<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P294"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapXLIX"></SPAN>XLIX<br/> THE INTELLECTUAL REVIVAL OF THE EUROPEANS</h2>
<p>Throughout the twelfth century there were many signs that the European
intelligence was recovering courage and leisure, and preparing to take up again
the intellectual enterprises of the first Greek scientific enquiries and such
speculations as those of the Italian Lucretius. The causes of this revival were
many and complex. The suppression of private war, the higher standards of
comfort and security that followed the crusades, and the stimulation of
men’s minds by the experiences of these expeditions were no doubt
necessary preliminary conditions. Trade was reviving; cities were recovering
ease and safety; the standard of education was arising in the church and
spreading among laymen. The thirteenth and fourteenth centuries were a period
of growing, independent or quasi-independent cities; Venice, Florence, Genoa,
Lisbon, Paris, Bruges, London, Antwerp, Hamburg, Nuremberg, Novgorod, Wisby and
Bergen for example. They were all trading cities with many travellers, and
where men trade and travel they talk and think. The polemics of the Popes and
princes, the conspicuous savagery and wickedness of the persecution of
heretics, were exciting men to doubt the authority of the church and question
and discuss fundamental things.</p>
<p>We have seen how the Arabs were the means of restoring
Aristotle to Europe, and how such a prince as Frederick II
acted as a channel through which Arabic philosophy and
science played upon the renascent European mind. Still more
influential in the stirring up of men’s ideas were the
Jews. Their very existence was a note of interrogation to
the claims of the church. And finally the secret,
fascinating enquiries of the alchemists were spreading far
and wide and setting men to the petty, furtive and yet
fruitful resumption of experimental science.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P295"></SPAN></span>And the
stir in men’s minds was by no means confined now to the
independent and well educated. The mind of the common man
was awake in the world as it had never been before in all the
experience of mankind. In spite of priest and persecution,
Christianity does seem to have carried a mental ferment
wherever its teaching reached. It established a direct
relation between the conscience of the individual man and the
God of Righteousness, so that now if need arose he had the
courage to form his own judgment upon prince or prelate or
creed.</p>
<p>As early as the eleventh century philosophical discussion had
begun again in Europe, and there were great and growing
universities at Paris, Oxford, Bologna and other centres.
There medieval “schoolmen” took up again and
thrashed out a series of questions upon the value and meaning
of words that were a necessary preliminary to clear thinking
in the scientific age that was to follow. And standing by
himself because of his distinctive genius was Roger Bacon
(circa 1210 to circa 1293), a Franciscan of Oxford, the
father of modern experimental science. His name deserves a
prominence in our history second only to that of Aristotle.</p>
<p>His writings are one long tirade against ignorance. He told
his age it was ignorant, an incredibly bold thing to do.
Nowadays a man may tell the world it is as silly as it is
solemn, that all its methods are still infantile and clumsy
and its dogmas childish assumptions, without much physical
danger; but these peoples of the middle ages when they were
not actually being massacred or starving or dying of
pestilence, were passionately convinced of the wisdom, the
completeness and finality of their beliefs, and disposed to
resent any reflections upon them very bitterly. Roger
Bacon’s writings were like a flash of light in a
profound darkness. He combined his attack upon the ignorance
of his times with a wealth of suggestion for the increase of
knowledge. In his passionate insistence upon the need of
experiment and of collecting knowledge, the spirit of
Aristotle lives again in him. “Experiment,
experiment,” that is the burthen of Roger Bacon.</p>
<p>Yet of Aristotle himself Roger Bacon fell foul. He fell foul
of him because men, instead of facing facts boldly, sat in
rooms and pored over the bad Latin translations which were
then all that was <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P296"></SPAN></span>available of the master.
“If I had my way,” he wrote, in his intemperate
fashion, “I should burn all the books of Aristotle, for
the study of them can only lead to a loss of time, produce
error, and increase ignorance,” a sentiment that
Aristotle would probably have echoed could he have returned
to a world in which his works were not so much read as
worshipped—and that, as Roger Bacon showed, in these
most abominable translations.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-296"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-296.jpg" alt="AN EARLY PRINTING PRESS" width-obs="550" height-obs="720" /> <p class="caption">
AN EARLY PRINTING PRESS
<br/><small><i>(From an old print)
</i></small></p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P297"></SPAN></span>Throughout his books, a little
disguised by the necessity of seeming to square it all with
orthodoxy for fear of the prison and worse, Roger Bacon
shouted to mankind, “Cease to be ruled by dogmas and
authorities; <i>look at the world!</i>” Four chief
sources of ignorance he denounced; respect for authority,
custom, the sense of the ignorant crowd, and the vain, proud
unteachableness of our dispositions. Overcome but these, and
a world of power would open to men: —</p>
<p>“Machines for navigating are possible without rowers,
so that great ships suited to river or ocean, guided by one
man, may be borne with greater speed than if they were full
of men. Likewise cars may be made so that without a draught
animal they may be moved <i>cum impetu inœstimable</i>,
as we deem the scythed chariots to have been from which
antiquity fought. And flying machines are possible, so that
a man may sit in the middle turning some device by which
artificial wings may beat the air in the manner of a flying
bird.”</p>
<p>So Roger Bacon wrote, but three more centuries were to elapse
before men began any systematic attempts to explore the
hidden stores of power and interest he realized so clearly
existed beneath the dull surface of human affairs.</p>
<p>But the Saracenic world not only gave Christendom the
stimulus of its philosophers and alchemists; it also gave it
paper. It is scarcely too much to say that paper made the
intellectual revival of Europe possible. Paper originated in
China, where its use probably goes back to the second century
<small>B.C.</small> In 751 the Chinese made an
attack upon the Arab Moslems in Samarkand; they were
repulsed, and among the prisoners taken from them were some
skilled papermakers, from whom the art was learnt. Arabic
paper manuscripts from the ninth century onward still exist.
The manufacture entered Christendom either through Greece or
by the capture of Moorish paper-mills during the Christian
reconquest of Spain. But under the Christian Spanish the
product deteriorated sadly. Good paper was not made in
Christian Europe until the end of the thirteenth century, and
then it was Italy which led the world. Only by the
fourteenth century did the manufacture reach Germany, and not
until the end of that century was it abundant and <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P298"></SPAN></span>cheap enough
for the printing of books to be a practicable business
proposition. Thereupon printing followed naturally and
necessarily, for printing is the most obvious of inventions,
and the intellectual life of the world entered upon a new and
far more vigorous phase. It ceased to be a little trickle
from mind to mind; it became a broad flood, in which
thousands and presently scores and hundreds of thousands of
minds participated.</p>
<p>One immediate result of this achievement of printing was the
appearance of an abundance of Bibles in the world. Another
was a cheapening of school-books. The knowledge of reading
spread swiftly. There was not only a great increase of books
in the world, but the books that were now made were plainer
to read and so easier to understand. Instead of toiling at a
crabbed text arid then thinking over its significance,
readers now could think unimpeded as they read. With this
increase in the facility of reading, the reading public grew.
The book ceased to be a highly decorated toy or a
scholar’s mystery. People began to write books to be
read as well as looked at by ordinary people. They wrote in
the ordinary language and not in Latin. With the fourteenth
century the real history of the European literature begins.</p>
<p>So far we have been dealing only with the Saracenic share in
the European revival. Let us turn now to the influence of
the Mongol conquests. They stimulated the geographical
imagination of Europe enormously. For a time under the Great
Khan, all Asia and Western Europe enjoyed an open
intercourse; all the roads were temporarily open, and
representatives of every nation appeared at the court of
Karakorum. The barriers between Europe and Asia set up by
the religious feud of Christianity and Islam were lowered.
Great hopes were entertained by the papacy for the conversion
of the Mongols to Christianity. Their only religion so far
had been Shumanism, a primitive paganism. Envoys of the
Pope, Buddhist priests from India, Parisian and Italian and
Chinese artificers, Byzantine and Armenian merchants, mingled
with Arab officials and Persian and Indian astronomers and
mathematicians at the Mongol court. We hear too much in
history of the campaigns and massacres of the Mongols, and
not enough of their curiosity and desire for learning. Not
perhaps as an originative people, but as transmitters <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P299"></SPAN></span>of knowledge
and method their influence upon the world’s history has
been very great. And everything one can learn of the vague
and romantic personalities of Jengis or Kublai tends to
confirm the impression that these men were at least as
understanding and creative monarchs as either that flamboyant
but egotistical figure Alexander the Great or that raiser of
political ghosts, that energetic but illiterate theologian
Charlemagne.</p>
<p>One of the most interesting of these visitors to the Mongol
Court was a certain Venetian, Marco Polo, who afterwards set
down his story in a book. He went to China about 1272 with
his father and uncle, who had already once made the journey.
The Great Khan had been deeply impressed by the elder Polos;
they were the first men of the “Latin” peoples he
had seen; and he sent them back with enquiries for teachers
and learned men who could explain Christianity to him, and
for various other European things that had aroused his
curiosity. Their visit with Marco was their second visit.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-299"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-299.jpg" alt="ANCIENT BRONZE FIGURE FROM BENIN, W. AFRICA" width-obs="180" height-obs="397" /> <p class="caption">
ANCIENT BRONZE FIGURE FROM BENIN, W. AFRICA
<br/><small>Note evidence in attire of knowledge of early European
explorers
<br/>
<i>(In the British Museum)
</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>The three Polos started by way of Palestine and not by the
Crimea, as in their previous expedition. They had with them
a gold tablet and other indications from the Great Khan that
must have greatly facilitated their journey. The Great Khan
had asked for some oil from the lamp that burns in the Holy
Sepulchre at Jerusalem; and so thither they first went, and
then by way of Cilicia into Armenia. They went thus far
north because the Sultan of Egypt was raiding the Mongol
domains at this time. Thence they came by way of Mesopotamia
to Ormuz on the Persian Gulf, as if they contemplated a sea
voyage. At Ormuz they met merchants from India. For some
reason they did not take ship, but instead turned northward
through the Persian deserts, and so by way of Balkh over
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P300"></SPAN></span>the
Pamir to Kashgar, and by way of Kotan and the Lob Nor into
the Hwang-ho valley and on to Pekin. At Pekin was the Great
Khan, and they were hospitably entertained.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-300"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-300.jpg" alt="ANOTHER ANCIENT NEGRO BRONZE OF A EUROPEAN" width-obs="160" height-obs="350" /> <p class="caption">
ANOTHER ANCIENT NEGRO BRONZE OF A EUROPEAN
<br/>
<small><i>(In the British Museum)
</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>Marco particularly pleased Kublai; he was young and clever,
and it is clear he had mastered the Tartar language very
thoroughly. He was given an official position and sent on
several missions, chiefly in south-west China. The tale he
had to tell of vast stretches of smiling and prosperous
country, “all the way excellent hostelries for
travellers,” and “fine vineyards, fields, and
gardens,” of “many abbeys” of Buddhist
monks, of manufactures of “cloth of silk and gold and
many fine taffetas,” a “constant succession of
cities and boroughs,” and so on, first roused the
incredulity and then fired the imagination of all Europe. He
told of Burmah, and of its great armies with hundreds of
elephants, and how these animals were defeated by the Mongol
bowmen, and also of the Mongol conquest of Pegu. He told of
Japan, and greatly exaggerated the amount of gold in that
country. For three years Marco ruled the city of Yang-chow
as governor, and he probably impressed the Chinese
inhabitants as being little more of a foreigner than any
Tartar would have been. He may also have been sent on a
mission to India. Chinese records mention a certain Polo
attached to the imperial council in 1277, a very valuable
confirmation of the general truth of the Polo story.</p>
<p>The publication of Marco Polo’s travels produced a
profound effect upon the European imagination. The European
literature, and especially the European romance of the
fifteenth century, echoes with the names in Marco
Polo’s story, with Cathay (North China) and Cambulac
(Pekin) and the like.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-301"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-301.jpg" alt="EARLY ITALIAN ENGRAVING OF A SAILING SHIP" width-obs="400" height-obs="815" /> <p class="caption">
EARLY ITALIAN ENGRAVING OF A SAILING SHIP
<br/><small>
<i>(In the British Museum)
</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>Two centuries later, among the readers of the Travels of
Marco Polo was a certain Genoese mariner, Christopher
Columbus, who <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P301"></SPAN></span>conceived the brilliant idea of
sailing westward round the world to China. In Seville there
is a copy of the Travels with marginal notes by Columbus.
There were many reasons why the thought of a Genoese should
be turned in this direction. Until its capture by the Turks
in 1453 Constantinople had been an impartial trading mart
between the Western world and the East, and the Genoese had
traded there freely. But the “Latin” Venetians,
the bitter rivals of the Genoese, had been the allies and
helpers of the Turks against the Greeks, and with the coming
of the Turks Constantinople turned an <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P302"></SPAN></span>unfriendly
face upon Genoese trade. The long forgotten discovery that
the world was round had gradually resumed its sway over
men’s minds. The idea of going westward to China was
therefore a fairly obvious one. It was encouraged by two
things. The mariner’s compass had now been invented
and men were no longer left to the mercy of a fine night and
the stars to determine the direction in which they were
sailing, and the Normans, Catalonians and Genoese and
Portuguese had already pushed out into the Atlantic as far as
the Canary Isles, Madeira and the Azores.</p>
<p>Yet Columbus found many difficulties before he could get
ships to put his idea to the test. He went from one European
Court to another. Finally at Granada, just won from the
Moors, he secured the patronage of Ferdinand and Isabella,
and was able to set out across the unknown ocean in three
small ships. After a voyage of two months and nine days he
came to a land which he believed to be India, but which was
really a new continent, whose distinct existence the old
world had never hitherto suspected. He returned to Spain
with gold, cotton, strange beasts and birds, and two wild-
eyed painted Indians to be baptized. They were called
Indians because, to the end of his days, he believed that
this land he had found was India. Only in the course of
several years did men begin to realize that the whole new
continent of America was added to the world’s
resources.</p>
<p>The success of Columbus stimulated overseas enterprise
enormously. In 1497 the Portuguese sailed round Africa to
India, and in 1515 there were Portuguese ships in Java. In
1519 Magellan, a Portuguese sailor in Spanish employment,
sailed out of Seville westward with five ships, of which one,
the <i>Vittoria</i>, came back up the river to Seville in
1522, the first ship that had ever circumnavigated the world.
Thirty-one men were aboard her, survivors of two-hundred-and-
eighty who had started. Magellan himself had been killed in
the Philippine Isles.</p>
<p>Printed paper books, a new realization of the round world as
a thing altogether attainable, a new vision of strange lands,
strange animals and plants, strange manners and customs,
discoveries overseas and in the skies and in the ways and
materials of life burst upon the European mind. The Greek
classics, buried and forgotten for so <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P303"></SPAN></span>long, were
speedily being printed and studied, and were colouring
men’s thoughts with the dreams of Plato and the
traditions of an age of republican freedom and dignity. The
Roman dominion had first brought law and order to Western
Europe, and the Latin Church had restored it; but under both
Pagan and Catholic Rome curiosity and innovation were
subordinate to and restrained by organization. The reign of
the Latin mind was now drawing to an end. Between the
thirteenth and the sixteenth century the European Aryans,
thanks to the stimulating influence of Semite and Mongol and
the rediscovery of the Greek classics, broke away from the
Latin tradition and rose again to the intellectual and
material leadership of mankind.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />