By Daniel Diehl
“Some men are born great, some achieve greatness and some have greatness thrust
upon them.” So wrote William Shakespeare in his play ‘Twelfth
Night’. He was obviously onto something here but it is just the last part
– about having greatness thrust upon you – which I want to look at for a
minute. While Indiana Jones type heroes who rush to embrace adventure and
danger are all well and good, it is the reluctant heroes – those that have
their greatness thrust upon them despite all the whining and excuse making they
can muster - that remain in the popular imagination, and our hearts, the
longest.
Think about it. Luke Skywalker didn’t like what he got himself into; he had “a bad feeling” about it; he just didn’t know how to extricate himself and still keep his self-respect intact. When Arthur pulled the sword out of the stone, he was way too young to know what kind of a messy future he was letting himself in for, and by the time he realized it, it was too late. Frodo had no intention of wandering all over Middle Earth, fighting nasty things without number and nearly going mad in the process; it just sort of happened when he wasn’t paying attention. That is the way life happens – when you are busy looking somewhere else it just drags you along kicking and screaming toward some unknown end that might leave you a hero and, just as easily, might leave you seriously dead.
Daniel Diehl is the author of more than 20 nonfiction books
and five novels including his acclaimed Merlin Chronicles trilogy. He has also written scripts for more than 170
hours of television documentary programming.
His work has been translated into eleven non-English languages. His
latest book is the nonfiction ‘Apparition Atlas: The Ghost Hunter’s Travel
Guide to Haunted America’, released in September 2015 by Ravenswood Press. Mr
Diehl posts a weekly blog about writing and books on his Facebook page. Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/daniel.diehl.731
Merlin Chronicles Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Merlin-Chronicles/479750768731838?fref=ts
Twitter: @DanielDiehlBOOK
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