Wednesday, October 9, 2013

"By eternal vigilance."


"And even when it should end, the freedom which the struggle would win could only be secured by eternal vigilance, eternal probity, eternal good will and eternal honesty of purpose. That would be the hardest lesson of all: peace would be a severer test of mankind even than war. Perhaps mankind would pass that test when the time came; and when that time came (the Captain said to himself) he would fight to the last, he would die in the last ditch, before he would compromise in the slightest with the blind or secret enemies of freedom and justice. He must remember this mood; when he became an old man he must remember it. He must remember in time to come how nothing was farther from his thoughts than the least yielding to the enemies of mankind, and that would help to keep him from the least indolent or careless or cynical yielding in that future." -- C.S. Forester, The Ship, 1943.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

We're all going to die in some shape or form so dying for something or someone you REALLY believe in isn't a bad way to check out.

Jim22 said...

That is a great book. I have it and have read it twice. The grit showed by the Navy men in that book is sad and inspiring.

It is one of Forester's lesser known books. Everyone knows The African Queen'. Few know 'The Ship'.