As this year’s sojourn to Europe
comes to an end, I refer back to my old literary friend Sherlock Holmes. In The Adventure of the Red Circle, Holmes
reminds his friend that, “Education never ends, Watson.” With
that I am reminded that in each new travel experience we are exposed to new
things and increase our knowledge and understanding of the world. Perhaps this is why I (and many others) enjoy travel so much,
because it is a high dosage of education. Why else navigate alternative
transportation options to spend less than twenty-four hours in Malmö? Because it is an opportunity to see something
new, to experience other things, to learn something.
At the airport in Copenhagen,
there is a commemorative display to Danish writer, and national hero, Hans
Christian Andersen. The display notes that Anderson made more than thirty trips
outside Denmark in his life. This
had a profound effect on Andersen and he wrote that travel enriched him and
made him happy. In The Fairy Tale of My Life (1855), he concluded, “To travel is to
live.”
These nineteenth century
literary references tells us of the importance of discovery, experience and
knowledge. While phenomena
of travel and discovery has substantially changed from the nineteenth century, the
basic human need to learn and explore has not. Yet, we would do well to remember that the act of travelling does
not require us to go far. It is a state of mind. Any journey, even as short as
fifteen minutes, can be a travel experience. It depends on the sojourner’s
attitude: Are we willing to see something new? Willing to explore? To learn
something?
It is also worth noting that
Doyle has Holmes quote Shakespeare near the end of the Red Circle: “Journeys end in lovers meeting.”
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