THE CONSEQUENCES : The background spaces - The ancestral
sea
The planet is not all land, and the
sea is as holy as the soil. We speak of the “waste
of waters,” and we still offer prayers for those
who go down to the sea in ships.
Superstition yet clings about the
sea. The landsman thinks of the sea as barren,
and he regrets that it is not solid land on which he
may grow grass and cattle. And as one looks over
the surface of the waters, with no visible object
on the vast expanse and even the clouds lying apparently
dead and sterile, and when one considers that three-fourths
of the earth’s surface is similarly covered,
one has the impression of utter waste and desolation,
with no good thing abiding there for the comfort and
cheer of man.
The real inhabitants of the sea are
beneath the surface and every part is tenanted, so
completely tenanted that the ocean produces greater
bulk of life, area for area, than does the solid land;
and every atom of this life is as keen to live and
follows as completely the law of its existence as
does the life of the interiors of the continents.
The vast meadows of plankton and nekton, albeit largely
of organisms microscopic, form a layer for hundreds
of feet beneath the surface and on which the great
herbivora feed; and on these animals the legions of
the carnivora subsist. Every vertical region
has its life, peculiar to it, extending even to the
bottoms of the depths in the world-slimes and the darkness;
and in these deeps the falling remains of the upper
realms, like gentle primeval rains, afford a never-failing,
never-ending source of food and maintain the slow
life in the bottoms. We think of the huge animals
of the sea when we think of mass, and it is true that
the great whales are the bulkiest creatures we know
to have lived; yet it is the bacteria, the desmids,
the minute crustaceans, and many other diminutive forms
that everywhere populate the sea from the equator to
the poles and provide the vast background of the ocean
life. In these gulfs of moving unseen forms nitrification
proceeds, and the rounds of life go on unceasingly.
The leviathan whale strains out these minute organisms
from the volumes of waters, and so full of them may
be his maw that his captors remove the accumulation
with spades. The rivers bring down their freight
of mud and organic matter, and supply food for the
denizens of the sea. The last remains of all
these multitudes are laid down on the ocean floors
as organic oozes; and nobody knows what part the abysmal
soil may play in the economy of the plant in some future
epoch.
The rains of the land come from the
sea; the clouds come ultimately from the sea; the
trade-winds flow regularly from the sea; the temperatures
of the land surface are controlled largely from the
sea; the high lands are washed into the sea as into
a basin; if all the continents were levelled into
the sea still would the sea envelop the planet about
two miles deep. Impurities find their way into
the sea and are there digested into the universal
beneficence. We must reckon with the sea.
It is supposed that the first life
on the earth came forth where the land and the waters
join, from that eternal interplay of cosmic forces
where the solid and the fluid, the mobile and the immobile,
meet and marry.
Verily, the ancestral sea is the background
of the planet. Its very vastness makes it significant.
It shows no age. Its deeps have no doubt existed
from the solidification of the earth and they will
probably remain when all works of man perish utterly.
The sea is the bosom of the earth’s
mysteries. Because man cannot set foot on it,
the sea remains beyond his power to modify, to handle,
and to control. No breach that man may make but
will immediately fill; no fleets of mighty ships go
down but that the sea covers them in silence and knows
them not; man may not hold converse with the monsters
in the deeps. The sea is beyond him, surpassing,
elemental, and yet blessing him with abundant benedictions.
So vast is the sea and so self-recuperating
that man cannot sterilize it. He despoils none
of its surface when he sails his ships. He does
not annihilate the realms of plankton, lying layer
on layer in its deluging, consuming soil. It
controls him mightily.
The seas and the shores have provided
the trading ways of the peoples. The ocean connects
all lands, surrounds all lands. Until recent times
the great marts have been mostly on coasts or within
easy water access of them. The polity of early
settlements was largely the polity of the sea and
the strand. The daring of the navigator was one
of the first of the heroic human qualities. Probably
all dry land was once under the sea, and therefrom
has it drawn much of its power.
From earliest times the sea has yielded
property common to all and free to whomever would
take it, the fish, the wrack, the drift,
the salvage of ships. Pirates have roamed the
sea for spoil and booty. When government appropriates
the wreckage of ships and the stranded derelict of
the sea, the people may think it justifiable protection
of their rights to secrete it. Smuggling is an
old sea license. Laws and customs and old restraints
lose their force and vanish on the sea; and freedom
rises out of the sea.
And so the ocean has contributed to
the making of the outlook of the human family.
The race would be a very different race had there been
no sea stretching to the unknown, conjuring vague
fears and stimulating hopes, bringing its freight,
bearing tidings of far lands, sundering traditions,
rolling the waves of its elemental music, driving its
rank smells into the nostrils, putting its salt into
the soul.