| PART 8
Chapter 13
 And Levin remembered a scene he had lately witnessed between
 Dolly and her children.  The children, left to themselves, had
 begun cooking raspberries over the candles and squirting milk
 into each other's mouths with a syringe.  Their mother, catching
 them at these pranks, began reminding them in Levin's presence of
 the trouble their mischief gave to the grown-up people, and that
 this trouble was all for their sake, and that if they smashed the
 cups they would have nothing to drink their tea out of, and that
 if they wasted the milk, they would have nothing to eat, and die
 of hunger. And Levin had been struck by the passive, weary incredulity with
 which the children heard what their mother said to them.  They
 were simply annoyed that their amusing play had been interrupted,
 and did not believe a word of what their mother was saying.  They
 could not believe it indeed, for they could not take in the
 immensity of all they habitually enjoyed, and so could not
 conceive that what they were destroying was the very thing they
 lived by. "That all comes of itself," they thought, "and there's nothing
 interesting or important about it because it has always been so,
 and always will be so.  And it's all always the same.  We've no
 need to think about that, it's all ready.  But we want to invent
 something of our own, and new.  So we thought of putting
 raspberries in a cup, and cooking them over a candle, and
 squirting milk straight into each other's mouths.  That's fun,
 and something new, and not a bit worse than drinking out of
 cups." "Isn't it just the same that we do, that I did, searching by the
 aid of reason for the significance of the forces of nature and
 the meaning of the life of man?" he thought. "And don't all the theories of philosophy do the same, trying by
 the path of thought, which is strange and not natural to man, to
 bring him to a knowledge of what he has known long ago, and knows
 so certainly that he could not live at all without it?  Isn't it
 distinctly to be seen in the development of each philosopher's
 theory, that he knows what is the chief significance of life
 beforehand, just as positively as the peasant Fyodor, and not a
 bit more clearly than he, and is simply trying by a dubious
 intellectual path to come back to what everyone knows? |