FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   371   372   373   374   375   376   377   378   379   380   381   382   >>  
re mathematician may work out the facts with the greatest accuracy and prove the existence of land at a certain point; but there is great danger that he may be knocked down by a club on his first landing on the beach, and never bring home any news of his discovery. The great courtier may do well for himself and keep smooth and politic relations with kings; the great administrator may found a wonderful colony; but it is the man with the wits and the hands, and some bigness of heart to tide him over daunting passages, that wins through the first elementary risks of any great discovery. Properly considered, Columbus's fame should rest simply on the answer to the single question, "Did he discover new lands as he said he would?" That was the greatest thing he could do, and the fact that he failed to do a great many other things afterwards, failed the more conspicuously because his attempts were so conspicuous, should have no effect on our estimate of his achievement. The fame of it could no more be destroyed by himself than it can be destroyed by us. True understanding of a man and estimate of his character can only be arrived at by methods at once more comprehensive and more subtle than those commonly employed among men. Everything that he sees, does, and suffers has its influence on the moulding of his character; and he must be considered in relation to his physical environment, no less than to his race and ancestry. Christopher Columbus spent a great part of his active life on the sea; it was sea-life which inspired him with his great Idea, it was by the conquest of the sea that he realised it; it was on the sea that all his real triumphs over circumstance and his own weaker self were won. The influences at work upon a man whose life is spent on the sea are as different from those at work upon one who lives on the fields as the environment of a gannet is different from the environment of a skylark: and yet how often do we really attempt to make due allowance for this great factor and try to estimate the extent of its moulding influence? To live within sound or sight of the sea is to be conscious of a voice or countenance that holds you in unyielding bonds. The voice, being continuous, creeps into the very pulses and becomes part of the pervading sound or silence of a man's environment; and the face, although it never regards him, holds him with its changes and occupies his mind with its everlasting riddle. Its
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   371   372   373   374   375   376   377   378   379   380   381   382   >>  



Top keywords:

environment

 

estimate

 
destroyed
 

character

 

Columbus

 

failed

 

considered

 
greatest
 

discovery

 

influence


moulding

 

weaker

 

relation

 

physical

 

influences

 
triumphs
 

ancestry

 
Christopher
 

inspired

 

mathematician


conquest

 

active

 

circumstance

 
realised
 

pulses

 

creeps

 
continuous
 

unyielding

 
pervading
 

silence


everlasting
 
riddle
 
occupies
 
countenance
 

conscious

 

attempt

 

fields

 

gannet

 

skylark

 

allowance


extent

 
factor
 

subtle

 

daunting

 

passages

 

bigness

 

answer

 
single
 
question
 

simply