Rowing After the White Whale Quotes

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Rowing After the White Whale: A Crossing of the Indian Ocean by Hand Rowing After the White Whale: A Crossing of the Indian Ocean by Hand by James Adair
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Rowing After the White Whale Quotes Showing 1-4 of 4
“But if adventure has a final and all embracing motive it is surely this: We go out because it is in our nature to go out, to climb mountains and to sail the seas, to fly to the planets and plunge into depths of the oceans. By doing these things we make touch with something outside or behind, which strangely seems to approve our doing them. We extend our horizon, we expand our being, we revel in the mastery of ourselves which gives an impression, mainly illusory, that we are masters of the World. In a word, we are men and when man ceases to do these things, he is no longer man.’ Wilfred Noyce”
James Adair, Rowing After the White Whale: A Crossing of the Indian Ocean by Hand
“I often got, floating on the ocean at night, that we were nothing but a minuscule piece of flotsam or perhaps plankton drifting through space itself. I say it was an impression, but of course it’s true.”
James Adair, Rowing After the White Whale: A Crossing of the Indian Ocean by Hand
“I hate storms but calms undermine my spirits.’ Bernard Moitessier, The Long Way”
James Adair, Rowing After the White Whale: A Crossing of the Indian Ocean by Hand