by Brett Rutherford
Adapted and translated from Victor Hugo, l’Annee Terrible, “January 1871”
[A denunciation of Louis-Jules Trochu (1815-1896), President of the Government of National Defense, who resigned from his post January 22, 1871]
Thoughts and prayers,
thought and prayers, on bended knee —
let this immortal France find its way!
Don’t order it about! You might have been
a valiant soldier, dear leader, but stop
all this talk of intercession
by all the various saints of Heaven
to avert the present danger!
For Paris, her crown aflame
amid the impure cloud surrounding it,
you are too pious, patient, and gentle
for this world in peril, for this angry people.
These are virtues that really do not help.
Something awful is always rising.
You flatter yourself to think
that merely by force of will you’ll tow
that blackened sphere, superb and vast,
that doom impossible to lock away,
the fate that breaks from out the shadows
above the sinister horizon.
Let France stand up to kings on ever side,
a battered, enormous, disheveled star,
sending out hurricanes to disperse the melee,
and though with blinding, scattered light,”
let this giantess fight on with irritated splendor,
and empty golden quivers on this unworthy
enemy, an army of clownish Schinderhans.
Let France’s fiery mane shake once, and rays
of fury will penetrate their skulls,
through their bronze helmets, and through
the density of their foreheads, and dull eyes.
You, so inclined to pity and prayer,
have not in your armory this sacred hatred.
The hour is dark. You cannot mail
a sermon to the enemy and expect a peace.
Saving the highest and best is the task
at hand, against a foul and sad cloud
that comes to tarnish it. The blue
of the empyrean can shine again only
from a relentless war against the abyss.
See with your own eyes this sublime Paris,
and tremble, as you ought. Do you fear,
myopic and timid, short-sighted and dull,
the immense, clear truth of the people?
Ah! Unleash this France, into a fire
not seen before, a flame indomitable
that grows as the wind carries it.
Trust to its roar, as lightning bolts
issue from it into the fleeing mist.
What fights as one voice will scatter all
before it, making the princes of night repent
for coming to wipe their muddy boots
at the edge of a sun-bright volcano,
for having offended daylight itself
with their advances.
Oh, what a dawn shall envelop all
these vile, deformed, and blood-stained kings,
a dawn more terrible as it reveals the orb
of the unforgiving sun. Let this goddess win!
Don’t stand in the way. Holding us back,
we shall have to lead you by a leash
once this great nation unbrakes itself
and hurtles forward. Trust the Marseillaise,
whose words are as drink, to rush us
madly into battle no matter what.
Light is a sword, it cuts the clouds
the way a battering ram knocks down a gate.
Stand aside for anger: sufficient unto the day
is the revenge thereof. We need this rage:
stop hindering it with platitudes.
A great people must be admirable in rage.
Darkness is a lack, and mist is a blindness.
We let a tawny and treacherous shadow
come over the plain; it made
the green meadow a sepulchral field.
The woods became an enemy hide-out,
the kindly river-bank a precipice
of danger and drowning,
corpse-lilies floating seaward.
Darkness concealed betraying lies,
the lairs of foxes, wolf-tracks’
when all the low and slimy, abject
and jealous beings arrived,
the awful lynx, the limping jackal,
the hyena with his obscene grimace,
even along the ground, the cowardly
asp, all in this unhealthy mist
turned France into a zoo of predators.
They came forth, and prowled,
and slipped and crawled, and drank
the blood of the people,
Morning comes now, avenging us.
We feel the indignation in the dawning day,
Not here! Not us! This specter, Wilhelm,
Emperor, and Prussia, this nightmare,
when with a pack of voracious kings,
when the swarm of all the crows and ravens
were animated by their hideous design
and came by ferocious instinct to the carnage,
when War, thief, hydra, satyr,
when the plagues, which follow every struggle,
stretch out dank hands to the survivors
as a further degradation —
Faced with all this, you soldier
more of the collar white than the epaulet,
just step aside!
Let this France rise as an apparition
on the threshold of the gulf of defeat.
Let it rise up, painting the distant peaks
with purple hues. Let its light shine,
darting in all directions from nadir to zenith,
in dazzling beams that save us, and devour
our enemies, delivering with terrible joy.