A man standing on the sea-shore is perhaps as ancient and as primitive a
symbol of wonder as the mind can conceive. Beneath his feet are the stones and
grasses of an element that is his own, natural to him, in some degree belonging
to him, at any rate accepted by him. He has place and condition there. Above him
arches a world of immense void, fleecy sailing clouds, infinite clear blueness,
shapes that change and dissolve; his day comes out of it, his source of light
and warmth marches across it, night falls from it; showers and dews also, and
the quiet influence of stars. Strange that impalpable element must be, and for
ever unattainable by him; yet with its gifts of sun and shower, its furniture of
winged life that inhabits also on the friendly soil, it has links and
partnerships with life as he knows it and is a complement of earthly conditions.
But at his feet there lies the fringe of another element, another condition, of
a vaster and more simple unity than earth or air, which the primitive man of our
picture knows to be not his at all. It is fluent and unstable, yet to be touched
and felt; it rises and falls, moves and frets about his very feet, as though it
had a life and entity of its own, and was engaged upon some mysterious business.
Unlike the silent earth and the dreaming clouds it has a voice that fills his
world and, now low, now loud, echoes throughout his waking and sleeping life.
Earth with her sprouting fruits behind and beneath him; sky, and larks singing,
above him; before him, an eternal alien, the sea: he stands there upon the
shore, arrested, wondering. He lives,—this man of our figure; he proceeds, as
all must proceed, with the task and burden of life. One by one its miracles are
unfolded to him; miracles of fire and cold, and pain and pleasure; the seizure
of love, the terrible magic of reproduction, the sad miracle of death. He fights
and lusts and endures; and, no more troubled by any wonder, sleeps at last. But
throughout the days of his life, in the very act of his rude existence, this
great tumultuous presence of the sea troubles and overbears him. Sometimes in
its bellowing rage it terrifies him, sometimes in its tranquillity it allures
him; but whatever he is doing, grubbing for roots, chipping experimentally with
bones and stones, he has an eye upon it; and in his passage by the shore he
pauses, looks, and wonders. His eye is led from the crumbling snow at his feet,
past the clear green of the shallows, beyond the furrows of the nearer waves, to
the calm blue of the distance; and in his glance there shines again that wonder,
as in his breast stirs the vague longing and unrest that is the life-force of
the world.
What is there beyond? It is the eternal question asked by the finite of the
infinite, by the mortal of the immortal; answer to it there is none save in the
unending preoccupation of life and labour. And if this old question was in truth
first asked upon the sea-shore, it was asked most often and with the most
painful wonder upon western shores, whence the journeying sun was seen to go
down and quench himself in the sea. The generations that followed our primitive
man grew fast in knowledge, and perhaps for a time wondered the less as they
knew the more; but we may be sure they never ceased to wonder at what might lie
beyond the sea. How much more must they have wondered if they looked west upon
the waters, and saw the sun of each succeeding day sink upon a couch of glory
where they could not follow? All pain aspires to oblivion, all toil to rest, all
troubled discontent with what is present to what is unfamiliar and far away; and
no power of knowledge and scientific fact will ever prevent human unhappiness
from reaching out towards some land of dreams of which the burning brightness of
a sea sunset is an image. Is it very hard to believe, then, that in that
yearning towards the miracle of a sun quenched in sea distance, felt and felt
again in human hearts through countless generations, the westward stream of
human activity on this planet had its rise? Is it unreasonable to picture, on an
earth spinning eastward, a treadmill rush of feet to follow the sinking light?
The history of man's life in this world does not, at any rate, contradict us.
Wisdom, discovery, art, commerce, science, civilisation have all moved west
across our world; have all in their cycles followed the sun; have all, in their
day of power, risen in the East and set in the West.
This stream of life has grown in force and volume with the passage of ages.
It has always set from shore to sea in countless currents of adventure and
speculation; but it has set most strongly from East to West. On its broad bosom
the seeds of life and knowledge have been carried throughout the world. It
brought the people of Tyre and Carthage to the coasts and oceans of distant
worlds; it carried the English from Jutland across cold and stormy waters to the
islands of their conquest; it carried the Romans across half the world; it bore
the civilisation of the far East to new life and virgin western soils; it
carried the new West to the old East, and is in our day bringing back again the
new East to the old West. Religions, arts, tradings, philosophies, vices and
laws have been borne, a strange flotsam, upon its unchanging flood. It has had
its springs and neaps, its trembling high-water marks, its hour of affluence,
when the world has been flooded with golden humanity; its ebb and effluence
also, when it has seemed to shrink and desert the kingdoms set upon its shores.
The fifteenth century in Western Europe found it at a pause in its movements: it
had brought the trade and the learning of the East to the verge of the Old
World, filling the harbours of the Mediterranean with ships and the monasteries
of Italy and Spain with wisdom; and in the subsequent and punctual decadence
that followed this flood, there gathered in the returning tide a greater energy
and volume which was to carry the Old World bodily across the ocean. And yet,
for all their wisdom and power, the Spanish and Portuguese were still in the
attitude of our primitive man, standing on the sea-shore and looking out in
wonder across the sea.
The flood of the life-stream began to set again, and little by little to rise
and inundate Western Europe, floating off the galleys and caravels of King
Alphonso of Portugal, and sending them to feel their way along the coasts of
Africa; a little later drawing the mind of Prince Henry the Navigator to devote
his life to the conquest and possession of the unknown. In his great castle on
the promontory of Sagres, with the voice of the Atlantic thundering in his ears,
and its mists and sprays bounding his vision, he felt the full force of the
stream, and stretched his arms to the mysterious West. But the inner light was
not yet so brightly kindled that he dared to follow his heart; his ships went
south and south again, to brave on each voyage the dangers and terrors that lay
along the unknown African coast, until at length his captains saw the Cape of
Good Hope. South and West and East were in those days confusing terms; for it
was the East that men were thinking of when they set their faces to the setting
sun, and it was a new road to the East that they sought when they felt their way
southward along the edge of the world. But the rising tide of discovery was
working in that moment, engaging the brains of innumerable sages, stirring the
wonder of innumerable mariners; reaching also, little by little, to quarters
less immediately concerned with the business of discovery. Ships carried the
strange tidings of new coasts and new islands from port to port throughout the
Mediterranean; Venetians on the lagoons, Ligurians on the busy trading wharves
of Genoa, were discussing the great subject; and as the tide rose and spread, it
floated one ship of life after another that was destined for the great business
of adventure. Some it inspired to dream and speculate, and to do no more than
that; many a heart also to brave efforts and determinations that were doomed to
come to nothing and to end only in failure. And among others who felt the force
and was swayed and lifted by the prevailing influence, there lived, some four
and a half centuries ago, a little boy playing about the wharves of Genoa, well
known to his companions as Christoforo, son of Domenico the wool-weaver, who
lived in the Vico Dritto di Ponticello.
|