In
Honor Of The 143rd Anniversary Of The Paris Commune –Jean-Paul Roget’s Fear
Jean-Paul
Roget frankly was exhausted after coming out of the three hour meeting of the
sectional committee of the Paris Commune that had just been declared a few days
previously and was desperately in need of organization now that the Theirs
government had fled to Versailles leaving the city to the “people.” And that
idea of organization, damn, the desperate need for organization, first and
foremost of the food supplies and military defense of the city against an
attack by either forces loyal to Theirs or from the dreaded Prussians who just
that moment had most of the capital surrounded and squeezed in was needed right
then. What had Jean-Paul exhausted was not the daunting tasks of organization in
front of him and his comrades, tough as they were, but that the three hour
meeting that had just finished produced not resolve and purpose but only reams
and reams of hot air.
Now that that people of Paris were masters of their
own house every dingbat orator, lawyer, crackpot radical and not a few
dandies saw their opportunity to wax and
wane endlessly about the beautiful struggle that had taken place, that a new
day was aborning ,and ill-witted material like that. Take Varlin, a Proudhonist
who had been, in the old days back in ’48 quite the radical figure, had been
seemingly on every barricade and who in the aftermath of the June Days
bloodbath been transported (exiled). This day however he felt the need, and
felt it for hours, to push the notion of artisan cooperatives at a time when Paris
was losing that segment of the population to the every-devouring factories that
were in fact more efficient in the production of goods. Moreover dear Varlin
was captivated by the notion that now that Theirs had fled (and good riddance)
there was no reason to pursue his troops and disband them as agents of potential
counter-revolution.
Certainly Varlin had forgotten the harsh memories of
’48 but he was not the worst offender against the urgency of the times. The old
windbag Capet, jesus, was he still alive thought Jean-Paul when he heard that
name announced from the podium, went on
and on about the glory days, the glory days of ’89 like life had stopped in
that blessed time. In the same vein (maybe vain) as well Dubois, an old time
working-class radical, a semi-follower of Marx from over in England, kept
harping on the need to take over the banks in order to finance the new affairs of the Commune. Jean-Paul himself merely a tanner, and a good
one, laughed when that idea was announced for where would he, or anyone else,
get the money for their daily personal and business needs. A couple of other speakers went on and on as well about
how great the peoples’ needs were without however coming up with one solid
working idea. At least Jean-Paul had suggested setting a maximum on the price
of bread that could help the people but that was merely “taken under
advisement” And so ended a day, a fruitless day by Jean –Paul’s lights in the
life of the Commune…
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