[At Last by Charles Kingsley]@TWC D-Link book
At Last

CHAPTER VIII: LA BREA
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The true arguments against the existence of a sea-serpent, namely, that no Ophidian could live long under water, and that therefore the sea- serpent, if he existed, would be seen continually at the surface; and again, that the appearance taken for a sea-serpent has been proved, again and again, to be merely a long line of rolling porpoises--these really sound arguments would be nothing to such people, or only be accepted as supplementing and corroborating their dislike to believe in anything new, or anything a little bigger than usual.
But so works the average, i.e.the uneducated and barbaric intellect, afraid of the New and the Big, whether in space or in time.

How the fear of those two phantoms has hindered our knowledge of this planet, the geologist knows only too well.
It was excusable, therefore, that this Pitch Lake should be counted among the wonders of the world; for it is, certainly, tolerably big.

It covers ninety-nine acres, and contains millions of tons of so- called pitch.
Its first discoverers, of course, were not bound to see that a pitch lake of ninety-nine acres was no more wonderful than any of the little pitch wells--'spues' or 'galls,' as we should call them in Hampshire--a yard across; or any one of the tiny veins and lumps of pitch which abound in the surrounding forests; and no less wonderful than if it had covered ninety-nine thousand acres instead of ninety- nine.

Moreover, it was a novelty.

People were not aware of the vast quantity of similar deposits which exist up and down the hotter regions of the globe.


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