V LUCK [1] ONCE
upon a time, an old Servian legend tells us, there were two brothers,
of whom
one was industrious but unfortunate, and the other lazy but
overwhelmingly
prosperous. One day the unfortunate brother meets a beautiful girl who
is
tending sheep and weaving a golden thread. “To whom do these sheep
belong?" he asks. “They belong to whom I belong.” “And to whom do you
belong?” “To your brother: I am his luck.” “And where is my luck,
then?” “Very
far from here.” “Can I find it?” “Yes, if you look for it.” So he wanders away in search of his luck. And one evening, in a great forest, he comes across a poor old woman asleep under a tree. He wakes her and asks who she is. “Don’t you know me?” she answers. “It is true you have never seen me: I am your luck.” “And who is it has given me so wretched a luck?" “Destiny.” “Can I find Destiny?" “Yes, if you look long enough.” So he goes off in search of Destiny. He
travels a
very long time, and at last she is pointed out to him. She lives in an
enormous
and luxurious palace; but her wealth is dwindling day by day, and the
doors and
windows of her abode are shrinking. She explains to him that she passes
thus,
alternatively, from misery to opulence; and that her situation at a
given
moment determines the future of all the children who may come into the
world at
that moment. “You were born,” she says, “when my prosperity was on the
wane;
and that is the cause of your ill-luck.” The only way, she tells him,
to
hoodwink or get the better of fortune would be to substitute the luck
of
Militza, his niece, for his own, seeing that she was born at a
propitious
period. All he need do, she says, is to take this niece into his house,
and to
declare to anyone who may ask him that all he has belongs to Militza. He follows her advice, and his affairs at
once take a
new turn. His herds multiply and grow fat, his trees are bowed down
beneath the
masses of fruit, unexpected inheritances fall in, his land returns
prodigious
crops. But one morning, as he stands there, his heart filled with
happiness,
eyeing a magnificent cornfield, a stranger asks him who the owner may
be of
those wonderful ears of wheat, which, as they sway to and fro beneath
the dew,
seem twice as heavy and twice as high as the ears in the adjoining
field. He
forgets himself, and answers, “They are mine.” At that very instant
fire breaks
out in the opposite end of the field, and commences its ravages. Then
he
remembers the advice that he has neglected to follow. He runs after the
stranger shouting, “Stop, come back; I made a mistake; what I told you
was not
true! This field is not mine; it belongs to my niece Militza!” And the
flames
have no sooner heard than they suddenly fall away, and the corn shoots
up
afresh. [2] This naïve and very ancient image, which might almost serve to-day as an illustration of our actual ignorance, proves that the mysterious problem of chance has not changed from the time of man’s first questioning look. We have our thoughts, which build up our intimate happiness or sorrow; and upon this events from without have more or less influence. And in some men these thoughts have acquired such strength, such vigilance, that without their consent nothing can enter the structure of crystal and brass they have been able to raise on the hill that commands the wonted road of adventures. And we have our will, which our thoughts feed and sustain; and many useless or harmful events can be held in check by our will. But around these islets, within which is a certain degree of safety, of immunity from attack, extends a region as vast and uncontrollable as the ocean, swayed by chance as the waves are swayed by the wind. Neither will nor thought can keep one of these waves from suddenly breaking upon us; and we shall be caught unawares, and perhaps be wounded and stunned. Only when the wave has retreated can thought and will begin their beneficent action. Then they will raise us, and bind up our wounds, restore animation, and take careful heed that the mischief the shock has wrought shall not touch the profound sources of life. Their mission extends no further, and may, on the surface, appear very humble. In reality, however, unless chance assume the irresistible form of cruel disease or death, the workings of will and thought shall suffice to neutralise all its efforts, and to preserve what is best and most essential to man in human happiness. [3] Redoubtable, multitudinous chance is for
ever
threading its watchful way through the midst of the events we have
foreseen,
and round and about our most deliberate actions, wherewith we slowly
trace the
broad lines of our existence. The air we breathe, the time we traverse,
the
space through which we move, are all peopled by lurking circumstances,
which
pick us out from among the crowd. The least study of their habits will
quickly
convince us that these strange daughters of hazard, who should be blind
and
deaf as their father, by no means act in his irresponsible fashion.
They are
well aware of what they are doing, and rarely make a mistake. With
inexplicable
certainty do they move to the passer-by whom they have been sent to
confront,
and lightly touch his shoulder. Two men may be travelling upon the same
road,
and at the same hour; but there will be no hesitation or doubt in the
ranks of
the double invisible troop whom fortune has ambushed there. Towards one
a band
of white virgins will hasten, bearing palms and amphora, presenting the
thousand unexpected delights of the journey; as the other approaches,
the “Evil
Women,” whom Æschylus tells of, hurl themselves from the hedges, as
though they
were charged to avenge, upon this unwitting victim, some inexplicable
crime
committed by him before he was born. [4] There is scarcely one of us who has not
been able, in
some measure, to see the workings of destiny in life; we have all known
men who
met with a prosperity or disaster entirely unconnected with any of
their
actions; men upon whom good or bad luck seemed suddenly, at a turn of
the road,
to spring from the ground or descend from the stars, undeserved,
unprovoked,
but complete and inevitable. One, we will say, who has scarcely given a
thought
to some appointment for which he knows his rival to be better equipped,
will
see this rival vanish at the decisive moment; another, who has counted
upon the
protection of a most influential friend, will see this friend die on
the very
day when his assistance could be of value. A third, who has neither
talent nor
beauty, will arrive each morning at the Palace of Fortune, Glory, or
Love, at
the brief instant when every door lies open; while another, a man of
great
merit, who long has pondered the legitimate step he is taking, presents
himself
at the hour when ill-luck shall close the gate for the next
half-century. One
man will risk his health twenty times, in imbecile feats, and never
experience
the least ill-effect; another will deliberately venture it in an
honourable
cause, and lose it without hope of return. To help the first, thousands
of
unknown people, who never have seen him, will be obscurely working; to
hinder
the second, thousands of unknown people labour, who are ignorant of his
existence. And all, on the one side as well as the other, are totally
unaware
of what they are doing: they obey the same minute, widely distributed
order;
and at the prescribed moment the detached pieces of the mysterious
machine
join, dovetail, unite; and we have two complete and dissimilar
destinies set
into motion by Time. [5] In a curious book on Chance and Destiny,
Dr. Foissac
gives various strange examples of the persistent, inexplicable,
fundamental, pre-ordained,
irreducible iniquity, in which so many existences are steeped. As we go
through
page after page we feel almost as though we were being conducted
through the
disconcerting laboratories of another world, where, in the absence of
every
instrument that human justice and reason might hold indispensable,
happiness
and sorrow were being parcelled out and allotted. Take, for instance,
the life
of Vauvenargues, one of the most admirable of men, and certainly, of
all the
great sages, the most unfortunate. Whenever his fortune hangs in the
balance he
is attacked and prostrated by cruel disease; and notwithstanding the
efforts of
his genius, his bravery, his moral beauty, day after day he is wantonly
betrayed or falls victim to gratuitous injustice; and at the age of
thirty-two
he dies, at the very moment when recognition is at last awaiting his
work. So
too there is a terrible story of Lesurques,1 in which we see
a
thousand coincidences, that might have been contrived in Hell, blending
and
joining together to work the ruin of an innocent man; while truth,
chained down
by fate, dumbly shrieking as we do when wrestling with nightmare, is
unable to
put forth a single gesture that shall rend the veil of night. And Aimar
de
Ransonnet, President of the Parliament of Paris, one of the most
upright of
men, who first of all is suddenly dismissed from his office, sees his
daughter
die on a dunghill before his eyes, his son perish at the hands of the
executioner, and his wife struck by lightning; while he himself is
accused of
heresy and sent to the Bastille, where he dies of grief before he is
brought to
trial. The calamities that befell Œdipus and the
Atrides are
regarded by us as improbable and fabulous; and yet we find in
contemporary
history that fatality clings with no less persistence to families such
as the
Stuarts, the Colignys,2 etc., and hounds to their death,
with what
almost seems personal vindictiveness, pitiable and innocent victims
like
Henrietta of England, daughter of Henri IV., Louise de Bourbon, Joseph
II., and
Marie Antoinette. And again, in another category, what shall
we say of
the injustice — unintelligent but apparently almost conscious, almost
systematic and premeditated — of games of chance, of duels, battles,
storms,
shipwrecks, and fires? Or of the inconceivable luck of a Chastenet de
Puységur
who, after forty years’ service, in the course of which he took part in
thirty
battles and a hundred and twenty sieges, always in the front rank and
displaying the most romantic courage, was never once touched by shot or
steel;
while Marshal Oudinot was wounded thirty-five times, and General Trézel
was
struck by a bullet in every encounter? What shall we say of the
extraordinary
fortune of Lauzun, Chamillart, Casanova, Chesterfield, etc., or of the
inconceivable,
unvarying prosperity that attended the crimes of Sylla, Marius, or
Dionysius
the Elder, who, in his extreme old age, after an odious but
fantastically
successful life, died of joy on learning that the Athenians had just
crowned
one of his tragedies? Or, finally, of Herod, surnamed the Great or the
Ascalonite, who swam in blood, murdered one of his wives and five of
his
children, put to death every upright man who might chance to offend
him, and
yet was fortunate in all his undertakings? [6] These famous examples, which might be
indefinitely
multiplied, are in truth no more than the abnormal and historic
presentments of
what is shown to us every day, in a humbler but not less emphatic
fashion, by
the thousand and one caprices of propitious or contrary fortune at work
on the
small and ill-lit stage of ordinary life. Doubtless we must, first of all, when
closely
examining such insolent prosperity or unvarying disaster, attribute a
royal
share to the physical or moral causes which are capable of explaining
them. Had
we ourselves known Vauvenargues, we should probably have detected a
certain
timidity, irresolution, or misplaced pride in his character, whereby he
was
disabled from allowing the opportunity to mature or from seizing it
with
sufficient vigour. And Lesurques, it may be, was deficient in ability,
in one
knows not what, in that prodigious personal force that one expects to
find in
falsely accused innocence. Nor can it be denied that the Stuarts, no
less than
Joseph II. and Marie Antoinette, were guilty of enormous blunders that
invited
disaster; or that Lauzun, Casanova, and Lord Chesterfield had flung to
the
winds those essential scruples that hinder the honest man. So too is it
certain
that although the existence of Sylla, Marius, Dionysius the Elder, and
Herod
the Ascalonite, may have been externally almost incomparably fortunate,
few
men, I fancy, would care to have lurking within them the strange,
restless,
blood-stained phantom, possessed neither of thought nor of feeling, on
which
the happiness must depend (if the word happiness be indeed applicable
here)
that is founded upon unceasing crime. But this deduction being made,
and on the
most reasonable, most liberal scale (which will become the more
generous as we
see more of life and understand it better, and penetrate further into
the
secrets of little causes and great effects), we shall still be forced
to admit
that there remains in these obstinately recurring coincidences, in
these
indissoluble series of good or evil fortune, these persistent runs of
good or
bad luck, a considerable, often essential, and sometimes exclusive
share that
can be ascribed only to the impenetrable, incontrovertible will of a
real but
unknown power: which is known as Chance, Fatality, Destiny, Luck,
Fortune, good
or evil star, Angel with the White Wings, Angel with the Black Wings,
and by
many other names, that vary in accordance with the more or less
imaginative,
more or less poetic genius of centuries and peoples. And here we have
one of
the most serious, most perplexing problems of all those that have to be
solved
by man before he may legitimately regard himself as the principal,
independent,
and irrevocable inhabitant of this earth. [7] Let us reduce the problem to its simplest
terms, and
submit it to our reason. First, however, let us consider whether it
affects man
alone. We have with us, upon this curiously incomprehensible globe,
silent and
faithful companions of our existence; and we shall often find it
helpful to let
our eyes rest upon these when, having reached certain altitudes that
perhaps
are illusory, our brain turns giddy, and inclines us too readily to the
idea
that the stars, the gods, or the veiled representatives of the sublime
laws of
the universe, are concerned solely with us. These poor brothers of our
animal
life, that are so calmly, so confidently resigned, would appear to know
many
things that we have forgotten; they are the tranquil custodians of the
secret
that we seek so anxiously! It is evident that animals, and notably
domestic animals,
have also a kind of destiny. They too know what prolonged and
gratuitous
happiness means; they also have encountered the persistent misfortune
for which
no cause can be found. They have the same right as we to speak of their
star,
their good or bad luck, their prosperity or disaster. Compare the fate
of the
cab-horse, that ends its days at the knacker’s, after having passed
through the
hands of a hundred brutal and nameless masters, with that of the
thoroughbred
which dies of old age in the stable of a kindhearted master; and from
the point
of view of justice (unless we accept the Buddhist theory, that life in
this
world is the reward or punishment of an anterior existence) explanation
is as
completely lacking as in the case of the man whom chance has reduced to
poverty
or raised to wealth. There is in Flanders a breed of draught-dogs upon
which
destiny alternatively lavishes her favour and her spite. Some will be
bought by
a butcher, and lead a magnificent life. The work is trifling: in the
morning,
harnessed four abreast, they draw a light cart to the slaughter-house,
and at
night, galloping joyously, triumphantly, home through the narrow
streets of the
ancient towns with their tiny, lit-up gables, bring it back overflowing
with
meat. Between-times there is leisure, and marvellous leisure, among the
rats
and the waste of slaughter-house. They are copiously fed, they are fat,
they
shine like seals, and taste in its fulness the only happiness dreamed
of by the
naïve, ferreting instinct of the honest dog. But their unfortunate
brethren of
the same litter, that the lame sand-pedlar buys, or the old collector
of
household refuse, or the needy peasant with his great cruel clogs —
these are
chained to heavy carts or shapeless barrows; they are filthy, mangey,
hairless,
emaciated, starving; and follow till they die the circles of a hell
into which
they were thrust by a few coppers dropped into some horny palm. And, in
a world
less directly subject to man, there must evidently be partridges,
pheasants,
deer, hares, which have no luck, which never escape the gun; while
others, one
knows not how or why, emerge unscathed from every battue. They, therefore, are exposed, like
ourselves, to
incontestable injustice. But it does not occur to us, when considering
their
hardships, to set all the gods in motion or seek explanation from the
mysterious powers; and yet what happens to them may well be no more
than the
image, naively simplified, of what happens to us. It is true that we
play the
precise part, in their case, of the mysterious powers that we seek in
our own.
But what right have we to expect from these last more consciousness,
more
intelligent justice, than we ourselves show in our dealings with
animals? And
in any event, if this instance shall only have deprived chance of a
little of
its useless prestige and have proportionately augmented our spirit of
initiative and struggle, there will be a gain the importance of which
is by no
means to be despised. Still further allowance must therefore be
made; but
yet there undoubtedly remains — at least as far as the more complex
life of man
is concerned — a cause of good or evil fortune, as yet untouched by our
explanations, in the often visible will of chance — which one might
almost call
the “small change" of fatality. We know — and this is one of those
formless but fundamental ideas on the laws of life that the experience
of
thousands of years has turned into a kind of instinct — we know that
men exist
who, other things being equal, are “lucky" or “unlucky.” Circumstances
permitted me to follow very closely the career of a friend of mine who
was
dogged by persistent ill-fortune. I do not mean to imply thereby that
his life
was unhappy. It is even remarkable that the malign influences always
respected
the broad lines of his veritable happiness; probably because these were
well
guarded. For he had in him a strong moral existence, profound thoughts
and
hopes, feelings and convictions. He was well aware that these were
possessions
that fortune could not touch; which indeed could not be destroyed
without his
consent. Destiny is not invincible; through life’s very centre runs a
great
inward canal, which we have the power to turn towards happiness or
sorrow;
although its ramifications, that extend over our days, and the thousand
tributaries
that flow in from external hazards, are all independent of our will. It is thus that a beautiful river,
streaming down
from the heights, and ashine with magnificent glaciers, passes at
length
through plains and through cities, whence it receives only poisonous
water. For
an instant the river is troubled; and we fear lest it lose, and never
recover
again, the image of the pure blue sky that the crystal fountains had
lent: the
image that seemed its soul, and the deep and the limpid expression of
its great
strength. But if we rejoin it, down yonder, beneath those great trees,
we find
that it has already forgotten the foulness of the gutters. It has
caught the
azure again in its transparent waves; and flows on to the sea, as clear
as it
was on the days when it first smilingly leapt from its source on the
mountains.
And so, as regards this friend of mine,
although
forced more than once to shed tears, they were at least not of the kind
that
memory never forgets, not of those that fall from our eyes as we mourn
our own
death. Every failure, the inevitable disappointment once over, served
only to
knit him the closer to his secret happiness, to affirm this within him,
and
draw round about it a more sombre outline, that it might thereby appear
the
more precious and ardent and certain. But no sooner had he quitted this
charmed
enclosure than hostile incidents vied with each other in their attacks
upon
him. As for instance — he was a very good fencer: he had three duels,
and was
wounded each time by a less skilful adversary. If he went on board
ship, the
voyage would rarely be prosperous. Whatever undertaking he put money
into was
sure to turn out badly. A judicial error, into which a whole series of
curiously malevolent circumstances dragged him, was productive of long
and
serious trouble. Further, although his face was agreeable, and the
expression
of his eyes loyal and frank, he was not what one calls “sympathetic":
he
did not arouse at first sight that spontaneous affection that we often
give,
without knowing why, to the unknown who passes, to an enemy even. Nor
was he
more fortunate in his affections. Of a loving nature, and infinitely
worthier
of being loved than most of those to whom the chance-ridden heart of
women
sacrificed him — here again he met with nothing but treachery,
deception, and
sorrow. He went his way, extricating himself as best he could from the
paltry
snares that malicious fortune prepared at every step; nor was he
discouraged or
deeply saddened, only somewhat surprised at so strange a persistence;
until at
last there came the great, and solitary good-fortune of his life: a
love that
was the complement of the one that was eager within him, a love that
was
complete, passionate, exclusive, unalterable. And from that moment it
was as
though he had come under the influence of another star, the beneficent
rays of
which were blending with his own: vexatious events grew slowly remoter,
fewer,
warier of attacking him, tardier in their approach. They seemed
reluctantly to
abandon their habit of selecting him as their victim. He actually saw
his luck
turn. And now that he has gone back, as it were, into the indifferent
and
neutral atmosphere of chance common to most men, he smiles when he
remembers
the time when every gesture of his was watched by the invisible enemy,
and
aroused a danger. [9] Let us not look to the gods for an
explanation of
these phenomena. Until these gods shall have clearly explained
themselves there
is nothing that they can explain for us. And destiny, which is merely
the god of
which we know least, has less right than any of the others to intervene
and cry
to us, as it does from the depths of its inscrutable night, "It is I
who
so willed it!" Nor let us invoke the illimitable law of the universe,
the
intentions of history, the will of the worlds, the justice of the
stars. These
powers exist: we submit to them, as we submit to the might of the sun.
But they
act without knowing us; and within the wide circle of their influence
there
remains to us still a liberty that is probably immense. They have
better work
on hand than to be forever bending over us to lift a blade of grass or
drop a
leaf in the little paths of our ant-hill. Since we ourselves are here
the
parties concerned, it is, I imagine, within ourselves that the key of
the mystery
shall be found; for it is probable that every creature carries within
him the
best solution of the problem that he presents. Within us, underlying
the
conscious existence that our reason and will control, is a profounder
existence, one side of which connects with a past beyond the record of
history,
the other with a future that thousands of years cannot exhaust. We may
safely
conceive that all the gods lie hidden within it, and that those
wherewith we
have peopled the earth and the planets will emerge, one by one, in
order to
give it a name and a form that our imagination may understand. And as
man’s
vision grows clearer, as he shows less desire for image and symbol, so
will the
number of these names, the number of these forms, tend to diminish. He
will
slowly arrive at the stage when there shall be one only that he will
proclaim,
or reserve; when it shall be revealed to him that this last form, this
last
name, is truly no more than the last image of a power whose throne was
always
within him. Then will the gods that had gone forth from us be found
again in
ourselves; and it is there that we will question them to-day. [10] I hold that it is in this unconscious life
of ours,
in this existence that is so vast, so divine, so inexhaustible and
unfathomable,
that we must seek for the explanation of fortunate or contrary chances.
Within
us is a being that is our veritable ego, our first-born: immemorial,
illimitable, universal, and probably immortal. Our intellect, which is
merely a
kind of phosphorescence that plays on this inner sea, has as yet but
faint
knowledge of it. But our intellect is gradually learning that every
secret of
the human phenomena it has hitherto not understood must reside there,
and there
alone. This unconscious being lives on another plane than our
intellect, in
another world. It knows nothing of Time and Space, the two formidable
but
illusory walls between which our reason must flow or be hopelessly lost
in the
desert. It knows no proximity, it knows no distance; past and future
concern it
not, or the resistance of matter. It is familiar with all things; there
is
nothing it cannot do. To this force, this knowledge, we have indeed at
all
times accorded a certain varying recognition; we have given names to
its
manifestations, we have called them instinct, soul, unconsciousness,
sub-consciousness, reflex action, presentiment, intuition, etc. We
credit it
more especially with the indeterminate and often prodigious force
contained in
those of our nerves that do not directly serve to produce our will and
our
reason: a force that would appear to be the very fluid of life. Its
nature is
probably more or less the same in all men; but it has very different
methods of
communicating with the intellect. In some men this unknown principle is
enshrined
at so great a depth that it concerns itself solely with physical
functions and
the permanence of the species; whereas in others it would seem to be
forever on
the alert, rising again and again to the surface of external and
conscious
life, which its fairy-like presence quickens; intervening at every
instant,
warning, deciding, counselling, blending with most of the essential
facts of a
career. Whence comes this faculty? There are no fixed or certain laws.
We do
not detect, for instance, any constant relation between the activity of
the
unconsciousness and the development of the intellect. This activity
obeys rules
of which we know nothing. So far as we at present can tell, it would
seem to be
purely accidental. We discover it in one man, and not in another; nor
have we
any clue that shall help us to guess at the reason of this difference. [11] The probable course pursued by fortunate
or contrary
chances may well be as follows. A happy or untoward event, that has
sprung from
the profound recesses of great and eternal laws, arises before us and
completely blocks the way. It stands motionless there: immovable,
inevitable,
disproportionate. It pays no heed to us; it has not come on our
account, but
for itself, because of itself. It ignores us completely. It is we who
approach
the event: we who, having arrived within the sphere of its influence,
will
either fly from it or face it, try a circuitous route or fare boldly
onwards.
Let us assume that the event is disastrous: fire, death, disease, or a
somewhat
abnormal form of accident or distress. It waits there, invisible,
indifferent,
blind, but perfect and unalterable; and still as yet it is only
potential. It
exists entire, but only in the future; and for us, whose intellect and
consciousness are served by senses unable to perceive things otherwise
than
through the succession of time, it is still as though it were not. Let
us still
be more precise; let us take the case of a shipwreck. The ship that
must perish
has not yet left the port; the rock or the shoal that shall rend it
sleeps
peacefully beneath the waves: the storm that shall burst forth at the
end of
the month slumbers far beyond our gaze, in the secret of the skies.
Normally,
were nothing written, had the catastrophe not already taken place in
the
future, fifty passengers would have arrived from five or six different
countries, and have duly gone on board. But destiny has clearly marked
the
vessel for its own. She must most certainly perish. And for months
past,
perhaps for years, a mysterious selection has been at work among the
passengers
who were to have departed upon the same day. It is possible that out of
fifty
who had originally intended to sail, only twenty will cross the gangway
at the
moment of lifting the anchor.3 It is even of the
circumstance that,
but for the disaster ahead, would have rendered their departure
imperative, and
that their place will be taken by twenty or thirty others in whom the
voice of
Chance does not speak with a similar power. Here we touch the
profoundest
depths of the profoundest of human enigmas; and the hypothesis
necessarily
falters. But is it not more reasonable, in the fictitious case before
us —
wherein we merely thrust into prominence what is of constant occurrence
in the
more obscure conjunctures of daily life — to regard both decision and
action as
emanating from our unconsciousness, rather than from doubtful, and
distant,
gods? Our unconsciousness is aware of the catastrophe, — it must be;
our
unconsciousness sees it; for it knows neither time nor space, and the
disaster
is therefore happening as actually before its eyes as before the eyes
of the
eternal powers. The mode of prescience matters but little.
Out of the
fifty travellers who have been warned, two or three will have had a
real
presentiment of the danger; these will be the ones in whom
unconsciousness is
free and untrammelled, and therefore more readily able to attain the
first, and
still obscure, layers of intellect. The others suspect nothing: they
inveigh
against the inexplicable obstacles and delays; they strain every nerve
to
arrive in time; but their departure becomes impossible. They fall ill,
take a
wrong road, change their plans, meet with some insignificant adventure,
have a
quarrel, a love-affair, a moment of idleness or forgetfulness, which
detains
them in spite of themselves. To the others it will never have even
occurred to
sail on the ill-starred boat, although this be the one they should
logically,
inevitably, have been compelled to choose. But the efforts that their
unconsciousness has put forth to save them have their workings so deep
down
that most of these men will have no idea that they owe their life to a
fortunate chance; and they will honestly believe that they never
intended to sail
by the ship that the powers of the sea had claimed. [12] As for those who punctually make their
appearance at
the fatal tryst, they belong to the tribe of the unlucky. They are the
more
unfortunate race of our race. When the rest all fly, they alone remain
in their
places. When others retreat, they advance boldly. They infallibly
travel by the
train that shall leave the rails, they pass underneath the tower at the
exact
moment of its collapse, they enter the house in which the fire is
smouldering, cross
the forest on which lightning shall fall, intrust all they have to the
banker
who means to abscond. They love the one woman on earth whom they should
have
avoided, they make the gesture they should not have made, they do the
thing
they should not have done. But when fortune beckons and the others are
hastening, urged by the deep voice of benevolent powers, they pass by,
not
hearing; and, vouchsafed no advice or warning but that of their
intellect, the
very wise old guide whose purblind eyes see only the tiny paths at the
foot of
the mountain, they go astray in a world that human reason has not yet
understood. These men have surely the right to exclaim against destiny;
and yet
not on the grounds that they would prefer. They have the right to ask
why it has
withheld from them the watchful guard who warns their brethren. But
this
reproach once made — and it is the cardinal reproach against
irreducible
injustice — they have no further cause of complaint. The universe is
not
hostile to them. Calamities do not pursue them; it is they who go
towards
calamity. Things from without wish them no ill; the mischief comes from
themselves. The misfortune they meet has not been lying in wait for
them; they
selected it for their own. With them, as with all men, events are
posted along
the course of their years, like goods in a bazaar, that stand ready for
the
customer who shall buy them. No one deceives them; they merely deceive
themselves. They are in no wise persecuted; but their unconscious soul
fails to
perform its duty. Is it less adroit than the others; is it less eager?
Does it
slumber hopelessly in the depths of its secular prison, and can no
amount of
will power arouse it from its fatal lethargy, and force the redoubtable
doors
that lead from the life that unconsciously is aware of all things to
the
intelligent life that knows nothing? [13] A friend in whose presence I was
discussing these
matters said to me yesterday: “Life, whose questions are more searching
than
those of the philosophers, will this very day compel me to add a
somewhat
curious problem to those you have stated. I am wondering what the
result will
be when two ‘lucks' — in other words, two unconsciousnesses, of which
one is
adroit and fortunate, the other inept and bungling — meet and in some
measure
blend in the same venture, the same undertaking? Which will triumph
over the
other? I soon shall know. This afternoon I propose to take a step that
will be
of supreme importance to the person I value above all others in this
world. Her
entire future may almost be said to depend upon it, her exterior
happiness, the
possibility of her living in accordance with her nature and her rights.
Now to
me chance has always been a faithful and far-seeing friend, and as I
glance
over my past and review the five or six decisive moments which, as with
all
men, were the golden pivots on which fortune turned, I am induced to
believe in
my star, and am morally certain that if I alone were concerned in the
step I am
taking to-day, it would be bound to succeed, because I am 'lucky.’ But
the
person in whose behalf I am acting has never been fortunate. Her
intellect is
remarkably subtle and profound, her will is a thousand times stronger
and more
balanced than my own; but, with all this, one can only believe that she
possesses a foolish or malignant unconsciousness, which has
persistently,
ruthlessly, exposed her to act after act of injustice, dishonesty, and
treachery, and has robbed her again and again of her due, and compelled
her to
travel the path of disastrous coincidence. Be sure that it would have
forced
her to embark on the ship that you speak of. I ask myself, therefore,
what
attitude will my vigilant, thoughtful unconsciousness adopt towards
this
indolent and sinning brother, in whose name it will have to act, whose
place as
it were it will take? “How and where is the momentous decision
being at
this moment arrived at, in search of which I shall so soon set forth?
What
power is it that now, at this very moment, while I am speaking to you,
balances
the pros and cons, and decrees the happiness or sorrow of the woman I
represent? From which sphere, or perhaps immemorial virtue, from what
hidden
spirit or invisible star, will the weight descend that shall incline
the scale
to light or to darkness? Outward appearances tell us that decision
rests with
the will, the reason, the interest of the parties engaged; in reality
it often
is otherwise. When one finds oneself thus face to face with the problem
which
directly affects a person we love, it no longer appears quite so
simple; our
eyes open wider, and we throw a startled, anxious, in a sense almost a
virgin
glance upon all this unknown that leads us, and that we are compelled
to obey. “I take this step therefore with more
emotion, I put
forth more zeal and vigour, than if it were my own life, my own
happiness, that
stood in peril. She for whom I am acting is indeed more I than I am
myself, and
for a long time past her happiness has been the source of mine. Of this
both my
heart and my reason are fully aware, but does my unconsciousness know?
My
reason and heart that form my consciousness, are barely thirty years
old; my
unconscious soul, that is still reminiscent of primitive secrets, may
well date
centuries back. Its evolution is very deliberate. It is as slow in its
movements as a world that turns in time without end. It will probably
therefore
not yet have learned that a second existence has linked itself to mine,
and
completely absorbed it. How many years must elapse before the great
news shall
penetrate to its retreat? Here again we note its diversity, its
inequality. In
one man, perhaps, unconsciousness will immediately recognise what is
taking
place in his heart; in another, it will very tardily lend itself to the
phenomena of reason. There is a love, again, such as that of the mother
for her
child, in which it moves in advance of both heart and reason. Only
after a very
long time does the unconscious soul of a mother separate itself from
that of
her children; it watches over these at first with far more zeal and
solicitude than
over the mother. But, in a love like mine, who shall say whether my
unconsciousness has gathered that this love is more essential to me
than my
life? I myself believe that it is satisfied that the step I propose to
take in
no wise concerns me. It will not appear; it will not intervene. At the
very
moment when I shall be feverishly displaying all the energy I possess,
when I
shall be striving for victory more keenly than were my salvation at
stake, it
will be tending its own mysterious affairs deep down in its shadowy
dwelling.
Were I seeking justice for myself, it would already be on the alert. It
would
know, perhaps, that I had better do nothing to-day. I should probably
not have
the slightest idea of its intervention; but it would raise some
unforeseen obstacle.
I should fall ill; catch a bad cold, be prevented by some secondary
event from
arriving at the unpropitious hour. Then, when I was actually in the
presence of
the man who held my destiny in his hands, my vigilant friend would
spread its
wings over me, its breath would inspire me, its light would dispel my
darkness.
It would dictate to me the words that I must say; they would be the
only words
that could meet the secret objections of the master of my Fate. It
would
regulate my attitude, my silence, my gestures; it would endow me with
confidence, the nameless influence, which often will govern the
decisions of
men far more than the reasons of reason or the eloquence of interest.
But here
I am solely afraid that my unconsciousness will do none of these
things. It
will remain perfectly passive. It will not appear on the familiar
threshold. In
its obtuseness, impervious to the fact that my life has ceased to be
self-contained, it will act in accordance with its ancient traditions,
with
those that have ruled it these hundreds of years; it will persist in
regarding
this matter as one that does not concern me, and will believe that in
helping
my failure it will be doing me service; whereas in truth it will
afflict me
more grievously, cause me more sorrow, than if it were to betray me at
the
approach of death. I shall be importing therefore, into this affair,
only the
palest reflection, a kind of phantom, of my own luck; and I ask myself
with
dread whether this will suffice to counterbalance the contrary fortune
which I
have, as it were, assumed, and which I represent.” [14] Some days later my friend informed me that
his action
had been unsuccessful. It may be that this reverse was only due to
chance or to
his own want of confidence. For the confidence which sees success ahead
pursues
it with a pertinacity and resource of which hesitation and doubt are
incapable:
nor is it troubled by any of those involuntary weaknesses which give so
great
an advantage to the adversary’s instinct. And there may probably be
much truth
also in his manner of depicting unconsciousness. For truly there are
depths in
us at which unconsciousness and confidence would seem to blend; and it
becomes
difficult to say where the first begins, or the second leaves off. We will not pursue this too subtle
inquiry, but
rather consider the other, and more direct, questions that life is ever
putting
to us concerning one of its greatest problems — chance. This possesses
what may
be called a daily interest. It asks us, for instance, what attitude we
should
adopt towards men who are incontestably unlucky; men whose evil star
has such
pernicious power that it infallibly brings disaster to whatever comes
within
the range — often a very wide one — of its baneful influence. Ought we
unhesitatingly to fly from such men, as Dr. Foissac advises? Yes,
doubtless, if
their misfortunes arise from an imprudent and unduly hazardous spirit,
a
heedless, quarrelsome, mischief-making, Utopian, or clouded mind.
Ill-luck is a
contagious disease; and one unconsciousness will often infect another.
But if
the misfortunes be wholly unmerited or fall upon those who are dear to
us,
flight were unjust and shameful. In such a case the conscious side of
our being
— which though it know but little, is yet able to fashion truths of a
different
order, truths that might almost be the first flowers of a dawning world
— is
bound to resist the universal wisdom of unconsciousness, bound to brave
its
warnings and involve it in its own ruin, that may well be a victory
upon an
ideal plane which some day perhaps shall appeal to the unconsciousness
also. We ask ourselves, also, whether
unconsciousness,
which we regard as the source of our luck, is really incapable of
change or
improvement. Have we not all of us noticed how strange are the ways of
chance?
When we behold it active in a small town, or among a certain number of
men
within the range of our own observation, the goddess would seem to
become as
persistent as a gadfly, and no less fantastic. Her marked personality
and
character will vary in accordance with the event or the being whereon
she may
fasten. She has all kinds of eccentricities, but pursues each one
logically to
the finish. Her first gesture will tell us nothing; from her second we
can
predict all that she means to do. Protean divinity that no image could
completely describe, here she leaps suddenly forth like a fountain in
the midst
of a desert, to disappear after having given birth to an ephemeral
oasis; there
she returns at regular intervals, collecting and scattering, like
migratory
birds that obey the rhythm of the seasons. On our right she fells a man
and
concerns herself with him no further; on our left she bears down
another, and
furiously worries her victim. But though she bring favour or ruin, she
will
almost always remain astoundingly faithful to the character she has
once and
for all assumed, in every particular case. This man, for instance, who
has been
unsuccessful in war, will continue to be unsuccessful; the other will
invariably win or lose at the cards; a third will infallibly be
deceived; a
fourth will find water, fire, or the dangers of the street, especially
hostile;
a fifth will be constantly fortunate or unfortunate in love, money
matters,
etc., and so to the end. All this may prove nothing, but we may regard
it at
least as some indication that her realm is truly within us, and not
without;
and that a hidden force that emanates only from us provides her with
form and
with vestment. Her habits at times will suddenly alter
one
eccentricity producing another; some brusque change of front will give
the lie
to her character, to confirm it the instant after in a new atmosphere.
We say
then that “luck turns.” May it not rather be our unconsciousness that
is
gradually developing, at last displaying some prudence, attention, and
slowly
becoming aware that important events are stirring in the world to which
it is
attached? Has it gained some experience? Has a ray of intelligence, a
spark of
will-power, filtered through to its lair and hinted at danger? Does it
learn,
after years have flown, and trial after trial has had to be borne, the
wisdom
of casting aside its confident apathy? Can external disaster arouse it
from
perilous slumber? Or, if it always has known what was happening over
the roof
of its prison, is it able, after long and painful effort, at last, at
the
critical moment, to contrive some kind of crevice in the great wall,
built by
the indifference of centuries, that separates it from its unknown
sisters; and
does it thus succeed in entering the ephemeral life on which a part of
its own
life depends? [15] But we must admit that this hypothesis of
unconsciousness will not suffice to account for all the injustice of
chance.
Its three most iniquitous acts are the three disasters — the most
terrible of
all to which man is exposed — that habitually strike him before birth;
I refer
to absolute poverty, disease (especially in the shocking forms of
physiological
degradation and incurable infirmities, of repulsive ugliness and
deformity),
and intellectual weakness. These are the three great priestesses of
unrighteousness that lie in wait for innocence and brand it on the
threshold of
life. And yet, mysterious as their method of choice may appear, the
triple
source whence they derive these three irremediable scourges is less
mysterious
than one is inclined to believe. We need not look for it in a
pre-established
will, in fatal, hostile, eternal, impenetrable laws. Poverty has its
origin in
man’s own province; and though we may marvel why one should be rich,
and the
other poor, we are well aware that the existence, side by side, of
excessive
wealth and excessive misery, is due to human injustice alone. In this
wickedness neither gods nor stars have part. And as for disease and
mental
weakness, when we shall have eliminated from them what now is due to
poverty,
mother of most of our mortal and physical sorrows, as well as to the
anterior,
and by no means, inevitable, faults of the parents, then, though some
measure
of persistent, and unaccountable, injustice may still remain, this
relic of
mystery will very nigh go into the hollow of the philosopher’s hand,
and there
he shall, later, examine it at his leisure. But we of to-day shall be
wise in
refusing to allow our life to be unnecessarily darkened, or hedged
round with
imaginary maledictions and foes. As far as ordinary luck is concerned, we
shall do
well to believe, for the moment that the history of our fortune (which
is not
necessarily the history of our real happiness, since this may be wholly
independent of luck) is the history of our unconscious being. There are
more
elements of probability in such a creed than in the assumption that the
stars,
eternity, or the spirit of the universe, are taking part in our pretty
adventures; and it gives more spur to our courage. And this idea, even
though
it may possibly be as difficult to alter the character of our
unconsciousness
as to modify the course of Mars or of Venus — still seems less distant
and less
chimerical than the other; and when we have to choose between two
probabilities
it is our imperative duty to select the one that presents the least
obstacles
to our hopes. Further, should misfortune be indeed inevitable, there
would be I
know not what proud consolation in being able to tell ourselves that it
issues
solely from us, and that we ,are not the victims of a malign will or
the toys
and playthings of useless chance; that in suffering more than our
brothers we
are perhaps only recording, in time and space, the necessary form of
our own
personality. And so long as calamity does not attack the intimate pride
of man,
he retains the force to continue the struggle and accomplish his
essential
mission; which is to live with all the ardour whereof he is capable,
and as
though his life were of greater consequence than any other to the
destinies of
mankind. This idea is also more conformable to the
vast law
which restores to us, one by one, the gods wherewith we had filled the
world.
Of these gods the greater number were merely the effect of causes that
reposed
in ourselves. As we progress we shall discover that many a force that
mastered
us and aroused our wonder was only an ill-understood fragment of our
own power;
and this will probably become more apparent every day. And though we shall not have conquered the
unknown
force by bringing it nearer or enclosing it within us, there yet shall
be gain
in knowing where it abides and where we may question it. Obscure forces
surround us; but the one that concerns us most nearly lies at the very
centre
of our being. All the others pass through it: it is their
trysting-place: they
re-enter and congregate there: and only in the degree of their relation
to it
have they interest for us. To distinguish this force from the host of
others we
have called it unconsciousness. And when we shall have succeeded in
studying
this unconsciousness more closely, when its mysterious adroitness, its
antipathies and preferences, its helplessness, shall be better known to
us, we
shall have most strangely blunted the teeth and nails of the monster
who
persecutes us under the name of Fortune, Destiny, or Chance. At the
present
hour we are feeding it still as a blind man might feed the lion that at
the
last shall devour him. Soon perhaps the lion will be seen by us in its
true
height, and we shall then learn how to subdue him. Let us therefore unweariedly follow each
path that
leads from our consciousness to our unconsciousness. We shall thus
succeed in
hewing some kind of track through the great and as yet impassable roads
that
lead from the seen to the unseen, from man to God, from the individual
to the
universe. At the end of these roads lies hidden the general secret of
life. In
the meanwhile let us adopt the hypothesis that offers the most
encouragement to
our existence in this life which has need of us for the solution of its
own
enigmas; for we are those in whom its secrets crystallise most limpidly
and
most rapidly. 1 His
history is concisely summed up by Dr. Foissac as follows: "On the 8th
Floréal of the year IV the courier and postilion who were taking the
mail from
Paris to Lyons were attacked and murdered, at nine in the evening, in
the
forest of Sénart. The assassins were Couriol, who had taken a seat in
the
cabriolet by the side Of the courier, Durechal, Rossi, Vidal, and
Dubosq, who
had come to meet him on hired horses, and lastly Bernard, who had
procured the
horses and took part in the subsequent distribution of plunder. For
this crime,
in which five assassins and one accomplice shared, seven individuals,
within
the space of four years, mounted the steps of the guillotine. Justice,
therefore, killed one man too many; the sword fell upon one who was
innocent;
nor could he have been one of these six individuals, all of whom
confessed
their crime. The innocent man was Lesurques, who had never ceased to
declare he
was not guilty; and all his alleged accomplices disavowed any knowledge
of him.
How, then, came this unfortunate creature to be implicated in an affair
that
was to confer so sad an immortality upon his name? Fatality so
contrived that,
four days before the crime, Lesurques, who had left Douai with an
income of
eighteen thousand livres, and had come to Paris that he might give a
better
education to his children, happened to be lunching with a
fellow-townsman named
Guesno, when Couriol came in and was invited to join them. Suspicion
having at
once fallen upon Couriol, the fact of this lunch was sufficient to
cause Guesno
to be put under arrest for a moment; but as he was able to prove an
alibi, the
judge, Daubenton, immediately set him at liberty. Only, as it was late,
Daubenton, told him to come the following day to fetch his paper. “In the morning of the 11th
Floréal
Guesno, on his way for this purpose to the Prefecture of Police, met
Lesurques,
whom he invited to accompany him; an invitation which Lesurques, who
had
nothing special to do, accepted. While they were waiting in the
antechamber for
the magistrate to arrive, two women were shown in who had been asked to
attend
in connection with the affair; and they, deceived by Lesurques’
resemblance to
Dubosq, who had fled, unhesitatingly denounced him as one of the
assassins, and
unfortunately persisted in this statement to the end. The antecedents
of
Lesurques pleaded in his favour; and among other facts that he cited to
prove
that he had not left Paris during the day of the 8th
Floréal, he
declared that he had been present at certain dealings that had taken
place at a
jeweller’s named Legrand, between this last and another jeweller named
Aldenoff.
These transactions had actually taken place on the 8th; but
Legrand,
on being requisitioned to produce his books, found that he had by a
clerical
blunder inscribed them under the date of the 9th. He thought
the
best thing he could do would be to scratch out the 9 and convert it
into an 8;
he did this in the idea that he would thereby save his fellow-townsman,
Lesurques, whom he knew to be innocent, whereas he actually succeeded
in
ruining him. The alteration and substitution were easily detected; from
that
moment the prosecution and the jury declined to place the least
confidence in
the eighty witnesses for the defence called by the accused; he was
convicted
and his property confiscated. Eighty-seven days elapsed between his
condemnation and execution, a delay that was altogether unusual at that
period;
but grave doubts had arisen as to his guilt. The Directorate did not possess the right
of
reprieve; they felt it their duty to refer the case to the Council of
Five
Hundred, asking whether Lesurques was to die because of his resemblance
to a
criminal. The Council passed to the Order of the Day on the report of
Simeon;
and Lesurques was executed, forgiving his judges. And not only had he
constantly protested his innocence, but at the moment the verdict was
given
Couriol had cried out, in firm tones, 'Lesurques is innocent!’ He
repeated this
statement both on the fatal hurdle and on the scaffold. All the other
prisoners, while admitting their own guilt, also declared the innocence
of
Lesurques. It was only in the year IX that Dubosq, his double, was
arrested and
sentenced. “The fatality that had attacked the head
of the
family spared none of its members. Lesurques’ mother died of grief; his
wife
went mad; his three children languished in insignificance and poverty.
The
government, however, moved by their great misfortune, restored to the
family of
Lesurques, in two instalments, the five or six hundred thousand francs
which
had been so iniquitously confiscated; but a swindler robbed them of the
greater
part of the money. Sixty years elapsed; of Lesurques’ three children
two were
dead; one alone survived, Virginie Lesurques. Public opinion had for a
long
time already proclaimed the innocence and the rehabilitation of her
unfortunate
father. She wanted more; and when the law of the 29th June,
1867,
was passed, authorising the revision of criminal judgments, she hoped
that the
day had come at last when she might proclaim this rehabilitation in the
sanctuary of justice; but, by a final fatality, the Court of Appeal,
arguing on
legal subtleties, declared by its decree of the 17th
December, x868,
that no cause had been shown for re-opening the case, and that Virginie
Lesurques had not made good her claim to revision.” It is as though one were enthralled by
some horrible
dream, in which a poor wretch is being delivered into the hands of the
Furies.
Ever since the fatal meal, no less tragic than that of Thyestes, which
Lesurques took at Guesno’s house, events have been dragging him nearer
and
nearer the gulf that yawns at his feet; while his destiny, hovering
above him
like an enormous vulture, hides the light from those who approach him.
And the
circles from above press magically forward to meet those from below:
they
advance, they contract, and then, uniting at last, their eddies blend
and
fasten upon what is now a corpse. Here, truly, the combination of murderous
fatalities
may well seem supernatural; and the case is typical, it is formidable,
it is as
symbolic as a myth. But there can be no doubt that analogous chains of
circumstances reproduce themselves daily in the countless petty or
ridiculous
mortifications of merely ordinary lives, which are beneath the
influence of an
evil or malicious star. 2 The
misfortunes of the Stuarts are well known; those of the Colignys are
less
familiar. Of these last the author we have already cited gives the
following
lucid account: “Gaspard de Coligny, Marshal of France under Francis 1st,
was married to the sister of the Constable Anne de Montmorency. He was
reproached with having delayed by half a day his attack on Charles the
Fifth,
at a time when such might have been most advantageously offered, and
with
having thereby let slip an almost certain opportunity of victory. One
of his
sons, who had been made Archbishop and Cardinal, embraced
Protestantism, and
was married in his red cassock. He fought against the King at the
battle of St.
Denis, and fled to England, where, in the year 1571, a servant of his
attempted
to poison him. He escaped, however, and seeking subsequently to return
to
France was captured at Rochelle, condemned to death, and executed. The
Admiral
de Coligny, brother of the Cardinal, was reputed one of the greatest
captains
of his time; he did marvels at the defence of Saint-Quentin. The place,
however, was taken by storm, and he was made a prisoner of war. Having
become
the real leader of the Calvinists, under the Prince de Condé, he
displayed the
most undaunted courage and extraordinary fertility of resource; neither
his
merit nor his military skill was ever called in question; and yet he
was
uniformly unsuccessful in every one of his enterprises. In 1562 he lost
the
battle of Dreux to the Duc de Guise; that of St. Denis to the Constable
de
Montmorency; and finally that of Jarnac, which was no less fatal to his
party.
He endured yet another reverse at Montcontour in Poitou; but his
courage
remained unshaken; his skill was able to parry the attacks of fortune,
and he
appeared more redoubtable after his defeats than his enemies in the
midst of
their victories. Often wounded, but always impervious to fear, he
remarked one
day quietly to his friends, who wept as they saw his blood flow,
‘Should not
the profession we follow cause us to regard death with the same
indifference as
life?' A few days before the Massacre of St. Bartholomew, Maurevert
shot him
with a carbine from a house in the cloister of St. Germain l’Auxerrois,
and
wounded him dangerously in the right hand and left arm. On the eve of
that
sanguinary day, Besme, at the head of a party of cut-throats, contrived
to
enter the admiral’s house, and ran him several times through the body,
then
flinging him out of the window into the courtyard, where he expired, it
is
said, at the feet of the Duc de Guise. His body was exposed for three
days to
the insults of the mob, and finally hung by the feet to the gibbet of
Montfaucon. “Thus, though the Admiral de Coligny
passed for the
greatest general of his time, he was always unfortunate and always
defeated;
while the Duc de Guise, his rival, who had less wisdom but more
audacity, and
above all more confidence in his destiny, was able to take his enemies
by
surprise and render himself master of events. ‘Coligny was an honest
man,’ said
the Abbé de Mably; ‘Guise wore the mask of a greater number of virtues.
Coligny
was detested by the people; Guise was their idol.’ It is stated that
the
Admiral left a diary, which Charles IX. read with interest, but the
Marshal de
Retz had it flung into the fire. Finally, a fatal destiny clinging to
all who
bore the name of Coligny, the last descendant of the family was killed
in a
duel by the Chevalier de Guise.” 3 It is
a remarkable and constant fact that great catastrophes claim infinitely
fewer
victims than the most reasonable probabilities might have led one to
suppose.
At the last moment a fortuitous or exceptional circumstance is almost
always
found to have kept away half, and sometimes two-thirds, of the persons
who were
threatened by the still invisible danger. A steamer that goes to the
bottom has
generally fewer passengers on board than would have been the case had
she not
been destined to go down. Two trains that collide, an express that
falls over a
precipice, etc., carry less travellers than they would on a day when
nothing is
to happen. Should a bridge collapse, the accident will generally be
found to
occur, in defiance of all probability, at the moment the crowd has just
left
it. In the case of fires in theatres and other public places, things
unfortunately happen otherwise. But there, as we know, the principal
danger
does not lie in the fire, but in the panic of the terror-stricken
crowd. Again,
a fire-damp explosion will usually occur at a time when the number of
miners
inside the mine is appreciably inferior to the number that would
habitually be
there. Similarly, when a powder-factory is blown up, the majority of
the
workmen, who would otherwise all have perished, will be found to have
left the
mill for some trifling, but providential, reason. So true is this, that
the
almost unvarying remark, that we read every day in the papers, has
become
familiar and hackneyed, as "A catastrophe which might have assumed
terrible proportions was fortunately confined, thanks to such and such
a
circumstance, etc., etc.,” or “One shudders to think what might have
happened
had the accident occurred a moment sooner, when all the workmen, all
the
passengers, etc.” Is this the clemency of Chance? We are becoming ever
less
inclined to credit it with a personality, with design or intelligence.
There is
more reason in the supposition that something in man had divined the
disaster;
that an obscure but unfailing instinct had preserved a great number of
people
from a danger that was on the point of taking shape, of assuming the
imminent
and imperious form of the inevitable, and that their unconsciousness,
taking
alarm, was seized with hidden panic; which manifested itself outwardly
in a
caprice, a whim, some puerile and inconsistent incident, that was yet
irresistible and became the means of salvation. |