FIRST EPILOGUE: 1813 - 20
2. CHAPTER II
 (continued)
But the rams need only cease to suppose that all that happens to
 them happens solely for the attainment of their sheepish aims; they
 need only admit that what happens to them may also have purposes
 beyond their ken, and they will at once perceive a unity and coherence
 in what happened to the ram that was fattened. Even if they do not
 know for what purpose they are fattened, they will at least know
 that all that happened to the ram did not happen accidentally, and
 will no longer need the conceptions of chance or genius. 
Only by renouncing our claim to discern a purpose immediately
 intelligible to us, and admitting the ultimate purpose to be beyond
 our ken, may we discern the sequence of experiences in the lives of
 historic characters and perceive the cause of the effect they
 produce (incommensurable with ordinary human capabilities), and then
 the words chance and genius become superfluous. 
We need only confess that we do not know the purpose of the European
 convulsions and that we know only the facts- that is, the murders,
 first in France, then in Italy, in Africa, in Prussia, in Austria,
 in Spain, and in Russia- and that the movements from the west to the
 east and from the east to the west form the essence and purpose of
 these events, and not only shall we have no need to see exceptional
 ability and genius in Napoleon and Alexander, but we shall be unable
 to consider them to be anything but like other men, and we shall not
 be obliged to have recourse to chance for an explanation of those
 small events which made these people what they were, but it will be
 clear that all those small events were inevitable. 
By discarding a claim to knowledge of the ultimate purpose, we shall
 clearly perceive that just as one cannot imagine a blossom or seed for
 any single plant better suited to it than those it produces, so it
 is impossible to imagine any two people more completely adapted down
 to the smallest detail for the purpose they had to fulfill, than
 Napoleon and Alexander with all their antecedents. 
 |