies the whole
history of bureaucracy.Another evil, brought about by modern customs, which
Rabourdin counted among the causes of this secret demoralization,
was the fact that there is no real subordination in the
administration in Paris; complete equality reigns between the head
of an important division and the humblest copying-clerk; one is as
powerful as the other in an arena outside of which each lords it in
his own way. Education, equally distributed through the masses,
brings the son of a porter into a government office to decide the
fate of some man of merit or some landed proprietor whose door-bell
his father may have answered. The last comer is therefore on equal
terms with the oldest veteran in the service. A wealthy
supernumerary splashes his superior as he drives his tilbury to
Longchamps and points with his whip to the poor father of a family,
remarking to the pretty woman at his side, "That's my chief." The
Liberals call this state of things Progress; Rabourdin thought it
Anarchy at the heart of power. He saw how it resulted in restless
intrigues, like those of a harem between eunuchs and women and
imbecile sultans, or the petty troubles of nuns full of underhand
vexations, or college tyrannies, or diplomatic manoeuvrings fit to
terrify an ambassador, all put in motion to obtain a fee or an
increase in salary; it was like the hopping of fleas harnessed to
pasteboard cars, the spitefulness of slaves, often visited on the
minister himself. With all this were the really useful men, the
workers, victims of such parasites; men sincerely devoted to their
country, who stood vigorously out from the background of the other
incapables, yet who were often forced to succumb through unworthy
trickery.All the higher offices were gained through parliamentary
influence, royalty had nothing to do now with them, and the
subordinate clerks became, after a time, merely the running-gear of
the machine; the most important considerations with them being to
keep the wheels well greased. This fatal conviction entering some
of the best minds smothered many statements conscientiously written
on the secret evils of the national government; lowered the courage
of many hearts, and corrupted sterling honesty, weary of injustice
and won to indifference by deteriorating annoyances. A clerk in the
employ of the Rothchilds corresponds with all England; another, in
a government office, may communicate with all the prefects; but
where the one learns the way to make his fortune, the other loses
time and health and life to no avail. An undermining evil lies
here. Certainly a nation does not seem threatened with immediate
dissolution because an able clerk is sent away and a middling sort
of man replaces him. Unfortunately for the welfare of nations
individual men never seem essential to their existence. But in the
long run when the belittling process is fully carried out nations
will disappear. Every one who seeks instruction on this point can
look at Venice, Madrid, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Rome; all places
which were formerly resplendent with mighty powers and are now
destroyed by the infiltrating littleness which gradually attained
the highest eminence. When the day of struggle came, all was found
rotten, the State succumbed to a weak attack. To worship the fool
who succeeds, and not to grieve over the fall of an able man is the
result of our melancholy education, of our manners and customs
which drive men of intellect into disgust, and genius to
despair.What a difficult undertaking is the rehabilitation of the
Civil Service while the liberal cries aloud in his newspapers that
the salaries of clerks are a standing theft, calls the items of the
budget a cluster of leeches, and every year demands why the nation
should be saddled with a thousand millions of taxes. In Monsieur
Rabourdin's eyes the clerk in relation to the budget was very much
what the gambler is to the game; that which he wins he puts back
again. All remuneration implies something furnished. To pay a man a
thousand francs a year and demand his whole time was surely to
organize theft and poverty. A galley-slave costs nearly as much,
and does less. But to expect a man whom the State remunerated with
twelve thousand francs a year to devote himself to his country was
a profitable contract for both sides, fit to allure all
capacities.These reflections had led Rabourdin to desire the recasting
of the clerical official staff. To employ fewer man, to double or
treble salaries, and do away with pensions, to choose only young
clerks (as did Napoleon, Louis XIV., Richelieu, and Ximenes), but
to keep them long and train them for the higher offices and
greatest honors, these were the chief features of a reform which if
carried out would be as beneficial to the State as to the clerks
themselves. It is difficult to recount in detail, chapter by
chapter, a plan which embraced the whole budget and continued down
through the minutest details of administration in order to keep the
whole synthetical; but perhaps a slight sketch of the principal
reforms will suffice for those who understand such matters, as well
as for those who are wholly ignorant of the administrative system.
Though the historian's position is rather hazardous in reproducing
a plan which may be thought the politics of a chimney-corner, it
is, nevertheless, necessary to sketch it so as to explain the
author of it by his own work. Were the recital of his efforts to be
omitted, the reader would not believe the narrator's word if he
merely declared the talent and the courage of this
official.Rabourdin's plan divided the government into three
ministries, or departments. He thought that if the France of former
days possessed brains strong enough to comprehend in one system
both foreign and domestic affairs, the France of to-day was not
likely to be without its Mazarin, its Suger, its Sully, its de
Choiseul, or its Colbert to direct even vast administrative
departments. Besides, constitutionally speaking, three ministries
will agree better than seven; and, in the restricted number there
is less chance for mistaken choice; moreover, it might be that the
kingdom would some day escape from those perpetual ministerial
oscillations which interfered with all plans of foreign policy and
prevented all ameliorations of home rule. In Austria, where many
diverse united nations present so many conflicting interests to be
conciliated and carried forward under one crown, two statesmen
alone bear the burden of public affairs and are not overwhelmed by
it. Was France less prolific of political capacities than Germany?
The rather silly game of what are called "constitutional
institutions" carried beyond bounds has ended, as everybody knows,
in requiring a great many offices to satisfy the multifarious
ambition of the middle classes. It seemed to Rabourdin, in the
first place, natural to unite the ministry of war with the ministry
of the navy. To his thinking the navy was one of the current
expenses of the war department, like the artillery, cavalry,
infantry, and commissariat. Surely it was an absurdity to give
separate administrations to admirals and marshals when both were
employed to one end, namely, the defense of the nation, the
overthrow of an enemy, and the security of the national
possessions. The ministry of the interior ought in like manner to
combine the departments of commerce, police, and finances, or it
belied its own name. To the ministry of foreign affairs belonged
the administration of justice, the household of the king, and all
that concerned arts, sciences, and belles lettres. All patronage
ought to flow directly from the sovereign. Such ministries
necessitated the supremacy of a council. Each required the work of
two hundred officials, and no more, in its central administration
offices, where Rabourdin proposed that they should live, as in
former days under the monarchy. Taking the sum of twelve thousand
francs a year for each official as an average, he estimated seven
millions as the cost of the whole body of such officials, which
actually stood at twenty in the budget.By thus reducing the ministers to three heads he suppressed
departments which had come to be useless, together with the
enormous costs of their maintenance in Paris. He proved that an
arrondissement could be managed by ten men; a prefecture by a dozen
at the most; which reduced the entire civil service force
throughout France to five thousand men, exclusive of the
departments of war and justice. Under this plan the clerks of the
court were charged with the system of loans, and the ministry of
the interior with that of registration and the management of
domains. Thus Rabourdin united in one centre all divisions that
were allied in nature. The mortgage system, inheritance, and
registration did not pass outside of their own sphere of action and
only required three additional clerks in the justice courts and
three in the royal courts. The steady application of this principle
brought Rabourdin to reforms in the finance system. He merged the
collection of revenue into one channel, taxing consumption in bulk
instead of taxing property. According to his ideas, consumption was
the sole thing properly taxable in times of peace. Land-taxes
should always be held in reserve in case of war; for then only
could the State justly demand sacrifices from the soil, which was
in danger; but in times of peace it was a serious political fault
to burden it beyond a certain limit; otherwise it could never be
depended on in great emergencies. Thus a loan should be put on the
market when the country was tranquil, for at such times it could be
placed at par, instead of at fifty per cent loss as in bad times;
in war times resort should be had to a land-tax."The invasion of 1814 and 1815," Rabourdin would say to his
friends, "founded in France and practically explained an
institution which neither Law nor Napoleon had been able to
establish,—I mean Credit."Unfortunately, Xavier considered the true principles of this
admirable machine of civil service very little understood at the
period when he began his labor of reform in 1820. His scheme levied
a toll on the consumption by means of direct taxation and
suppressed the whole machinery of indirect taxation. The levying of
the taxes was simplified by a single classification of a great
number of articles. This did away with the more harassing customs
at the gates of the cities, and obtained the largest revenues from
the remainder, by lessening the enormous expense of collecting
them. To lighten the burden of taxation is not, in matters of
finance, to diminish the taxes, but to assess them better; if
lightened, you increase the volume of business by giving it freer
play; the individual pays less and the State receives more. This
reform, which may seem immense, rests on very simple machinery.
Rabourdin regarded the tax on personal property as the most
trustworthy representative of general consumption. Individual
fortunes are usually revealed in France by rentals, by the number
of servants, horses, carriages, and luxuries, the costs of which
are all to the interest of the public treasury. Houses and what
they contain vary comparatively but little, and are not liable to
disappear. After pointing out the means of making a tax-list on
personal property which should be more impartial than the existing
list, Rabourdin assessed the sums to be brought into the treasury
by indirect taxation as so much per cent on each individual share.
A tax is a levy of money on things or persons under disguises that
are more or less specious. These disguises, excellent when the
object is to extort money, become ridiculous in the present day,
when the class on which the taxes weigh the heaviest knows why the
State imposes them and by what machinery they are given back. In
fact the budget is not a strong-box to hold what is put into it,
but a watering-pot; the more it takes in and the more it pours out
the better for the prosperity of the country. Therefore, supposing
there are six millions of tax-payers in easy circumstances
(Rabourdin proved their existence, including the rich) is it not
better to make them pay a duty on the consumption of wine, which
would not be more offensive than that on doors and windows and
would return a hundred millions, rather than harass them by taxing
the thing itself. By this system of taxation, each individual
tax-payer pays less in reality, while the State receives more, and
consumers profit by a vast reduction in the price of things which
the State releases from its perpetual and harassing interference.
Rabourdin's scheme retained a tax on the cultivation of vineyards,
so as to protect that industry from the too great abundance of its
own products. Then, to reach the consumption of the poorer
tax-payers, the licences of retail dealers were taxed according to
the population of the neighborhoods in which they
lived.In this way, the State would receive without cost or
vexatious hindrances an enormous revenue under three forms; namely,
a duty on wine, on the cultivation of vineyards, and on licenses,
where now an irritating array of taxes existed as a burden on
itself and its officials. Taxation was thus imposed upon the rich
without overburdening the poor. To give another example. Suppose a
share assessed to each person of one or two francs for the
consumption of salt and you obtain ten or a dozen millions; the
modern "gabelle" disappears, the poor breathe freer, agriculture is
relieved, the State receives as much, and no tax-payer complains.
All persons, whether they belong to the industrial classes or to
the capitalists, will see at once the benefits of a tax so assessed
when they discover how commerce increases, and life is ameliorated
in the country districts. In short, the State will see from year to
year the number of her well-to-do tax-payers increasing. By doing
away with the machinery of indirect taxation, which is very costly
(a State, as it were, within a State), both the public finances and
the individual tax-payer are greatly benefited, not to speak of the
saving in costs of collecting.The whole subject is indeed less a question of finance than a
question of government. The State should possess nothing of its
own, neither forests, nor mines, nor public works. That it should
be the owner of domains was, in Rabourdin's opinion, an
administrative contradiction. The State cannot turn its possessions
to profit and it deprives itself of taxes; it thus loses two forms
of production. As to the manufactories of the government, they are
just as unreasonable in the sphere of industry. The State obtains
products at a higher cost than those of commerce, produces them
more slowly, and loses its tax upon the industry, the maintenance
of which it, in turn, reduces. Can it be thought a proper method of
governing a country to manufacture instead of promoting
manufactures? to possess property instead of creating more
possessions and more diverse ones? In Rabourdin's system the State
exacted no money security; he allowed only mortgage securities; and
for this reason: Either the State holds the security in specie, and
that embarrasses business and the movement of money; or it invests
it at a higher rate than the State itself pays, and that is a
contemptible robbery; or else it loses on the transaction, and that
is folly; moreover, if it is obliged at any time to dispose of a
mass of these securities it gives rises in certain cases to
terrible bankruptcy.The territorial tax did not entirely disappear in Rabourdin's
plan,—he kept a minute portion of it as a point of departure in
case of war; but the productions of the soil were freed, and
industry, finding raw material at a low price, could compete with
foreign nations without the deceptive help of customs. The rich
carried on the administration of the provinces without compensation
except that of receiving a peerage under certain conditions.
Magistrates, learned bodies, officers of the lower grades found
their services honorably rewarded; no man employed by the
government failed to obtain great consideration through the value
and extent of his labors and the excellence of his salary; every
one was able to provide for his own future and France was delivered
from the cancer of pensions. As a result Rabourdin's scheme
exhibited only seven hundred millions of expenditures and twelve
hundred millions of receipts. A saving of five hundred millions
annually had far more virtue than the accumulation of a sinking
fund whose dangers were plainly to be seen. In that fund the State,
according to Rabourdin, became a stockholder, just as it persisted
in being a land-holder and a manufacturer. To bring about these
reforms without too roughly jarring the existing state of things or
incurring a Saint-Bartholomew of clerks, Rabourdin considered that
an evolution of twenty years would be required.