[The Mysterious Stranger and Other Stories by Mark Twain]@TWC D-Link book
The Mysterious Stranger and Other Stories

CHAPTER 7
29/41

But suppose, for argument's sake, that the man should skip one of these acts; an apparently trifling one, for instance; suppose that it had been appointed that on a certain day, at a certain hour and minute and second and fraction of a second he should go to the well, and he didn't go.
That man's career would change utterly, from that moment; thence to the grave it would be wholly different from the career which his first act as a child had arranged for him.

Indeed, it might be that if he had gone to the well he would have ended his career on a throne, and that omitting to do it would set him upon a career that would lead to beggary and a pauper's grave.

For instance: if at any time--say in boyhood--Columbus had skipped the triflingest little link in the chain of acts projected and made inevitable by his first childish act, it would have changed his whole subsequent life, and he would have become a priest and died obscure in an Italian village, and America would not have been discovered for two centuries afterward.

I know this.

To skip any one of the billion acts in Columbus's chain would have wholly changed his life.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books