| FIRST EPILOGUE: 1813 - 20
4. CHAPTER IV
 (continued)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. 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. 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. |