Philippe François Nazaire Fabre d'Églantine (commonly known as Fabre d'Églantine; July 28, 1750 – April 5, 1794) was a French actor, dramatist, and politician of the French Revolution.
A tragedy, Augusta, produced at the Théâtre Français, also proved a failure. Only one of his plays was ever popular: Philinte, ou La suite du Misanthrope (1790), supposed to be a continuation of Molière's Le Misanthrope, but the hero of the piece is a different character from the nominal prototype —a pure and simple egotist. On its publication, the play was introduced by a preface, in which the author satirises L'Optimiste of his rival Jean François Collin d'Harleville, whose Châteaux en Espagne had gained the applause which Fabre's Présomptueux (1789) had failed to win. The character of Philinte had much political significance. Alceste received the highest praise, and stands for the patriot citizen, while Philinte is a dangerous aristocrat in disguise.
After the death of Jean-Paul Marat (13 July 1793), Fabre published a Portrait de l'Ami du Peuple. On the abolition of the Gregorian Calendar in France he sat on the committee entrusted with the creation of the French Republic's Revolutionary Calendar, and contributed a large part of the new nomenclature (Prairial, Floréal, as well as Primidi and Duodi). The report which he made on the subject, on October 24 1793, adds scientific information.
''Il pleut, il pleut, bergère,Fabre died under the guillotine on 5 April 1794. On his way to the scaffold he distributed his handwritten poems to the people.
''rentre tes blancs moutons.
According to a popular legend, Fabre complained bitterly about the injustice done to him on the way to the scaffold. Whereupon Danton replied with supreme sarcasm: "Des vers... Avant huit jours, tu en feras plus que tu n'en voudras!" ("Before eight days have passed, you'll make more of them then you would like to"), where "them" (vers) can be understood as either "verses" or "worms".
A posthumous play, Les Précepteurs, using the themes of Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Or, On Education, was performed on September 17, 1794, and met with an enthusiastic reception. Among Fabre's other plays are the Convalescent de qualité (1791), and L'Intrigue épistolaire (1791, supposedly including a depiction of the painter Jean-Baptiste Greuze). The author's Œuvres mêlées et posthumes were first published at Paris in 1802 in 2 volumes.
Deputies to the French National Convention | French dramatists and playwrights | French stage actors | French dramatists and playwrights | Natives of Languedoc-Roussillon | Executed writers | People executed by guillotine during the French Revolution | 1750 births | 1794 deaths
Fabre d'Églantine | Fabre d'Églantine | Fabre D'Eglantine | Fabre d'Églantine | Fabre d'Églantine | Фабр д’Эглантин
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