a space of sea so wide that the farther shore is invisible,
and yet imagine the farther shore also. You
will see America across the Atlantic and Japan across
the Pacific; but you cannot see, in one single effort
of the imagination, an Atlantic of empty blue water
stretching to an empty horizon, another beyond that
equally vast and empty, another beyond that, and so
on until you have spanned the thousand horizons that
lie between England and America. The mind, that
is to say, works in steps and spans corresponding to
the spans of physical sight; it cannot clear itself
enough from the body, or rise high enough beyond experience,
to comprehend spaces so much vaster than anything
ever seen by the eye of man. So also with the
stretching of the horizon which bounded human knowledge
of the earth. It moved step by step; if one
of Prince Henry’s captains, creeping down the
west coast of Africa, discovered a cape a hundred
miles south of the known world, the most he could
probably do was to imagine that there might lie, still
another hundred miles farther south, another cape;
to sail for it in faith and hope, to find it, and
to imagine another possibility yet another hundred
miles away. So far as experience went back, faith
could look forward. It is thus with the common
run of mankind; yesterday’s march is the measure
of to-morrow’s; as much as they have done once,
they may do again; they fear it will be not much more;
they hope it may be not much less.
The history of the exploration of the world up to
the day when Columbus set sail from Palos is just
such a history of steps. The Phoenicians coasting
from harbour to harbour through the Mediterranean;
the Romans marching from camp to camp, from country
to country; the Jutes venturing in their frail craft
into the stormy northern seas, making voyages a little
longer and more daring every time, until they reached
England; the captains of Prince Henry of Portugal
feeling their way from voyage to voyage down the coast
of Africa—there are no bold flights into
the incredible here, but patient and business-like
progress from one stepping-stone to another.
Dangers and hardships there were, and brave followings
of the faint will-o’-the-wisp of faith in what
lay beyond; but there were no great launchings into
space. They but followed a line that was the
continuance or projection of the line they had hitherto
followed; what they did was brave and glorious, but
it was reasonable. What Columbus did, on the
contrary, was, as we shall see later, against all
reason and knowledge. It was a leap in the dark
towards some star invisible to all but him; for he
who sets forth across the desert sand or sea must
have a brighter sun to guide him than that which sets
and rises on the day of the small man.