.-l}R'H>l{ll lI-‘:~~;4>\
S(’IN)VIlL\'‘K
strmgtlt
wax
now
Itlpltlly
tm~reast'rt,q,
for
allthetribes
lretweeh.theEbroimr)
the
I’yrt*nec.\'
(It/lint’over
tohis
Sllle,
and
troops
<'urm:jlncltt'rtgrluily
to
join
him
fromevery
quarter.
/itthesunte
time’hewastroubled
by
theluck
ofdisciplttte
andthe
()V(’VCl)I’Z/ldfllltft’
aftlimérnewly
arrived
lmrhttrium.whowould
slxrmtathimtnatturk
the
erterny
andhadno
paticnte
withhis
tlolttyu
mg
luL‘l'lC.\',
andhe
Ih(?t'(f_ltH‘(‘,
triedtowin
them(IVCY
bytlrgtumvlt.
Butwlwnhesawthat
they
weredixcrmterttcd
and
pt’V.\‘i.\It’tl
in
pren-
im;
their(Iernantls
regurtllenof
the
(‘lrt’tlm.\‘l(,lt'll.’£’.,\’,helet
them
have
their
way
andalltrvwtlthemto
engage
the
L-rmny;
he
hopml
that
they
would
suffer
4!severe
defeat
without
htetng
ttotitpletcly
crushvd,
andthatthiswould
malcrtlzrmbetter
di.\'p0.\'ed
to
obey
his
orttcrsin
j't¢turz*,
TheeventturnedUutas
he
exporter!
andSt-r‘tu—
riusctzrrwtollllflt
Vcflflll’.
provirlrccl
a
rallying
point
for
the
[llglllH‘.&‘,
andledthem
safely
brickinhis
('tmtp.
Hi.\‘
rzextstcp
was
torevivetltcir
(le;'t*cIm'l
spirits,
amtsoat
few
days
laterho
summoned[I
general
a.\‘,\’(',ml)l}‘.BC_l(Irtf
it
he
produced
two
ltrtrsex,
one
o/"them
oldand
(‘Ilfl‘t’hl£’ll,
thentlwr
large
and
lusty
tlrlll
292 LAW 35
OBSERVANCE OFTHELAW
Starting
outinlifeasa
nondescript
French
seminary-school
teacher,
Joseph
Fouchéwanderedfromtown
to
townformostofthedecadeofthe
17805,
teaching
mathematics
to
youngboys.
Yethenever
completely
committed
himselftothe
church,
nevertookhisvowsasa
pn'est—he
had
biggerplans.
Patiently
waiting
forhis
chance,
he
kept
his
options
open.
Andwhenthe
FrenchRevolutionbroke
out,
in
1789,
Fouchéwaitedno
longer:
He
got
rid
ofhis
cassock,
grew
hishair
long,
andbecamea
revolutionary.
Forthiswas
the
spirit
ofthetimes.Tomisstheboatatthiscriticalmomentcouldhave
spelt
disaster.Fouchédidnotmisstheboat:
Befriending
the
revolutionary
leader
Robespierre,
he
quickly
roseintherebelranks.In 1792 thetownof
NanteselectedFouchétobeits
representative
totheNational
Convention
(created
that
year
toframeanewconstitutionforaFrench
republic).
WhenFouchéarrivedinParisto
take
hisseatat
the
convention,
a
vio-
lentrifthadbrokenoutbetweenthemoderatesandtheradical
Jacobins.
Fouchésensedthatinthe
long
runneithersidewould
emerge
victorious.
Power
rarely
ends
up
inthehandsofthosewhostarta
revolution,
oreven
ofthosewhofurther
it;
power
sticks
tothose
who
bring
it
toa
conclusion.
ThatwasthesideFouchéwantedtobeon.
His
sense
of
timing
was
uncanny.
Hestartedasa
moderate,
formoderv
ateswereinthe
majority.
Whenthetimecametodecideonwhetherornot
toexecuteLouis
XVI,however,
hesawthatthe
people
were
clamoring
for
the
king’s
head,
so
he
castthe
deciding
vote~—forthe
guillotine.
Nowhe
hadbecomearadical.Yetas
tensions
came
to
the
boil
in
Paris,
heforesaw
the
danger
of
being
too
closely
associatedwith
any
one
faction,
soheac-
cepted
a
position
inthe
provinces,
wherehecouldlielowforawhile.A
fewmonthslaterhewas
assigned
tothe
post
of
proconsul
in
Lyons,
where
he
oversaw
the
executionofdozensofaristocrats.At
a
certain
moment,
however,
hecalledahalttothe
killings,sensing
thatthemoodofthecoun-
ny
was
turning—anddespite
theblood
already
onhis
hands,
thecitizensof
Lyons
hailedhimasasaviorfromwhathadbecomeknownastheTerror.
SofarFouchéhad
played
hiscards
brilliantly,
butin 1794 his
old
friend
Robespierre
recalledhimtoParistoaccountforhisactionsin
Lyons.
Robespierre
hadbeenthe
driving
forcebehindtheTerror.Hehadsent
headsonboththe
right
andtheleft
rolling,
and
Fouché,
whomheno
longertrusted,
seemeddestinedto
provide
thenexthead.Overthenext
few
weeks,
atense
struggle
ensued: While
Robespierre
railed
openly
against
Fouché,
accusing
ofhim
dangerous
ambitionsand
calling
forhisar»
rest,
the
crafty
Fouchéworkedmore
indirectly,
quietly
gaining
support
among
thosewhowere
beginning
totireof
Robespierre’s
dictatorialcon-
trol.Fouchéwas
playing
fortime.Heknewthatthe
longer
he
survived,
the
moredisaffectedcitizenshecould
rallyagainstRobespierre.
Hehadto
havebroad
support
beforehemoved
against
the
powerful
leader.
He
ral-
lied
supportamong
boththemoderatesandthe
jacobins,
playing
onthe
widespread
fearof
Robespierre-—everyone
wasafraidof
being
thenextto
go
tothe
guillotine.
Itallcametofruitionon
July
27:Theconvention