Early on the morning of 14 November 1793, the
Montagnard and former
friar François Chabot burst into
Maximilien Robespierre's bedroom dragging him from bed with accusations of counter-revolution and conspiracy, waving a hundred thousand livres in assignat notes, claiming that a band of royalist plotters gave it to him to buy Fabre d'Eglantine's vote, along with others, to liquidate some stock in an overseas trading concern. The fraud that he spoke of regarding Fabre had been carried out in early October, when the
French East India Company had been liquidated in accordance with the anti-capitalist legislation of the summer. The decree had apparently been falsified so that the directors were blackmailed into turning over the half-million-livre profits of this exercise to the cabal of the Convention members responsible. In 1794, Robespierre had evidence of Fabre's criminality and he denounced Fabre for what he viewed as a particular heinous crime, criminality disguised by patriotism. On 12 January 1794 Fabre was arrested by order of the
Committee of Public Safety on a charge of malversation and
forgery in connection with the affairs of the
French East India Company. This struck a hard blow to the Montagnards and sent them on their way to extinction in the Convention. During his trial, d'Eglantine was asked to testify in his own defense and tried to twist the facts around, accusing other people, but was unsuccessful. According to legend, Fabre showed the greatest calmness and sang his own well-known song:
Il pleut, il pleut, bergère, rentre tes blancs moutons. Fabre died under the
guillotine on 5 April 1794 with the other
Dantonists. On his way to the scaffold he distributed his handwritten poems to the people. 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 than 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
Emile: Or, On Education, was performed on 17 September 1794 and met with an enthusiastic reception. Among Fabre's other plays are
Le 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 two volumes. ==Fictional accounts==