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<h2> CHAPTER IV </h2>
<p>The flood of nations begins to subside into its normal channels. The waves
of the great movement abate, and on the calm surface eddies are formed in
which float the diplomatists, who imagine that they have caused the floods
to abate.</p>
<p>But the smooth sea again suddenly becomes disturbed. The diplomatists
think that their disagreements are the cause of this fresh pressure of
natural forces; they anticipate war between their sovereigns; the position
seems to them insoluble. But the wave they feel to be rising does not come
from the quarter they expect. It rises again from the same point as before—Paris.
The last backwash of the movement from the west occurs: a backwash which
serves to solve the apparently insuperable diplomatic difficulties and
ends the military movement of that period of history.</p>
<p>The man who had devastated France returns to France alone, without any
conspiracy and without soldiers. Any guard might arrest him, but by
strange chance no one does so and all rapturously greet the man they
cursed the day before and will curse again a month later.</p>
<p>This man is still needed to justify the final collective act.</p>
<p>That act is performed.</p>
<p>The last role is played. The actor is bidden to disrobe and wash off his
powder and paint: he will not be wanted any more.</p>
<p>And some years pass during which he plays a pitiful comedy to himself in
solitude on his island, justifying his actions by intrigues and lies when
the justification is no longer needed, and displaying to the whole world
what it was that people had mistaken for strength as long as an unseen
hand directed his actions.</p>
<p>The manager having brought the drama to a close and stripped the actor
shows him to us.</p>
<p>"See what you believed in! This is he! Do you now see that it was not he
but I who moved you?"</p>
<p>But dazed by the force of the movement, it was long before people
understood this.</p>
<p>Still greater coherence and inevitability is seen in the life of Alexander
I, the man who stood at the head of the countermovement from east to west.</p>
<p>What was needed for him who, overshadowing others, stood at the head of
that movement from east to west?</p>
<p>What was needed was a sense of justice and a sympathy with European
affairs, but a remote sympathy not dulled by petty interests; a moral
superiority over those sovereigns of the day who co-operated with him; a
mild and attractive personality; and a personal grievance against
Napoleon. And all this was found in Alexander I; all this had been
prepared by innumerable so-called chances in his life: his education, his
early liberalism, the advisers who surrounded him, and by Austerlitz, and
Tilsit, and Erfurt.</p>
<p>During the national war he was inactive because he was not needed. But as
soon as the necessity for a general European war presented itself he
appeared in his place at the given moment and, uniting the nations of
Europe, led them to the goal.</p>
<p>The goal is reached. After the final war of 1815 Alexander possesses all
possible power. How does he use it?</p>
<p>Alexander I—the pacifier of Europe, the man who from his early years
had striven only for his people's welfare, the originator of the liberal
innovations in his fatherland—now that he seemed to possess the
utmost power and therefore to have the possibility of bringing about the
welfare of his peoples—at the time when Napoleon in exile was
drawing up childish and mendacious plans of how he would have made mankind
happy had he retained power—Alexander I, having fulfilled his
mission and feeling the hand of God upon him, suddenly recognizes the
insignificance of that supposed power, turns away from it, and gives it
into the hands of contemptible men whom he despises, saying only:</p>
<p>"Not unto us, not unto us, but unto Thy Name!... I too am a man like the
rest of you. Let me live like a man and think of my soul and of God."</p>
<p>As the sun and each atom of ether is a sphere complete in itself, and yet
at the same time only a part of a whole too immense for man to comprehend,
so each individual has within himself his own aims and yet has them to
serve a general purpose incomprehensible to man.</p>
<p>A bee settling on a flower has stung a child. And the child is afraid of
bees and declares that bees exist to sting people. A poet admires the bee
sucking from the chalice of a flower and says it exists to suck the
fragrance of flowers. A beekeeper, seeing the bee collect pollen from
flowers and carry it to the hive, says that it exists to gather honey.
Another beekeeper who has studied the life of the hive more closely says
that the bee gathers pollen dust to feed the young bees and rear a queen,
and that it exists to perpetuate its race. A botanist notices that the bee
flying with the pollen of a male flower to a pistil fertilizes the latter,
and sees in this the purpose of the bee's existence. Another, observing
the migration of plants, notices that the bee helps in this work, and may
say that in this lies the purpose of the bee. But the ultimate purpose of
the bee is not exhausted by the first, the second, or any of the processes
the human mind can discern. The higher the human intellect rises in the
discovery of these purposes, the more obvious it becomes, that the
ultimate purpose is beyond our comprehension.</p>
<p>All that is accessible to man is the relation of the life of the bee to
other manifestations of life. And so it is with the purpose of historic
characters and nations.</p>
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