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<h2> SECOND EPILOGUE </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I </h2>
<p>History is the life of nations and of humanity. To seize and put into
words, to describe directly the life of humanity or even of a single
nation, appears impossible.</p>
<p>The ancient historians all employed one and the same method to describe
and seize the apparently elusive—the life of a people. They
described the activity of individuals who ruled the people, and regarded
the activity of those men as representing the activity of the whole
nation.</p>
<p>The question: how did individuals make nations act as they wished and by
what was the will of these individuals themselves guided? the ancients met
by recognizing a divinity which subjected the nations to the will of a
chosen man, and guided the will of that chosen man so as to accomplish
ends that were predestined.</p>
<p>For the ancients these questions were solved by a belief in the direct
participation of the Deity in human affairs.</p>
<p>Modern history, in theory, rejects both these principles.</p>
<p>It would seem that having rejected the belief of the ancients in man's
subjection to the Deity and in a predetermined aim toward which nations
are led, modern history should study not the manifestations of power but
the causes that produce it. But modern history has not done this. Having
in theory rejected the view held by the ancients, it still follows them in
practice.</p>
<p>Instead of men endowed with divine authority and directly guided by the
will of God, modern history has given us either heroes endowed with
extraordinary, superhuman capacities, or simply men of very various kinds,
from monarchs to journalists, who lead the masses. Instead of the former
divinely appointed aims of the Jewish, Greek, or Roman nations, which
ancient historians regarded as representing the progress of humanity,
modern history has postulated its own aims—the welfare of the
French, German, or English people, or, in its highest abstraction, the
welfare and civilization of humanity in general, by which is usually meant
that of the peoples occupying a small northwesterly portion of a large
continent.</p>
<p>Modern history has rejected the beliefs of the ancients without replacing
them by a new conception, and the logic of the situation has obliged the
historians, after they had apparently rejected the divine authority of the
kings and the "fate" of the ancients, to reach the same conclusion by
another road, that is, to recognize (1) nations guided by individual men,
and (2) the existence of a known aim to which these nations and humanity
at large are tending.</p>
<p>At the basis of the works of all the modern historians from Gibbon to
Buckle, despite their seeming disagreements and the apparent novelty of
their outlooks, lie those two old, unavoidable assumptions.</p>
<p>In the first place the historian describes the activity of individuals who
in his opinion have directed humanity (one historian considers only
monarchs, generals, and ministers as being such men, while another
includes also orators, learned men, reformers, philosophers, and poets).
Secondly, it is assumed that the goal toward which humanity is being led
is known to the historians: to one of them this goal is the greatness of
the Roman, Spanish, or French realm; to another it is liberty, equality,
and a certain kind of civilization of a small corner of the world called
Europe.</p>
<p>In 1789 a ferment arises in Paris; it grows, spreads, and is expressed by
a movement of peoples from west to east. Several times it moves eastward
and collides with a countermovement from the east westward. In 1812 it
reaches its extreme limit, Moscow, and then, with remarkable symmetry, a
countermovement occurs from east to west, attracting to it, as the first
movement had done, the nations of middle Europe. The counter movement
reaches the starting point of the first movement in the west—Paris—and
subsides.</p>
<p>During that twenty-year period an immense number of fields were left
untilled, houses were burned, trade changed its direction, millions of men
migrated, were impoverished, or were enriched, and millions of Christian
men professing the law of love of their fellows slew one another.</p>
<p>What does all this mean? Why did it happen? What made those people burn
houses and slay their fellow men? What were the causes of these events?
What force made men act so? These are the instinctive, plain, and most
legitimate questions humanity asks itself when it encounters the monuments
and tradition of that period.</p>
<p>For a reply to these questions the common sense of mankind turns to the
science of history, whose aim is to enable nations and humanity to know
themselves.</p>
<p>If history had retained the conception of the ancients it would have said
that God, to reward or punish his people, gave Napoleon power and directed
his will to the fulfillment of the divine ends, and that reply, would have
been clear and complete. One might believe or disbelieve in the divine
significance of Napoleon, but for anyone believing in it there would have
been nothing unintelligible in the history of that period, nor would there
have been any contradictions.</p>
<p>But modern history cannot give that reply. Science does not admit the
conception of the ancients as to the direct participation of the Deity in
human affairs, and therefore history ought to give other answers.</p>
<p>Modern history replying to these questions says: you want to know what
this movement means, what caused it, and what force produced these events?
Then listen:</p>
<p>"Louis XIV was a very proud and self-confident man; he had such and such
mistresses and such and such ministers and he ruled France badly. His
descendants were weak men and they too ruled France badly. And they had
such and such favorites and such and such mistresses. Moreover, certain
men wrote some books at that time. At the end of the eighteenth century
there were a couple of dozen men in Paris who began to talk about all men
being free and equal. This caused people all over France to begin to slash
at and drown one another. They killed the king and many other people. At
that time there was in France a man of genius—Napoleon. He conquered
everybody everywhere—that is, he killed many people because he was a
great genius. And for some reason he went to kill Africans, and killed
them so well and was so cunning and wise that when he returned to France
he ordered everybody to obey him, and they all obeyed him. Having become
an Emperor he again went out to kill people in Italy, Austria, and
Prussia. And there too he killed a great many. In Russia there was an
Emperor, Alexander, who decided to restore order in Europe and therefore
fought against Napoleon. In 1807 he suddenly made friends with him, but in
1811 they again quarreled and again began killing many people. Napoleon
led six hundred thousand men into Russia and captured Moscow; then he
suddenly ran away from Moscow, and the Emperor Alexander, helped by the
advice of Stein and others, united Europe to arm against the disturber of
its peace. All Napoleon's allies suddenly became his enemies and their
forces advanced against the fresh forces he raised. The Allies defeated
Napoleon, entered Paris, forced Napoleon to abdicate, and sent him to the
island of Elba, not depriving him of the title of Emperor and showing him
every respect, though five years before and one year later they all
regarded him as an outlaw and a brigand. Then Louis XVIII, who till then
had been the laughingstock both of the French and the Allies, began to
reign. And Napoleon, shedding tears before his Old Guards, renounced the
throne and went into exile. Then the skillful statesmen and diplomatists
(especially Talleyrand, who managed to sit down in a particular chair
before anyone else and thereby extended the frontiers of France) talked in
Vienna and by these conversations made the nations happy or unhappy.
Suddenly the diplomatists and monarchs nearly quarreled and were on the
point of again ordering their armies to kill one another, but just then
Napoleon arrived in France with a battalion, and the French, who had been
hating him, immediately all submitted to him. But the Allied monarchs were
angry at this and went to fight the French once more. And they defeated
the genius Napoleon and, suddenly recognizing him as a brigand, sent him
to the island of St. Helena. And the exile, separated from the beloved
France so dear to his heart, died a lingering death on that rock and
bequeathed his great deeds to posterity. But in Europe a reaction occurred
and the sovereigns once again all began to oppress their subjects."</p>
<p>It would be a mistake to think that this is ironic—a caricature of
the historical accounts. On the contrary it is a very mild expression of
the contradictory replies, not meeting the questions, which all the
historians give, from the compilers of memoirs and the histories of
separate states to the writers of general histories and the new histories
of the culture of that period.</p>
<p>The strangeness and absurdity of these replies arise from the fact that
modern history, like a deaf man, answers questions no one has asked.</p>
<p>If the purpose of history be to give a description of the movement of
humanity and of the peoples, the first question—in the absence of a
reply to which all the rest will be incomprehensible—is: what is the
power that moves peoples? To this, modern history laboriously replies
either that Napoleon was a great genius, or that Louis XIV was very proud,
or that certain writers wrote certain books.</p>
<p>All that may be so and mankind is ready to agree with it, but it is not
what was asked. All that would be interesting if we recognized a divine
power based on itself and always consistently directing its nations
through Napoleons, Louis-es, and writers; but we do not acknowledge such a
power, and therefore before speaking about Napoleons, Louis-es, and
authors, we ought to be shown the connection existing between these men
and the movement of the nations.</p>
<p>If instead of a divine power some other force has appeared, it should be
explained in what this new force consists, for the whole interest of
history lies precisely in that force.</p>
<p>History seems to assume that this force is self-evident and known to
everyone. But in spite of every desire to regard it as known, anyone
reading many historical works cannot help doubting whether this new force,
so variously understood by the historians themselves, is really quite well
known to everybody.</p>
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