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to do。 Never did a mind more inflexibly set aside the occupation or
thought which did not come at the right day or hour; never was one
more ardent in seeking it; more alert in its pursuit; more capable of
fixing it when the time came to take it up。〃
He himself said later on:'46'
〃Various subjects and affairs are stowed away in my brain as in a
chest of drawers。 When I want to take up any special business I shut
one drawer and open another。 None of them ever get mixed; and never
does this incommode me or fatigue me。 If I feel sleepy I shut all the
drawers and go to sleep。〃
Never has brain so disciplined and under such control been seen; one
so ready at all times for any task; so capable of immediate and
absolute concentration。 Its flexibility'47' is wonderful; 〃in the
instant application of every faculty and energy; and bringing them all
to bear at once on any object that concerns him; on a mite as well as
on an elephant; on any given individual as well as on an enemy's army。
。 。 。 When specially occupied; other things do not exist for him;
it is a sort of chase from which nothing diverts him。〃 And this hot
pursuit; which nothing arrests save capture; this tenacious hunt; this
headlong course by one to whom the goal is never other than a fresh
starting…point; is the spontaneous gait; the natural; even pace which
his mind prefers。
〃I am always at work;〃 says he to Roederer。'48' 〃I meditate a great
deal。 If I seem always equal to the occasion; ready to face what
comes; it is because I have thought the matter over a long time before
undertaking it。 I have anticipated whatever might happen。 It is no
spirit which suddenly reveals to me what I ought to do or say in any
unlooked…for circumstance; but my own reflection; my own meditation。
。 。 。 I work all the time; at dinner; in the theatre。 I wake up at
night in order to resume my work。 I got up last night at two o'clock。
I stretched myself on my couch before the fire to examine the army
reports sent to me by the Minister of War。 I found twenty mistakes in
them; and made notes which I have this morning sent to the minister;
who is now engaged with his clerks in rectifying them。〃 …
His associates weaken and sink under the burden imposed on them and
which he supports without feeling the weight。 When Consul;'49' 〃he
sometimes presides at special meetings of the section of the interior
from ten o'clock in the evening until five o'clock in the morning。 。
。 。 Often; at Saint…Cloud; he keeps the counselors of state from
nine o'clock in the morning until five in the evening; with fifteen
minutes' intermission; and seems no more fatigued at the close of the
session than when it began。〃 During the night sessions 〃many of the
members succumb through weariness; while the Minister of War falls
asleep〃; he gives them a shake and wakes them up; 〃Come; come;
citizens; let us bestir ourselves; it is only two o'clock and we must
earn the money the French people pay us。〃 Consul or Emperor;'50' 〃he
demands of each minister an account of the smallest details: It is not
rare to see them leaving the council room overcome with fatigue; due
to the long interrogatories to which he has subjected them; he appears
not to have noticed; and talks about the day's work simply as a
relaxation which has scarcely given his mind exercise。〃 And what is
worse; 〃it often happens that on returning home they find a dozen of
his letters requiring immediate response; for which the whole night
scarcely suffices。〃 The quantity of facts he is able to retain and
store away; the quantity of ideas he elaborates and produces; seems to
surpass human capacity; and this insatiable; inexhaustible; unmovable
brain thus keeps on working uninterruptedly for thirty years。
Through another result of the same mental organization; Napoleon's
brain is never unproductive; that's today our great danger。 … During
the past three hundred years we have more and more lost sight of the
exact and direct meaning of things。 Subject to the constraints of a
conservative; complex; and extended educational system we study
* the symbols of objects rather than on the objects themselves;
* instead of the ground itself; a map of it;
* instead of animals struggling for existence;'51' nomenclatures and
classifications; or; at best; stuffed specimens displayed in a museum;
* instead of persons who feel and act; statistics; codes; histories;
literatures; and philosophies;
in short; printed words。 Even worse; abstract terms; which from
century to century have become more abstract and therefore further
removed from experience; more difficult to understand; less adaptable
and more deceptive; especially in all that relates to human life and
society。 Here; due to the growth of government; to the multiplication
of services; to the entanglement of interests; the object;
indefinitely enlarged and complex; now eludes our grasp。 Our vague;
incomplete; incorrect idea of it badly corresponds with it; or does
not correspond at all。 In nine minds out of ten; or perhaps ninety…
nine out of a hundred; it is but little more than a word。 The others;
if they desire some significant indication of what society actually is
beyond the teachings of books; require ten or fifteen years of close
observation and study to re…think the phrases with which these have
filled their memory; to interpret them anew; to make clear their
meaning; to get at and verify their sense; to substitute for the more
or less empty and indefinite term the fullness and precision of a
personal impression。 We have seen how ideas of Society; State;
Government; Sovereignty; Rights; Liberty; the most important of all
ideas; were; at the close of the eighteenth century; curtailed and
falsified; how; in most minds; simple verbal reasoning combined them
together in dogmas and axioms; what an offspring these metaphysical
simulacra gave birth to; how many lifeless and grotesque abortions;
how many monstrous and destructive chimeras。 There is no place for
any of these fanciful dreams in the mind of Bonaparte; they cannot
arise in it; nor find access to it; his aversion to the unsubstantial
phantoms of political abstraction extends beyond disdain; even to
disgust。'52' That which was then called ideology; is his particular
bugbear; he loathes it not alone through calculation; but still more
through an instinctive demand for what is real; as a practical man and
statesman; always keeping in mind; like the great Catherine; 〃that he
is operating; not on paper; but on the human hide; which is ticklish。〃
Every idea entertained by him had its origin in his personal
observation; and he used his own personal observations to control
them。
If books are useful to him it is to suggest questions; which he never
answers but through his own experience。 He has read only a little;
and hastily;'53' his classical education is rudimentary; in the way of
Latin; he remained in