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The Spirit of Adventure is the most animating impulse in the human breast. Man
naturally detests inaction; he thirsts after change and novelty, and the
prospect of excitement makes him prefer even danger to continued repose.
The love of adventure! how strongly it urges forward the Young!
The Young, who are ever discontented with the Present, and sigh for
opportunities of action which they know not where to seek. Old men mourn over
the folly and recklessness of the Young, who, in the fresh and balmy spring-time
of life, recoil from the confinement of the desk or the study, and long for
active occupation, in which all their beating energies may find employment.
Subjection is the consequence of civilized life; and self-sacrifice is necessary
in those who are born to toil, before they may partake of its enjoyments. But
though the Young are conscious that this is so, they repine not the less; they
feel that the freshness and verdure of life must first die away; that the
promised recompense will probably come too late to the exhausted frame; that the
blessings which would now be received with prostrate gratitude will cease to be
felt as boons; and that although the wishes and wants of the heart will take new
directions in the progress of years, the consciousness that the spring-time of
life - that peculiar season of happiness which can never be known again - has
been consumed in futile desires and aspirations, in vain hopes and bitter
experiences, must ever remain deepening the gloom of Memory.
Anxious to possess immediate independence, young
men, full of adventurous spirit, proceed in search of new fields of labour,
where they may reap at once the enjoyments of domestic life, whilst they
industriously work out the curse that hangs over the Sons of Adam.
They who thus become emigrants from the ardent
spirit of adventure, and from a desire to experience a simpler and less
artificial manner of living than that which has become the essential
characteristic of European civilization, form a large and useful body of
colonists. These men, notwithstanding the pity which will be bestowed upon them
by those whose limited experience of life leads to the belief that happiness or
contentment can only be found in the atmosphere of England, are entitled to some
consideration and respect. To have dared to
deviate from the beaten track which was before them in the outset of life; to
have perceived at so vast a distance advantages which others, if they had seen,
would have shrunk from aiming at; to have persevered in their resolution,
notwithstanding the expostulations of Age, the regrets of Friendship, and the
sighs of Affection - all this betokens originality and strength of character. You will find more
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The Bushman
E.W. Landor
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