Section 1
The history of mankind is the
history of the attainment of external power.
Man is the tool-using, fire-making animal. From
the outset of his terrestrial career we find him supplementing
the natural strength and bodily weapons of a beast
by the heat of burning and the rough implement of
stone. So he passed beyond the ape. From
that he expands. Presently he added to himself
the power of the horse and the ox, he borrowed the
carrying strength of water and the driving force of
the wind, he quickened his fire by blowing, and his
simple tools, pointed first with copper and then with
iron, increased and varied and became more elaborate
and efficient. He sheltered his heat in houses
and made his way easier by paths and roads. He
complicated his social relationships and increased
his efficiency by the division of labour. He began
to store up knowledge. Contrivance followed contrivance,
each making it possible for a man to do more.
Always down the lengthening record, save for a set-back
ever and again, he is doing more…. A quarter
of a million years ago the utmost man was a savage,
a being scarcely articulate, sheltering in holes in
the rocks, armed with a rough-hewn flint or a fire-pointed
stick, naked, living in small family groups, killed
by some younger man so soon as his first virile activity
declined. Over most of the great wildernesses
of earth you would have sought him in vain; only in
a few temperate and sub-tropical river valleys would
you have found the squatting lairs of his little herds,
a male, a few females, a child or so.
He knew no future then, no kind of
life except the life he led. He fled the cave-bear
over the rocks full of iron ore and the promise of
sword and spear; he froze to death upon a ledge of
coal; he drank water muddy with the clay that would
one day make cups of porcelain; he chewed the ear
of wild wheat he had plucked and gazed with a dim speculation
in his eyes at the birds that soared beyond his reach.
Or suddenly he became aware of the scent of another
male and rose up roaring, his roars the formless precursors
of moral admonitions. For he was a great individualist,
that original, he suffered none other than himself.
So through the long generations, this
heavy precursor, this ancestor of all of us, fought
and bred and perished, changing almost imperceptibly.
Yet he changed. That keen chisel
of necessity which sharpened the tiger’s claw
age by age and fined down the clumsy Orchippus to the
swift grace of the horse, was at work upon him—is
at work upon him still. The clumsier and more
stupidly fierce among him were killed soonest and
oftenest; the finer hand, the quicker eye, the bigger
brain, the better balanced body prevailed; age by
age, the implements were a little better made, the
man a little more delicately adjusted to his possibilities.
He became more social; his herd grew larger; no longer
did each man kill or drive out his growing sons; a
system of taboos made them tolerable to him, and they
revered him alive and soon even after he was dead,
and were his allies against the beasts and the rest
of mankind. (But they were forbidden to touch the
women of the tribe, they had to go out and capture
women for themselves, and each son fled from his stepmother
and hid from her lest the anger of the Old Man should
be roused. All the world over, even to this day,
these ancient inevitable taboos can be traced.) And
now instead of caves came huts and hovels, and the
fire was better tended and there were wrappings and
garments; and so aided, the creature spread into colder
climates, carrying food with him, storing food—until
sometimes the neglected grass-seed sprouted again and
gave a first hint of agriculture.
And already there were the beginnings
of leisure and thought.
Man began to think. There were
times when he was fed, when his lusts and his fears
were all appeased, when the sun shone upon the squatting-place
and dim stirrings of speculation lit his eyes.
He scratched upon a bone and found resemblance and
pursued it and began pictorial art, moulded the soft,
warm clay of the river brink between his fingers, and
found a pleasure in its patternings and repetitions,
shaped it into the form of vessels, and found that
it would hold water. He watched the streaming
river, and wondered from what bountiful breast this
incessant water came; he blinked at the sun and dreamt
that perhaps he might snare it and spear it as it
went down to its resting-place amidst the distant
hills. Then he was roused to convey to his brother
that once indeed he had done so—at least
that some one had done so—he mixed that
perhaps with another dream almost as daring, that
one day a mammoth had been beset; and therewith began
fiction—pointing a way to achievement—and
the august prophetic procession of tales.
For scores and hundreds of centuries,
for myriads of generations that life of our fathers
went on. From the beginning to the ripening of
that phase of human life, from the first clumsy eolith
of rudely chipped flint to the first implements of
polished stone, was two or three thousand centuries,
ten or fifteen thousand generations. So slowly,
by human standards, did humanity gather itself together
out of the dim intimations of the beast. And
that first glimmering of speculation, that first story
of achievement, that story-teller bright-eyed and flushed
under his matted hair, gesticulating to his gaping,
incredulous listener, gripping his wrist to keep him
attentive, was the most marvellous beginning this
world has ever seen. It doomed the mammoths,
and it began the setting of that snare that shall catch
the sun.