| FIRST EPILOGUE: 1813 - 20
3. CHAPTER III
 (continued)On his return from Italy he finds the government in Paris in a
 process of dissolution in which all those who are in it are inevitably
 wiped out and destroyed. And by chance an escape from this dangerous
 position presents itself in the form of an aimless and senseless
 expedition to Africa. Again so-called chance accompanies him.
 Impregnable Malta surrenders without a shot; his most reckless schemes
 are crowned with success. The enemy's fleet, which subsequently did
 not let a single boat pass, allows his entire army to elude it. In
 Africa a whole series of outrages are committed against the almost
 unarmed inhabitants. And the men who commit these crimes, especially
 their leader, assure themselves that this is admirable, this is glory-
 it resembles Caesar and Alexander the Great and is therefore good. This ideal of glory and grandeur- which consists not merely in
 considering nothing wrong that one does but in priding oneself on
 every crime one commits, ascribing to it an incomprehensible
 supernatural significance- that ideal, destined to guide this man
 and his associates, had scope for its development in Africa.
 Whatever he does succeeds. The plague does not touch him. The
 cruelty of murdering prisoners is not imputed to him as a fault. His
 childishly rash, uncalled-for, and ignoble departure from Africa,
 leaving his comrades in distress, is set down to his credit, and again
 the enemy's fleet twice lets him slip past. When, intoxicated by the
 crimes he has committed so successfully, he reaches Paris, the
 dissolution of the republican government, which a year earlier might
 have ruined him, has reached its extreme limit, and his presence there
 now as a newcomer free from party entanglements can only serve to
 exalt him- and though he himself has no plan, he is quite ready for
 his new role. He had no plan, he was afraid of everything, but the parties
 snatched at him and demanded his participation. He alone- with his ideal of glory and grandeur developed in Italy
 and Egypt, his insane self-adulation, his boldness in crime and
 frankness in lying- he alone could justify what had to be done. He is needed for the place that awaits him, and so almost apart from
 his will and despite his indecision, his lack of a plan, and all his
 mistakes, he is drawn into a conspiracy that aims at seizing power and
 the conspiracy is crowned with success. |