284 LAW 34
Onthe
night
of
February
23,
acrowdofParisianssurroundedthe
palace.
With asuddenness that
caught everyone by surprise,
Louis-
Philippe
abdicated
that
veryevening
andfledto
England.
Heleftnosue»
cessor,
noreventhe
suggestion
ofone-—hiswhole
government
folded
up
anddissolvedlikea
traveling
circus
leaving
town.
Interpretation
Louis-Philippeconsciously
dissolvedthe aurathat
natu.rallypertains
to
kings
andleaders.
Scoffing
atthe
symbolism
of
grandeur,
hebelieveda
newworldwas
dawning,
whererulersshouldactand belike
ordinary
citi
zens.Hewas
right:
Anew
world,
without
kings
and
queens,
was
certainly
onits
way.
Hewas
profoundlywrong,
however,
in
predicting
a
change
in
the
dynamics
of
power.
The
bourgeoisking’s
hatandumbrellaamusedtheFrenchat
first,
but
soon
grewirritating.People
knewthat
Louis-Philippe
wasnot
really
like
thematall—thatthehatandumbrellawere
essentially
akindoftricktoen-
courage
theminthe
fantasy
thatthe
country
had
suddenlygrown
more
equal.Actually,though,
the
divisionsofwealthhadneverbeen
greater.
TheFrench
expected
theirrulertobeabitofa
showman,
tohavesome
presence.
Evenaradicallike
Robespierre,
whohad
briefly
cometo
power
during
theFrenchRevolution
fiftyyears
earlier,
hadunderstood
this,
and
cenainlyNapoleon,
whohadturnedthe
revolutionaryrepublic
into
anim
per-ialregime,
hadknown
itin
hisbones.Indeed
as
soonas
Louis—Phi1ippe
fled the
stage,
the French revealed their true desire:
They
elected
Napoleon’sgrand-nephewpresident.
Hewasavirtual
unknown,
but
they
hoped
hewouldrecreatethe
greatgeneral’spowerful
aura,
erasing
the
awkward
memory
ofthe
“bourgeoisking.”
Powerful
peoplemay
be
tempted
toaffect
a
common-man
aura,
trying
tocreatetheillusionthat
they
andtheir
subjects
or
underlings
are
basically
thesame.Butthe
people
whomthisfalse
gesture
isintendedto
impress
will
quickly
see
through
it.
They
understandthat
they
arenot
beinggiven
more
power——that
it
onlyappears
asif
they
sharedinthe
powerfulperson’s
fate.
The
only
kindof
commontouch
that
worksisthekindailected
by
Franklin
Roosevelt,
a
style
thatsaidthe
president
sharedvaluesand
goals
withthe
common
people
evenwhileheremaineda
patrician
atheart.Henever
pretended
toerasehisdistancefromthecrowd.
Leaderswho
try
todissolvethatdistance
through
afalse
chumrniness
gradually
lose
the
ability
to
inspireloyalty,
fear,
orlove.Instead
they
elicit
contempt.
Like
Louis—Philippe,they
aretoo
uninspiring
eventobeworth
the
guillotine-——the
best
they
candois
simply
vanishinthe
night,
asif
they
wereneverthere.
OBSERVANCEOFTHELAW
When
Christopher
Columbuswas
trying
tofind
funding
forhis
legendary
voyages,many
aroundhimbelievedhecamefromtheItalian
aristocracy.
Thisviewwas
passed
into
historythrough
a
biography
writtenaftertheex-
plorer’s
death
by
his
son,
whichdescribeshimasa
descendant
ofa
Count