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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Book of Courage, by John Thomson Faris</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
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+ text-align: justify;
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+<body>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Book of Courage, by John Thomson Faris</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Book of Courage</p>
+<p>Author: John Thomson Faris</p>
+<p>Release Date: May 19, 2010 [eBook #32438]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOOK OF COURAGE***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by Emmy, Juliet Sutherland,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 315px;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="315" height="500" alt="Cover" title="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h1>THE BOOK OF COURAGE</h1>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><i>THE SUNRISE INSPIRATIONAL BOOKS</i></h2>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+THE FIRST VOLUME<br />
+<big>THE BOOK OF COURAGE</big><br />
+By JOHN T. FARIS<br />
+Volumes on other subjects in preparation for this series<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 33px;">
+<img src="images/acorn.png" width="33" height="48" alt="acorn" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class='center'><i><big>OTHER BOOKS</big></i><br />
+
+<br />
+By JOHN T. FARIS<br />
+
+<big>SEEING PENNSYLVANIA</big><br />
+
+Frontispiece in color, 113 illustrations and 2 maps<br />
+<br />
+<big>THE ROMANCE OF OLD</big><br />
+<big>PHILADELPHIA</big><br />
+
+Frontispiece in color and 101 illustrations<br />
+<br />
+<big>OLD ROADS OUT OF</big><br />
+<big>PHILADELPHIA</big><br />
+
+117 illustrations and a map<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 33px;">
+<img src="images/acorn.png" width="33" height="48" alt="acorn" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+By JOHN T. FARIS<br />
+and THEODOOR DEBOOY<br />
+
+<big>THE VIRGIN ISLANDS</big><br />
+OUR NEW POSSESSIONS AND THE<br />
+BRITISH ISLANDS<br />
+
+97 illustrations and five maps<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
+<div class='bbox'><div class='bbox2'>
+<h1>THE BOOK OF<br />COURAGE</h1>
+
+<h3><i>BY</i></h3>
+
+<h2>JOHN T. FARIS</h2>
+
+<div class='copyright'>
+AUTHOR OF<br />
+"THE VICTORY LIFE," "MAKING GOOD," "OLD ROADS OUT O<br />
+PHILADELPHIA," "SEEING PENNSYLVANIA," ETC.<br />
+</div></div><div class='bbox2'>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 149px;">
+<img src="images/emblem.png" width="149" height="150" alt="Droit et Avant" title="" />
+</div>
+</div><div class='bbox2'>
+<div class='center'>
+PHILADELPHIA &amp; LONDON<br />
+J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY<br />
+1920<br />
+</div></div></div>
+
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='copyright'>
+COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+PRINTED BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY<br />
+AT THE WASHINGTON SQUARE PRESS<br />
+PHILADELPHIA, U. S. A.<br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><i>FOREWORD</i></h2>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>A &nbsp;&nbsp;TEACHER has told of the greatest
+moment of discouragement that ever
+came to her. At cost of great labor she had
+fitted up a room for the use of children, placing
+pictures on the walls, plants in the windows,
+goldfish on the table, and a canary in a cage.
+But the night before the day when she planned
+to welcome the children to the room there was
+a cold snap, and the janitor let the fire go out.
+In the morning she looked on broken radiators,
+frozen goldfish, drooping plants, and what she
+feared was a dead bird. In her despair she
+was about to decide that she would never
+make another effort to have things pleasant
+for the children, when the bit of fluff in the
+bird-cage, roused from stupor by the noise
+made by the discouraged woman, lifted its
+voice in song.</div>
+
+<p>That song told her that she had reached
+once again the point that comes to everyone,
+times without number, the point that separates
+the life of conquest from the life of defeat,
+the life of cowardice from the life of courage.
+She was at the crossroads, and she took the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+turning to the right. The bird's song marked
+for her the end of discouragement.</p>
+
+<p>"I can sing, as well as the bird," she said to
+herself. And at once she began to make plans
+for her charges.</p>
+
+<p>Everywhere there are people who feel that
+the odds are against them, that difficulties in
+the way are unsurmountable, that it is useless to
+make further effort to conquer. The author of
+"The Book of Courage" knows by experience
+how they feel, and he longs to send to them a
+message of cheer and death-to-the-blues, a
+call to go on to the better things that wait
+for those who face life in the spirit of the
+gallant General Petain, whose watchword,
+"They shall not pass!" put courage into his
+men and hope into the hearts of millions all
+over the world.</p>
+
+<p>"Courage!" is the call to these. "Courage"
+is likewise the word to those who are already
+struggling in the conquering spirit of Sir
+Walter Scott who, when both domestic calamity
+and financial misfortune came, said to a
+comforter, "The blowing off of my hat on a
+stormy day has given me more weariness,"
+who called adversity "a tonic and a bracer."</p>
+
+<p>The world needs courage&mdash;the high courage
+that shows itself in a life of daily struggle and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+conquest, that smiles at obstacles and laughs
+at difficulties.</p>
+
+<p>How is the needed courage to be secured?
+What are the springs of courage? What
+are some of the results of courage? These
+are questions "The Book of Courage" seeks to
+answer by telling of men and women who have
+become courageous.</p>
+
+<p>Glorious provision has been made by the
+Inspirer of men for giving courage to all, no
+matter what their difficulties or their hardships.
+Among His provisions are home and
+friends, work and service, will and conscience,
+the world with all its beauty, and Himself as
+Companion and Friend.</p>
+
+<p>Thus we are left absolutely without excuse
+when we are tempted to let down the bars to
+worry and gloom and discouragement.</p>
+
+<p>Keep up the bars! Don't let the enemies
+of peace and progress pass! And always,</p>
+
+<div class='poem'>
+"Like the star,<br />
+That shines afar,<br />
+Without haste,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And without rest,</span><br />
+Let each man wheel, with steady sway<br />
+Round the tasks that rule the day,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And do his best."</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 18em;">J. T. F.</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Philadelphia, 1920</span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><i>CONTENTS</i></h2>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents and book spie">
+<tr><td align='left'><img src="images/spine.jpg" width="72" height="400" alt="Book Spine" title="" />
+</td><td align='left'><div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td align='left' colspan='3'><small>CHAPTER</small></td><td align='right'><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>1.&nbsp;</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>THE COURAGE OF SELF-CONQUEST</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>I.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>RESTRAINING SELF</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>II.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>EFFACING SELF</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>III.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>FORGIVING INJURIES</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_22">22</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>IV.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>FORGETTING WRONGS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_25">25</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>V.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>GETTING RID OF EVIL</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>VI.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>LOOKING BEYOND MONEY</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>2.&nbsp;</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>THE COURAGE THAT FACES OBSTACLES</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>I.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>LEARNING</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>II.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>DEPENDING ON SELF</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>III.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>UNCOMPLAINING</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>IV.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>PERSISTING</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>V.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>TOILING</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_63">63</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>VI.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>CONQUERING INFIRMITY</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>3.&nbsp;</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>THE COURAGE OF INDUSTRY</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>I.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>BEGINNING</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>II.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>PURPOSE FORMING</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>III.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>USING TIME WISELY</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_89">89</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>IV.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>WORKING HARDER</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>V.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>ABUSING THE WILL TO WORK</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>4.&nbsp;</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>THE COURAGE OF FACING CONSEQUENCES</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_104">104</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>I.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>VENTURING</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>II.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>FORMING CHARACTER</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>III.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>TRUTH TELLING</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_111">111</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>IV.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>DUTY DOING</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_117">117</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>V.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>FINDING HIS LIFE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>5.&nbsp;</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>COURAGE FOR THE SAKE OF OTHERS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>I.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>IMPARTING COURAGE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>II.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>CONQUERING HAPPINESS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_126">126</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>III.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>MAKING LITTLE THINGS COUNT</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>IV.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>DID HE GO TOO FAR?</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>6.&nbsp;</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>GOLDEN RULE COURAGE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>I.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>LOOKING OUT FOR OTHERS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>II.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>SUCCEEDING BY COURAGEOUS SERVICE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_143">143</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>III.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>SERVICE BY SYMPATHY</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_146">146</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>IV.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>DOING BUSINESS FOR OTHERS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_150">150</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>V.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>PRAYING AND HELPING</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_152">152</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>VI.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>GIVING THAT COUNTS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_155">155</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>VII.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>EXPENSIVE ECONOMY</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>7.&nbsp;</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>COURAGE THROUGH COMPANIONSHIP</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_161">161</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>I.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>COMPANIONSHIP WITH FRIENDS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_162">162</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>II.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>SUCCESSFUL COMRADES</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_165">165</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>III.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>COMPANIONSHIP WITH THE PAST</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>IV.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>COMPANIONSHIP WITH NATURE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>V.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>COMPANIONSHIP WITH GOD</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_183">183</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>VI.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>A CHAPTER OF&mdash;ACCIDENTS?</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_190">190</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>8.&nbsp;</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>GOD THE SOURCE OF COURAGE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>I.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>THAT'S FOR ME!</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>II.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>BANING ON GOD'S PROMISES</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_201">201</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>III.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>PRACTICAL PRECEPTS FROM PROVERBS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_205">205</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>IV.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>GETTING CLOSE TO THE BIBLE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_210">210</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>V.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>THE BIBLE AND ONE MAN</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_213">213</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>VI.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'>OUT OF THE DEPTHS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_218">218</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>THE BOOK OF COURAGE</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER ONE</h2>
+
+<h3><i>THE COURAGE OF SELF-CONQUEST</i></h3>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>THE highest courage is impossible without
+self-conquest. And self-conquest is
+never easy. A man may be a marvel of physical
+courage, and be a coward in matters of
+self-government. Failure here threatens dire
+disaster to his entire career.</div>
+
+<p>Alexander the Great conquered most of the
+world he knew, but he permitted his lower
+nature to conquer his better self, and he died a
+disappointed, defeated man.</p>
+
+<p>Before the days of Alexander there was a
+man named Nehemiah from whom the world-conqueror
+might have learned a few secrets.
+He was a poor exile in the service of a foreign
+ruler. That ruler sent him down to Jerusalem,
+the capital city of his own home land, with
+instructions to govern the people there. Now,
+in those days, it was a common thing for governors
+of cities to plunder the people unfortunate
+enough to be in their charge. Thus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+Nehemiah would have had ample precedent to
+fill his own coffers by injustice, profiteering
+and worse: he had the power. Possibly he
+was tempted to do something of the sort.
+But he had the courage to shut up tight all
+baser passions, and then to sit firmly on the
+lid. In the brief record of his service he
+referred to some of the self-seeking governors,
+and told of their rascally deeds. Then he
+added the significant words, "<i>So did not I.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>That was certainly courage&mdash;the courage of
+self-conquest.</p>
+
+<p>As a young man Ulysses S. Grant was a
+brave soldier, but he nearly wrecked his life
+because of weak yielding to his appetite. His
+real career began only with self-conquest.
+When he found the courage to fight himself&mdash;and
+not until then&mdash;he became ready for the
+marvelous life of high courage that never faltered
+when he was misunderstood by associates
+and maligned by enemies, that pressed steadily
+onward, in the face of biting disease, until
+work was done, until honor was satisfied.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />I
+<br />RESTRAINING SELF</div>
+
+<p>A little girl four years old came trembling to
+her mother and asked for pencil and paper.
+Then, teeth set and eyes flashing, she pounced
+on the paper and began to make all sorts of
+vicious marks. Asked what she was doing, she
+said she was writing a letter to a sister who
+had offended her by an act that had been misunderstood.
+"She is not a nice girl," the
+little critic said, "and I'm telling her so. I
+don't like her any more, and I'm saying that."
+As she wrote her hand trembled; she was carried
+away by her unpleasant emotion. After
+a few moments, unable to go on with her
+self-appointed task, she flung herself, sobbing,
+into her mother's arms and for half an hour
+she could not control herself.</p>
+
+<p>The sight was pitiful. But far more pitiful
+is the spectacle of one old enough to know
+better who yields to vexation and hatred,
+thereby not only making himself disagreeable,
+but robbing himself of power to perform the
+duties of the hour. For there is nothing so
+exhausting as uncontrolled emotion. There
+is so much for each one of us to do, and every
+ounce of strength is needed by those who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+would play their part in the world. Then
+what spendthrift folly it is to waste needed
+power on emotion that is disquieting, disagreeable
+and disgraceful!</p>
+
+<p>That lesson was never impressed more
+forcibly than by a French officer of whom
+a visitor from America asked, "Did I understand
+that you had lost three sons?" "Yes,
+sir, and two brothers," was the proud reply.
+"How you must hate the Boche," remarked a
+bystander. "No, no," was the instant reply,
+"not hate; just pity, sir; pity, but not hate.
+Hate, you know, is an excessive emotion, sir;
+and no one can do effective work if he spends
+his vitality in an excess of emotion. No," he
+concluded, "we cannot hate; we cannot work
+if we burn up ourselves inside. Pity, sir;
+pity. 'They know not what they do.' That's
+the idea. And they don't."</p>
+
+<p>The same lesson of self-restraint was taught
+by Marshal Foch in his words to the soldiers
+of France. He urged them to keep their eyes
+and ears ready and their mouths "in the
+safety notch"; and he told them they must
+obey orders first and kick afterwards if they
+had been wronged. He said, "Bear in mind
+that the enemy is your enemy and the enemy
+of humanity until he is killed or captured;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+then he is your dear brother or fellow soldier
+beaten or ashamed, whom you should no
+further humiliate." He told them that it was
+necessary to keep their heads clear and cool, to
+be of good cheer, to suffer in silence, to dread
+defeat, but not wounds, to fear dishonor, but
+not death, and to die game. Because so many
+of the soldiers under him heeded this wise
+admonition, they did not waste their precious
+strength on useless and harmful emotions,
+but they were ever ready to go to their task,
+with the motto of their division, "It shall
+be done."</p>
+
+<p>What a blessing it will be to the world that
+millions of young men were trained in France
+to repress hurtful emotion, to exercise self-restraint&mdash;which
+may be defined as the act
+or process of holding back or hindering oneself
+from harmful thoughts or actions. And
+what a wonderful thing it will be if the lesson
+is passed on to us, so that we shall not be like
+the torrent that wastes its power by rushing
+and brawling over the stones, all to no purpose,
+but like the harnessed stream whose energy is
+made to turn the wheels of factory and mill.
+For only guarded and guided strength is useful
+and safe.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />II<br />
+EFFACING SELF</div>
+
+<p>"Every man that falls must understand
+beforehand that he is a dead man and nothing
+can save him. It is useless for him to cry out,
+and it may, by giving the alarm, cause the
+enterprise to fail."</p>
+
+<p>This was the message to his men of the
+officer to whom Napoleon committed the capture
+of Mt. Cenis.</p>
+
+<p>The historian tells us that at one point in
+the ascent of a precipitous track, three men fell.
+"Their bodies were heard bounding from crag
+to crag, but not a cry was heard, not a moan.
+The body of one hero was recovered later.
+There was a smile on his lips."</p>
+
+<p>How that record of the silence succeeded by
+a smile grips the heart, for it was not the false
+courage that plays to the grandstand, but
+the deeper, truer courage that sinks self for
+the good of others, and does this not merely
+because it is a part of the game, but with the
+gladness that transfigures life.</p>
+
+<p>Such courage does not wait for some great
+occasion for exhibiting itself; it is revealed in
+the midst of the humdrum routine of daily
+life&mdash;a routine that is especially trying to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+those who have been looking forward to some
+great, perhaps dramatic service.</p>
+
+<p>A young man of seventeen entered the navy,
+with his parents' consent, as an apprentice.
+When he left home he had dreams of entering
+at once on a life of thrilling adventure where
+there would be numberless opportunities for
+the display of high courage. At the end of
+a month a friend asked him how he liked life
+at the navy yard. "Fine!" was the reply.
+"What are you doing?" was the next query.
+"They haven't given me anything but window
+washing to do yet," he replied, with a smile
+that was an index of character.</p>
+
+<p>A newspaper writer has told of a college student
+nineteen years old who enlisted in the
+navy. He was sent to one of our naval stations
+and told to guard a pile of coal. As the summer
+passed he still guarded that coal pile.
+He wrote home about it:</p>
+
+<p>"You know, dad, when we were little
+shavers, you always rubbed it into us that
+anything that was worth doing at all was
+worth doing as well as it could be done. I've
+been standing over that coal pile nearly three
+months now, and it looks just exactly as small
+as it did when I first landed on the job."</p>
+
+<p>"He was relieved from the coal pile at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+last and promoted," said the writer who told
+of him. "At the same time the government
+gave him a last chance to return to his college
+work. He thought it over carefully. He realized
+that America was going to need trained
+men as never before, but still, he decided, the
+best service that he individually could give
+was the one that he had chosen. He had a
+few days of leave before going on to his next
+assignment, and he hurried back to his home.
+He found that his summer task was a matter of
+town history, and he had to face a good deal
+of affectionate raillery about his coal pile. Of
+course he did not mind that. But his answer
+revealed his spirit:</p>
+
+<p>"'You may laugh, but that coal pile was all
+right. I'll admit it got on my nerves for a
+bit, but I figured it out that while I was taking
+care of that coal pile I was releasing some
+other fellow who knew things I didn't know,
+and who could do things I couldn't do. I'm
+ready to stand by a coal pile till the war ends,
+if that's where I can help the most.'"</p>
+
+<p>"That is the spirit that will conquer because
+it is the spirit that never can be conquered,"
+was the comment made on the incident.
+"There is no self in it&mdash;only consecration to
+duty; no seeking for large things&mdash;only for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+an opportunity to serve whenever the call
+comes. That is the spirit that is growing in
+America to-day&mdash;and only through such spirit
+can we accomplish our great task in the life
+of the world."</p>
+
+<p>The man who really desires to serve his
+fellows does not think of declaring that he
+will not do humble tasks, but he demands that
+the work he is asked to do shall be needed.</p>
+
+<p>A young man who was seeking his life work
+made known his willingness to be a shoe-black,
+if he could be convinced that this was
+the work God wanted him to do. An immigrant
+in New York City read in the morning,
+"Lord, my heart is not haughty nor mine eyes
+lofty." Then he went out to sweep a store, and
+he swept it well. It is worthy of note that
+the young man who was willing to be a shoe-black
+became one of the foremost men of his
+generation, and that the immigrant became the
+pastor of a leading city church. But a far
+more important fact is that the quality of the
+service given counted more in their minds
+than the character of the employment.</p>
+
+<p>The service of the man who would be worth
+while in the world must partake of the spirit
+of the successful figure on the baseball diamond
+or the football gridiron: readiness to do<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+everything, or anything&mdash;or to do nothing,
+if he is so directed&mdash;in the interests of the
+team. It must take a leaf from the book of
+General Pershing and his fellow officers who,
+in a time of stress for the Allies, were willing
+and eager to brigade their troops with the
+soldiers of France and England, thus losing
+the identity of their forces in the interest of
+the great cause for which they stood. It
+must learn the lesson taught by the life of
+Him who emptied Himself for the sake of
+the world&mdash;and did it with a smile.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />III<br />
+FORGIVING INJURIES</div>
+
+<p>A gifted writer has told the story of a workman
+in a Bessemer steel furnace who was
+jealous of the foreman whom he thought had
+injured him. The foreman was making a good
+record, and the workman did not want to see
+him succeed. So he plotted his undoing&mdash;he
+loosened the bolts of the cable that controlled
+an important part of the machinery, and
+so caused an accident that not only interfered
+seriously with the day's turn, but put a section
+of the plant out of commission for the
+time being. As a result the superintendent<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+was discharged. When he left he vowed vengeance
+on the man whom he suspected of
+causing his discharge: "I'll get you for this
+some day," he declared. Perhaps he would
+have been even more emphatic if he had
+known the extent of his enemy's culpability.</p>
+
+<p>Years passed. The workman who had loosened
+the bolts became superintendent of the
+mill. He, too, tried to break a production
+record, and was in a fair way to succeed until
+some mysterious difficulty developed that
+interfered seriously with results. And just
+when the new superintendent was losing sleep
+over his problem, the old superintendent
+came to town.</p>
+
+<p>"He's come for his revenge!" was the
+thought of the new superintendent.</p>
+
+<p>But the superintendent did not wait for a
+visit from the man he feared; he sought him
+at once. "He must know the extent of my
+meanness," he decided. So he told his story.
+To his surprise the former foreman seemed
+more interested in the account of the progress
+of the mill than in the sorry tale of past
+misdeeds. Learning of the mysterious difficulty
+that threatened failure in the attempt
+to break the production record, the injured
+man showed real concern. "I can't imagine<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+where the difficulty is, but I'd like to take a
+look around for it," he said. Arm in arm,
+then, the two men, once bitter enemies, moved
+toward the mill. The search was successful,
+the difficulty was corrected, and the record
+was broken.</p>
+
+<p>Fine story, isn't it? What a pity it is only a
+story, that such things don't ever happen in
+real life!</p>
+
+<p>Don't they? How about Henry Nasmyth,
+the English inventor of the steam piledriver,
+whose ideas were stolen by French machinists?
+His first knowledge of the piracy was when
+he saw a crude imitation of his piledriver in
+a factory in France. Instead of seeking
+damages and threatening vengeance, he
+pointed out mistakes made in construction
+and helped his imitators perfect the appliance
+they had stolen from him.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, such things do happen in daily life.
+They are happening every day. As we read
+of them or hear of them or meet people who
+are actors in such a drama, we are conscious
+of admiration for the deed, a quickening of
+the pulse, and the thankful thought that the
+world is not such a bad place after all.</p>
+
+<p>But are we to stop with quickened heartbeats
+and gratitude for the greatness of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+heart shown by others? How about the bitterness
+we have been treasuring against some one
+who has injured us&mdash;or some one we think
+has injured us (it is astonishing how many of
+the slights and indignities for which vengeance
+has been vowed are only imaginary,
+after all!) How long do we intend to persist
+in treasuring the grudge that has perhaps already
+caused sorrow that cannot be measured?
+Let's be courageous enough to own ourselves
+in the wrong, when we are in the wrong, and
+to forgive the evil that has been kept alive by
+our persistent efforts to remember it. Let
+the quickened pulse-beat be ours not merely
+because we are hearing about forgiveness,
+but because we ourselves are rejoicing in
+friendship restored.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />IV<br />
+FORGETTING WRONGS</div>
+
+<p>There are people whose minds are like a
+lumber-room, littered with all sorts of odds
+and ends. In such a room it is impossible to
+count on laying hands promptly on a desired
+article, and in such a mind confusion takes the
+place of order. The mind had better be
+empty. An empty mind presents a fine opening<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+for the proper kind of filling, but a confused
+mind is hopeless. How is it possible to
+make the memory a helpful servant unless
+nothing is allowed to find lodgment there that
+is not worth while?</p>
+
+<p>An old proverb says, "No one can keep the
+birds from flying about his head, but one can
+keep them from nesting in his hair." That
+proverb points the way to saving the mind
+from becoming a lodging place for lumbering
+thoughts and ideas; everything that is certain
+to hinder instead of help one to be worth-while
+to the world must be told that there is
+"positively no admittance."</p>
+
+<p>Among the things one must not afford permission
+to pass the bars is the thought that
+some associate may have said or done something
+that seemed like a slight or an injury.
+No man can afford to injure another, but any
+man can better afford to be injured than to allow
+his thoughts to dwell on the injury, to
+brood over it, until he is in a degree unfitted
+for his work. Far better is it to be like a
+father who said to his son when the latter, years
+after the commission of the deed, was speaking
+of his sorrow that he had grieved his
+father so: "Son, you must be dreaming; I
+don't recall the incident."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then one must know when to forget evil
+things heard of another. Sometimes it is
+necessary to remember such facts, but so
+often the insinuations made concerning other
+people are not worth consideration, because
+they are not true. Even where there is ground
+for them, they are not proper subjects for
+thought and remembrance.</p>
+
+<p>It is best to forget past achievements, unless
+they are made stepping-stones to greater
+achievements, spurs to work that could never
+be done without them. Yet how often the
+temptation comes to gloat in thought over
+these things, and over the good things said
+of one because of them, while opportunities
+for greater things are passed by. Thus a
+school-boy thought with delight of a word of
+commendation from his teacher when he
+ought to have been giving attention to the
+recitation of the pupil next to him; the result
+was a reprimand that stung. A soldier in
+the trenches has no time to gaze in admiration
+at the medal he has won by valor when at any
+moment there may sound the call to deeds of
+still greater valor. No more should a civilian
+imperil future success by failure to forget
+"the things which are behind."</p>
+
+<p>The individual who refuses to forget a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+kindness he has done to someone else is another
+cumberer of the ground. A safe rule is, never
+forget a kindness received from another, but
+forget at once a kindness done to another.
+It is not difficult to sympathize with the youth
+who, after being reminded for the twentieth
+time by his brother of a trip to New Orleans
+for which the brother had paid out of his
+savings, said, "Yes, and I wish I had never
+taken a cent of the money!"</p>
+
+<p>A thing to be forgotten always is the off-color
+story with which some people persist
+in polluting the atmosphere. Unfortunately
+there are always to be found folks like the
+young man of whom Donald Hankey said
+"He talks about things that I won't even
+think." When such talk is heard, don't
+think of it. If you do, you are apt to think of
+it again and again, until, perhaps, you will be
+telling it to some one else. And no one wants
+to be remembered as was the business man,
+proposed for the presidency of a great concern,
+of whom one said, "No, don't let's have him;
+he has earned a reputation for telling questionable
+stories."</p>
+
+<p>If a good memory is to be a good servant,
+it must be trained to remember only the things
+that are helpful. And that takes courage!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />V<br />
+GETTING RID OF EVIL</div>
+
+<p>One of the trying disappointments of daily
+life comes with the discovery that something
+on which we have been depending is
+no longer worthy of confidence, because a foreign
+substance, some adulterant, has been
+mixed with it, without our knowledge. This
+seemed to be the case perhaps more than ever
+before during the recent days of war when a
+severe strain was put on the products of nearly
+every kind.</p>
+
+<p>In many parts of the country those who
+were compelled to replenish their coal supply
+during the worst weather of a severe winter
+complained because the anthracite then secured
+gave out little heat; it contained
+such a large proportion of culm or other waste
+product which, in ordinary times, is carefully
+removed before shipment, that it could not
+do its work properly.</p>
+
+<p>Disappointed in their anthracite, some
+turned to bituminous coal, only to find that
+at least fifty per cent, of a shipment received
+during the days of stress was made up of
+rock and clay.</p>
+
+<p>Experience with the coal should have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+prepared one of the purchasers for his disappointment
+in a restaurant where he had been
+accustomed to be served with a splendid oyster
+stew. But he was surprised and displeased
+when he found that at least one-third of
+the milk which should have gone into the stew
+had been displaced by water.</p>
+
+<p>At home that evening the same man was
+told more of the activity of dealers who
+permit impurities to interfere with the comfort
+of those who like pure products; the
+grocer had that day sent a package of soup
+beans which contained at least ten per cent.
+of gravel.</p>
+
+<p>It is easy to appreciate the disappointment
+and embarrassment that come from the failure
+of the coal dealer, the restaurant keeper
+or the grocer to supply us with pure food
+and fuel. Then isn't it strange that we are
+apt to pay so little attention to the adulterants
+in character that are the cause of so
+much of the world's sorrow? That is to
+say, it seems odd that we pay so little attention
+to the things in our own lives that interfere;
+we are not apt to find it a difficult matter to
+rail at others because they permit evil to mix
+with good in their lives. Our vision is so much
+better when we are looking at motes in others<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+than when we are looking straight past the
+beams in our own make-up.</p>
+
+<p>There is daily need for each one of us to ask
+God for grace to go on a hunt for the evil
+that adulterates his own life, making it a disappointment
+to others and a cause of sorrow
+to God. Those who are bold enough to scrutinize
+themselves without flinching will be
+apt to find not merely things that are unquestionably
+evil, but they will be dismayed
+to see that even much of the good in which
+they have been taking comfort is adulterated
+with evil&mdash;as, for instance, the deed of helpfulness
+performed for a friend with the unconscious
+thought, "Some day he may be
+able to do something for me," or the gift
+made to a needy cause, accompanied by the
+assurance that the treasurer of the fund is
+one whom we particularly wish to impress
+with our liberality so that possibly a future
+benefit will come from him to us.</p>
+
+<p>The adulterants of evil mixed with the
+good in our lives must be removed. And
+there is just one way to get rid of them&mdash;to
+submit ourselves to the sifting of Him who not
+only knows the good from the evil, the wheat
+from the chaff, but will also show the way to
+retain the wheat and throw out the chaff.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Of course one does not have to yield himself
+to Christ's sifting. But of one thing we can be
+sure; there will be a sifting. If Christ is not
+invited to do the work, the Devil will take up
+the task. But his purpose in sifting is always
+to retain the evil, and drive out all the good.</p>
+
+<p>God asks for "pure religion and undefiled."
+There is no place in his calculations for
+adulterants. Be courageous, and get rid
+of them!</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />VI<br />
+LOOKING BEYOND MONEY</div>
+
+<p>Money is a good thing, when it is properly
+secured and properly used. But there are
+better things than money. Honor is better,
+and loving service, and thoughtful consideration
+of others.</p>
+
+<p>This was the lesson taught by the life of a
+man who was a shareholder in a mining
+company that was about to go out of business.
+The shareholders would sustain very heavy
+losses, so a friend who knew the secrets of the
+company determined to warn this man,
+whom everybody liked. The hint was given
+that it would be to his advantage to sell
+quickly. "Why?" asked Mr. N. "Well,
+you know, the value of the mines is greatly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+depreciated." "When I bought the shares I
+took the risk." "Yes, but now you should
+take the opportunity of selling while you can,
+so as not to lose anything." "And supposing
+I don't sell, what then?" "Then you will
+probably lose all you have." "And if I do
+sell, somebody else will lose instead of me?"
+"Yes, I suppose so." "Do you suppose Jesus
+Christ would sell out?" "That is hardly a
+fair question. I suppose he would not."
+"I am a Christian," said Mr. N., "and I
+wish to follow my Master, therefore I shall
+not sell." He did not, and soon after lost
+everything, and had to begin life again.</p>
+
+<p>This shareholder would have appreciated
+Professor A. H. Buchanan, who was for forty
+years professor of mathematics in Cumberland
+University, Tennessee. After his death it
+was told of him that at one time he was offered
+an appointment in government service to
+which a $3,000 salary attached. His income
+as professor in a church college was $600
+a year. But he saw more chance to make
+his life count for Christian things in the professor's
+place than in public service, so he
+declined the $3000 and stayed by the $600.
+One who spoke of these facts in the professor's
+life said, in comment:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"If he had taken the $3,000, everybody
+would have regarded him as an ordinary
+sort of man. Now everybody who has heard
+of Professor Buchanan's exceptional devotion
+appreciates that he was a very extraordinary
+man. A very cheap person indeed is capable
+of accepting a bigger salary."</p>
+
+<p>At about the time of the death of this
+professor of mathematics a daily paper mentioned
+a civil engineer who was transforming
+the appearance of a western city, and said
+of him: "Two or three times he has had
+chances to get three or four times his present
+salary. Each time he has said: 'No, my
+work is here; I haven't finished it. The
+money doesn't count, so I shall stick here and
+finish my work.'"</p>
+
+<p>After the death of a famous minister in
+St. Louis a story was told of him that he
+had not allowed to be known widely during
+his lifetime. This was the romantic tale,
+as related by a writer in The New York <i>Sun:</i></p>
+
+<p>"When a young man, he found to his
+amazement among his father's papers a deed
+to five thousand eight hundred and eighty-three
+acres of land, located in what is known
+as West Virginia. This deed was a great surprise
+to all who saw or heard of it. Putting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+this deed in his pocket, young Palmore, the
+only heir to the property, made a trip to
+West Virginia, to look over his vast estate,
+which was far in the interior.</p>
+
+<p>"Starting from the city of Charleston,
+West Virginia, he drove in a buggy into the
+region where his plantation was located. He
+traced the boundaries of his property and
+found that hundreds of families had settled
+on it without any right to it, but were living
+as if secure in the possession of their
+separate little patches of territory. He found
+that beneath the surface of this land there was
+almost limitless wealth, but the multitudes
+who had built themselves humble homes
+on the surface did not know of it, and
+had been living thus in undisturbed possession
+for a number of years. He quietly walked
+about at night and looked through the windows
+at the parents and children living on his
+estate. Great lawyers were ready to inaugurate
+legal proceedings that would have
+made him a millionaire, and such legal
+proceedings would doubtless have been instituted
+if the heir in person had not visited
+the scene of his great estate. As he dreamed
+in the nighttime about dispossessing such a
+multitude of people of their humble homes,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+he began to feel that, instead of such a fortune
+being a blessing, an estate received at such
+an expense would be a burden.</p>
+
+<p>"After earnest prayer and sleepless hours
+in the midst of his vast acres, he was seized
+with the conviction that each member of this
+multitude of families living on his property
+needed it more than did the heir, and
+there and then he made up his mind that
+he would leave them in quiet possession of
+his estate."</p>
+
+<p>The reporter who related the story said
+that the man had been called a fool, and commented,
+"He was God's fool."</p>
+
+<p>Then he said that the incident he had related
+would have been unbelievable if it had
+not been so well attested. But why unbelievable?
+Is it because of the common idea
+that "every man has his price," that it is
+unthinkable that a sane man would let a
+fortune that he could claim honestly slip
+through his fingers?</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it is true that every man has his
+price. However, if this snarl of the pessimist
+is to have universal application, the price must
+be understood to be&mdash;in many instances&mdash;not
+selfish gratification, but the opportunity for
+courageous service. There are men and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+women who can be won by such an opportunity
+who cannot be reached by any argument
+of mere private advantage. Such people
+silence the complaints of the croaker and
+command the confidence of those who are
+struggling to help their fellows.</p>
+
+<p>Louis Agassiz, the naturalist, was such a
+man. "I have no time to make money,"
+was his remark when urged by a friend to
+turn aside from the important work of the moment
+to an easy, lucrative task. His reason
+was thus explained at another time: "I have
+made it the rule of my life to abandon any
+intellectual pursuit the moment it becomes
+commercially valuable." It was his idea that
+there were many who would then be willing
+to carry on work he had begun.</p>
+
+<p>A contrast is presented by the famous
+inventor who, early in life, made it a rule
+never to give himself to any activity in which
+there was no prospect of financial gain.
+His first question was not, "Does the public
+need this invention?" but "Is there money
+in it?" Having answered to his satisfaction,
+he was ready to go ahead.</p>
+
+<p>The world could not well have spared
+either of these men, for both rendered valuable
+service. But, judging from the stories<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+of their careers, there was more joy in the life
+of the naturalist, who, satisfied to earn a living,
+thought most of serving his fellows, than in
+the life of the inventor before whose eyes the
+dollar continually loomed large. The counting-house
+measure of life is not the most satisfying
+nor is it the most useful.</p>
+
+<p>That was the notion of Jacob Riis, of whom
+a minister who was devoting his life to the
+interest of young working men near his church
+once asked if such effort was merely thrown
+away, if he was pocketing himself. "Pocketing
+yourself, are you?" Riis replied. "Stick
+to your pocket. It is a pretty good pocket
+to be in. Out of such a pocket, worked in the
+way you are working it, will come healing for
+the ills of the day that now possess us. I
+would rather be in such a pocket, working for
+the Lord, than in a $1,000,000 church, working
+for the applause of a congregation."</p>
+
+<p>Those who are familiar with inside history
+at Washington say that the day after Garfield's
+election as President, a dispatch was sent to
+Milton Wells, a Wisconsin preacher, whose
+vote in the convention had kept Garfield's
+name on the list of candidates to the very
+last, asking him if he would become governor
+of Arizona Territory. Mr. Wells answered:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+"I have a better office that I cannot leave.
+I am preaching here for $600 per year."</p>
+
+<p>There was once a man named Paul who
+might have enjoyed position and power, if
+he had wished, but he chose instead a life of
+courageous service of which he was able once
+to write, without boasting:</p>
+
+<p>"In labors more abundantly, in prisons
+more abundantly; in stripes above measure,
+in deaths oft. Of the Jews five times received
+I forty stripes save one. Thrice was I beaten
+with rods, once was I stoned, thrice I suffered
+shipwreck, a night and a day have I been in
+the deep; in journeyings often, in perils of
+rivers, in perils of robbers, in perils from my
+countrymen, in perils from the Gentiles, in
+perils in the city, in perils in the wilderness,
+in perils in the sea, in perils among false
+brethren; in labor and travail, in watchings
+often, in hunger and thirst, in fastings often,
+in cold and nakedness."</p>
+
+<p>How could Paul bear all these things? They
+were enough to break down a dozen strong
+men. Probably he sometimes felt that he
+could not bear the burden any longer, but
+always there came to him the assurance of
+Christ, "My grace is sufficient for thee."
+Then he could bear anything; yet not he,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+but Christ, who lived in him. Thus his glory
+was not in his own strength but in his weakness,
+which made place in his life for the
+strength of Christ.</p>
+
+<p>Until men and women learn how to gain
+strength in their weakness as Paul did, their
+lives will be unsatisfying, their days will be
+full of complaint. Their burdens, which
+seemed like mountains before learning to
+trust Christ, will be borne as easily as if they
+were feathers.</p>
+
+<p>God does not promise to make us all
+dollar millionaires if we look at Him for
+strength in our weakness, but He does promise
+to make us all millionaires of faith and hope
+and courage. Paul was; we can be, too.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER TWO</h2>
+
+<h3><i>THE COURAGE THAT FACES OBSTACLES</i></h3>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>"YOU may expect to spend the rest of
+your days tied to your chair."</div>
+
+<p>Theodore Roosevelt's physician made this
+disconcerting announcement to his patient
+a few weeks before his death.</p>
+
+<p>How would the courageous man receive
+an announcement like that? How would you
+receive it?</p>
+
+<p>Let the words spoken in reply by the lion-hearted
+Roosevelt never be forgotten by
+others who struggle with difficulties:</p>
+
+<p>"All right! I can work and live that
+way, too!"</p>
+
+<p>Surely the triumphant words justified
+the characterization made by Herman Hagedorn
+of this colossal worker:</p>
+
+<p>"He was frail; he made himself a mountain
+of courage."</p>
+
+<p>At a dinner given to celebrate the worthy
+achievement of a public man, a guest spoke
+of him to a companion at table.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No wonder he has been so well. Everything
+is in his favor: he is young, he is brilliant,
+he is in good health."</p>
+
+<p>"In good health?" was the answering
+comment. "Where did you get that? For
+years he has been in wretched health; many
+a night he was unable to sleep except he knelt
+on the floor by the bedside and stretched himself
+from his waist across the bed. But it is
+not strange that you did not know, he has
+said nothing of his ailments; he is so full
+of courage himself that he makes everyone
+around him courageous."</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />I<br />
+LEARNING</div>
+
+<p>When the famous Sioux Indian, Charles A.
+Eastman, was a boy, his father, who had
+learned the joys of civilized life, urged his son
+to secure an education. "I am glad that
+my son is brave and strong," he said to him.
+"I have come to start you on the White Man's
+way. I want you to grow to be a good man."</p>
+
+<p>Then he urged his son, Ohiyesa, as he was
+called, to put on the civilized clothes he had
+brought with him. The boy rebelled at first;
+he had been accustomed to hate white men and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+everything that belonged to them. But
+when he reflected that they had done him
+no harm, after all, he decided to try on the
+curious garments.</p>
+
+<p>Together father and son traveled toward
+the haunts of the white man. As they traveled
+Ohiyesa listened to tales of the wonderful
+inventions he would see. He was especially
+eager to look on a railroad train.</p>
+
+<p>But even after he had gone with his father,
+he was reluctant to enter on his long training,
+until his father suggested that he make
+believe he was starting on a long war-path, from
+which there could be no honorable return until
+his course was completed. Entering into the
+spirit of the proposal, the Indian lad began
+his schooling at Flandreau Indian Agency,
+and persisted for twelve long years. After
+graduating from college he devoted himself
+to his people, and in many years since has
+accomplished wonders for them, teaching them
+the patience he had himself learned, and enabling
+them to understand that such patience
+and persistence always brings its reward.</p>
+
+<p>The experience of Isaac Pitman, the inventor
+of shorthand, was different, yet, after all,
+it was much the same. As a boy he had little
+education. But soon after he went to work<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+he made up his mind to supply the lack.
+The record of how he did this is one of the
+most remarkable instances of courageous
+patience on record.</p>
+
+<p>The long office hours at his place of employment,
+from six in the morning until six
+at night, made study difficult, but he showed
+conclusively that where there is a will there
+is a way, and that he had the will. He was
+accustomed to leave his bed at four, that
+he might study two hours before the beginning
+of the day's work. Two hours in the
+evening also were set apart for study. Sometimes
+it happened that work at the factory
+was light, and the young clerk was excused
+for the morning. Instead of taking the time
+for sport, it was his habit to take a book
+with him into the fields or under the trees.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Allen Reid, in his biography of
+Pitman says: "One of the books which he
+made his companion in morning walks into
+the country was Lennie's Grammar. The
+conjugation of verbs, list of irregular verbs,
+adverbs, prepositions, and <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'conjuctions'">conjunctions</ins>, and
+the thirty-six rules of syntax, he committed
+to memory so that he could repeat them in
+order. The study of the books gave him a
+transparent English style."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>His father was a subscriber to the local
+library. "I went regularly to the library
+for fresh supplies of books," Isaac said, in
+1863, "and thus read most of the English
+classics. I think I was quite as familiar with
+Addison, and Sir Roger, and Will Honeycomb,
+and all the Club, as I was with my own
+brothers and sisters .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and when reading
+The Spectator at that early age, I wished that
+I might be able to do something in letters."</p>
+
+<p>Before he left school he formed the habit of
+copying choice pieces of poetry and prose
+into a little book which he kept in his pocket.
+These bits he would commit to memory
+when he had leisure. A later pocket companion
+contained a neatly written copy of
+Valpey's Greek Grammar, as far as the syntax,
+which he committed to memory. In his morning
+walks in 1832 he committed to memory the
+first fourteen chapters of Proverbs. He would
+not undertake a fresh chapter until he had repeated
+the preceding one without hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>As most of his knowledge of words was
+gained from books, he had difficulty in pronunciation.
+"His method of overcoming the
+deficiency was ingenious," his biographer
+wrote. "Again and again he read 'Paradise
+Lost.' Careful attention to the meter enabled<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+him to correct his faulty pronunciation of
+many words. Words not found in the poem
+he discovered in the dictionary. With unusual
+courage he decided to read through
+Walker's Dictionary, fixing his mind on words
+new to him and on the spelling and pronunciation
+of familiar terms. On the pages of one
+of his pocket-books he copied all words he
+had been in the habit of mispronouncing. Although
+there were more than two thousand of
+these words, the plan was carried out before
+he was seventeen."</p>
+
+<p>The labor of writing out so many extracts
+from books led him to study the imperfect
+system of shorthand then current, and to
+develop the system that was to bear his name.</p>
+
+<p>So many young people feel that they "simply
+cannot abide" the long process of getting
+an education; they give up when they
+are only a part of the way to the goal. But
+for most of them the day of bitter regret will
+come when they will wish that they had been
+more like Eastman or Pitman in their determination
+to be patient and persistent, to
+allow nothing to stand in the way of their
+purpose to fit themselves in the best possible
+manner for the serious business of life.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />II<br />
+DEPENDING ON SELF</div>
+
+<p>Young men just starting out in life nowadays,
+who find the path to success difficult,
+are more fortunate than some of those who
+struggled with hard times a century or more
+ago, because they are determined to make a
+self-respecting fight on their own merits. It
+was not always so; once nothing was thought
+of the effort made by an impecunious young
+man to throw himself on the generosity of
+one who had already achieved success.
+Then it was a habit of many authors to seek
+as a patron a man of influence and means
+who would help them live till their books
+were ready for the publisher, and then help
+to get the books before the public.</p>
+
+<p>From letters of George Crabbe, a poet of
+some note in his century, asking Edmund
+Burke to become his patron, something of
+his story may be known. As a boy he was apprenticed
+to an apothecary; later he was proprietor
+of a small shop of his own. Business,
+neglected for books and writing, did not
+prosper. With his sister, his housekeeper,
+he "fasted with much fortitude." Then he
+went to London, with a capital of nine pounds,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+and starved some more. Months were spent
+in trying to enlist two patrons. At last, threatened
+with a prison for debt, he decided to try
+a third patron; and this was his procedure, as
+he himself described it:</p>
+
+<p>"I looked as well as I could into every character
+that offered itself to my view, and resolved
+to apply where I found the most shining
+abilities, for I had learnt to distrust the
+humanity of weak people in all stations."</p>
+
+<p>So he wrote to Edmund Burke, telling him
+that he could no longer be content to live
+in the home of poor people, who had kept
+him for nearly a year, and had lent him money
+for his current expenses. Describing himself
+as "one of those outcasts on the world, who
+are without a friend, without employment
+and without bread," he told of his vain appeal
+to another for gold to save him from
+prison, added that he had but one week
+to raise the necessary funds, and made
+his request.</p>
+
+<p>"I appeal to you, sir, as a good, and, let
+me add, a great man. I have no other pretensions
+to your favor than that I am an unhappy
+one. It is not easy to support thoughts
+of confinement, and I am coward enough to
+dread such an end to my suspense .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+call upon you, sir, to-morrow, and if I have
+not the happiness to obtain credit with you
+I must submit to my fate .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I have only to
+hope a speedy end to a life so unpromisingly
+begun .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I can reap some consolation in looking
+to the end of it."</p>
+
+<p>The appeal was successful. Edmund Burke
+became Crabbe's patron. The poet was glad
+to eat the crumbs that fell from the rich man's
+table, and submitted to many unpleasant
+slights and insinuations while he received
+the dole of charity.</p>
+
+<p>That suing thus for a patron did not always
+have the effect of destroying an author's
+self-respect is shown by a letter written by
+Dr. Samuel Johnson to Lord Chesterfield.
+When, after years of hard labor, Dr. Johnson's
+dictionary was known to be ready for publication,
+Lord Chesterfield wrote for "The
+World" two flattering articles about the
+author, evidently thinking that the work
+would be dedicated to him. At once Dr.
+Johnson wrote:</p>
+
+<p>"My Lord: When, upon some slight encouragement,
+I first visited your lordship,
+I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. could not forbear to wish .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. that I might
+obtain that regard for which I saw the world
+contending; but I found my attendance so<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
+little encouraged, that neither pride nor
+modesty would suffer me to continue it.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>"Seven years, my lord, have passed since
+I waited in your outward room, or was repulsed
+from your door, during which time I
+have been pushing on my work through
+difficulties, of which it is useless to complain,
+and have brought it at last to the verge of
+publication, without one act of assistance,
+one word of encouragement or one smile
+of favor. Such treatment I did not expect
+for I never had a patron before.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The notice
+which you have been pleased to take of my
+labor, had it been early, had been kind; but
+it has been delayed till I am indifferent, and
+cannot enjoy it; till I am solitary, and cannot
+impart it; till I am known, and do not want
+it.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I have long awakened from that
+dream of hope, in which I once boasted myself
+with so much exultation, my lord,</p>
+
+<p>"Your lordship's most humble, most obedient
+servant,</p>
+
+<div class='sig'>
+"Sam Johnson."<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>The lapse of a century has brought a change.
+Self-respecting, courageous young workers
+do not seek a patron to help them to fame.
+To-day they ask only to fight their own battles,
+win their own victories.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />III<br />
+UNCOMPLAINING</div>
+
+<p>Nor do courageous workers complain when
+little things go wrong.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what I shall do if the mail
+does not come to-morrow. Think of being
+two days without a morning paper!"</p>
+
+<p>The complaint was heard when railway
+traffic had been tied up by washouts on the
+railway. The inconvenience suffered by the
+speaker seemed to him very great. Though
+there had been no other interruption to the
+many comforts and conveniences to which
+he had been accustomed, the single difficulty
+made him lose his temper and spoiled his day.</p>
+
+<p>When one is tempted to magnify such a
+small difficulty into a mountain it is worth
+while to look at things from the standpoint
+of a man whose life far from the centers of
+civilization makes him so independent of circumstances
+and surroundings that he can be
+cheerful even in the face of what seem like
+bitter privations.</p>
+
+<p>A company of travelers in the forests of
+Canada thought that the knowledge of the
+most recent news was necessary to happiness.
+They learned their mistake when they reached<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+the camp of a man from whom they expected
+to learn news more recent than the events
+reported in the paper the day they left civilization,
+seven weeks before. They felt sure
+that, as he lived on the trail, he would have
+seen some traveler who had left the railroad
+since their own departure.</p>
+
+<p>When they asked him for late news from
+the States, he said he had some very recent
+news, and proceeded to tell of events eight
+months old! "Do you call that recent?"
+he was asked, in disgust.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter with that?" was the
+wondering reply. "It only happened last
+fall, and there ain't been nobody through here
+since." And he contentedly resumed the task
+at which he had been engaged when interrupted
+by the demand for "recent" news.</p>
+
+<p>On the same journey the travelers&mdash;whose
+story is told in "Trails in Western Canada"&mdash;showed
+that they were learning the lesson.
+Carelessness in handling a campfire caused
+a forest fire which threatened their food supply.
+They saved this, but lost their only
+axes. After a long search they found these in
+the embers, but the temper had been utterly
+ruined by the heat. Only a few hours before
+they felt that an axe was absolutely necessary<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+not only to comfort but to life itself, yet
+when the ruined tools were found the travelers
+turned to their tasks without giving the disaster
+a second thought. They knew that there
+is always a way out of difficulty. They continued
+their expedition without an axe, and
+found that they managed very well.</p>
+
+<p>The lesson was impressed still more by
+the attitude of a guide who spent a few days
+with them. Like many other people on
+vacation they allowed themselves to worry
+about finances. But their thoughts were
+set on a new track by the guide, who, after
+telling of the success in trapping grizzly bear
+and beaver which had enabled him to save
+a little money, said: "Life is too short to
+worry about money. If I lose all I have
+to-morrow, I can get a couple of bear traps
+and by next spring I'll be on my feet again.
+The mountains are always here, and I know
+where there is a bunch of bear and a colony
+of beaver, and I can get along out here, and
+live like a prince while those poor millionaires
+are lying awake at nights, lest someone
+come and steal their money."</p>
+
+<p>Two other guides were engaged to pole the
+travelers' raft down the Fraser River. Nearly
+every day the cold rain fell in torrents, but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+the men were unmoved. "All day long they
+would stand in their wet clothes, their hands
+numb and blue from the cold as they handled
+their dripping poles; yet not a comment indicating
+discomfort is recalled. Physical annoyances,
+which in the city would bring an ambulance,
+scarcely are mentioned by them."</p>
+
+<p>One day one of the men was asked what
+they did when they were sick. "Cain't say
+we ever are sick," was the reply. "The worst
+thing that ever happened to us, I reckon,
+was when Mort here had a bad tooth; but,
+after a day or two, we got sick of it, and took
+it out." That was all he thought worth saying
+about it till he was pressed for an account
+of the operation. "Oh, I looked through our
+dunnage bag," he said, "and found an old
+railroad spike. Mort held it against the tooth
+and I hit the head with a big rock, and knocked
+her out the first time."</p>
+
+<p>His companion was unwilling to agree
+that this was the most trying experience.
+He told of a day when the man who had reported
+the tooth extraction, cut his foot severely
+with an axe. "Oh, that didn't bother
+us," the victim interrupted. "I just slapped
+on some spruce gum and never thought anything
+more about it." Asked how long he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+was laid up, the surprised answer was: "Laid
+up for that? We weren't laid up at all.
+Couldn't travel quite as fast for a day or two,
+but we didn't lose no time at that, for we traveled
+longer to make up."</p>
+
+<p>Still another guide gave an object lesson
+in making light of difficulties when his horse
+fell on him, bruising one of his knees so that
+it swelled to an enormous size. The injured
+man made no complaint, though his companions
+were full of sympathy. He knew he
+could reduce the swelling by heroic remedies.</p>
+
+<p>One day when traveling was unusually difficult,
+the guide cheered his employers by telling
+them of the fine camp he owned just ahead&mdash;"a
+house like a hotel," he said. And when
+the camp was reached he pointed proudly to
+"a great log with a few great pieces of bark
+and some cedar slivers stretched over the top."
+In this camp the night was spent, without
+blankets and in the rain. "But as no one
+seemed to consider this anything out of the
+ordinary, the travelers made no complaint."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps a taste of the wilderness is what
+we need when we become impatient of trifles
+and make ourselves miserable because everything
+does not go to suit us.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />IV<br />
+PERSISTING</div>
+
+<p>Failure camps on the trail of the man who
+is ready to give up because difficulties multiply.
+A representative of a large paper warehouse
+made up his mind to add to his list of
+customers a certain Michigan firm. Repeated
+rebuffs did not daunt him. Every sixty days
+he sent the firm a letter of invitation to buy
+his goods. During twenty-seven years one
+hundred and sixty-one letters were mailed
+without result. Then, in reply to the one
+hundred and sixty-second letter, the Michigan
+firm asked for quotations. These were given
+promptly, and two carloads of paper were sold.
+What if this letter writer had become discouraged
+before he wrote this final letter?</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you were planning to complete
+your education," a friend said to a young man
+whom he had not seen for some time; "yet now
+you are clerking in a store. Perhaps, though,
+you are earning money for next <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'year'sexpenses'">year's expenses</ins>."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I am earning money for this year's
+expenses," was the discouraged reply. "I
+did want an education, but I found it was
+too difficult to get what I sought, so I have
+decided to settle down."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Of course it is easier to give up than it is
+to push on in the face of difficulty, but the
+youth who pushes on is fitting himself to
+fill a man's place in the world, while the young
+man who is easily discouraged is fitting himself
+for nothing but disappointment. The
+world has no place for a quitter.</p>
+
+<p>There is a tonic for young people who
+purpose to make the most of themselves in
+glimpses of a few college students who had the
+courage to face difficulty. One of these was an
+Italian boy, who was glad to beat carpets,
+wash windows, scrub kitchen floors, mow
+lawns, teach grammar, arithmetic and vocal
+exercises at a night school for foreigners. Then&mdash;as
+if his time was not fully occupied by
+these occupations&mdash;he made arrangements
+to care for a furnace and sift the ashes, in exchange
+for piano lessons. That student finished
+his preparatory course with credit,
+taking a prize for scholarship.</p>
+
+<p>A seventeen-year-old boy wanted an education,
+but he had nine brothers and sisters at
+home, and he knew that he could look for no
+financial assistance from his parents. So he
+picked cotton at sixty cents a hundred pounds,
+sawed wood, cut weeds and scrubbed floors&mdash;and
+thus paid his expenses.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One student could not spare the money to
+pay his railroad fare to the school of his
+choice. But he had a pony. So he rode the
+pony the entire distance of five hundred miles,
+working for his expenses along the way.</p>
+
+<p>A beginner in college was too full of grit to
+give up when bills came on him more heavily
+than he had expected. During the school
+year he did chores, rang the bell for the change
+of classes, did janitor work, and waited on
+table in restaurants. In the summer he found
+work on farms near by.</p>
+
+<p>"No task is too difficult for the man with a
+purpose," declared a worker with young men,
+some of whom were ready to give up. "Two
+things are necessary if you would be successful,"
+was another man's message to those
+whom he wished to inspire to do purposeful
+work. "First: know what you want to do.
+Second: do it."</p>
+
+<p>Those who permit obstacles to stand in the
+way of the performance of tasks they know
+they ought to perform if they would make the
+most of themselves, need to take to heart the
+message given by a mother to her son when
+he was ready to give up the unequal struggle
+with poverty and physical infirmity. "Thou
+wilt have much to bear, many hardships to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+suffer," she said. "But mark what I say, we
+must not mind the trouble. During the first
+part of the night we must prepare the
+bed on which to stretch ourselves during the
+latter part."</p>
+
+<p>Giving up after failure is always easier
+than trying again, but the men and women
+who count are those who will not be dismayed
+by failure. When J. Marion Sims, the famous
+surgeon, was beginning the practice of
+medicine, he proudly tacked an immense tin
+sign on the front of his office. Then he lost
+two patients, and pride and courage both
+failed him. "I just took down that long tin
+signboard from my door," he wrote in the
+story of his life. "There was an old well back
+of the house, covered over with boards. I
+went to the well, took that sign with me,
+dropped it in there, and covered the old well
+over again. I was no longer a doctor in the
+town." But fortunately he conquered discouragement,
+made a fresh beginning, and
+overcame tremendous obstacles. After his
+death a famous man said that if all his discoveries
+should be suppressed, it would be
+found that his own peculiar branch of surgery
+had gone backward at least twenty-five years.</p>
+
+<p>Indomitable perseverance is necessary for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+the business man as for the professional man;
+and it will just as surely bring reward to those
+who are engaged in Christian work as to those
+who are seeking worldly honor. So when the
+uphill climb seems too difficult, there must
+be no faltering. Remember&mdash;as Christina
+Rossetti said&mdash;"We shall escape the uphill
+by never turning back."</p>
+
+<p>In gathering material for a history of
+Charles V of Spain, a Spanish historian
+was painstaking in his researches. Finally
+he was able to tell the king's whereabouts
+on every day of his career, except for two
+weeks in 1538.</p>
+
+<p>Then friends assured him that he had done
+his best. In all probability nothing of importance
+happened during those days. But
+the historian believed in being thorough to
+the end. So he delayed publication. For
+fifteen years he sought news of the missing
+fortnight. Finally, and reluctantly, when he
+was seventy-five years old, he published
+the book.</p>
+
+<p>At length an American woman, studying in
+the archives of Spain, having learned of the
+lost days, resolved to find them. Among
+musty documents, in many libraries, she toiled.
+Then, by a woman's intuition, she was led to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+look for documents of a sort the Spanish historian
+had never thought of. And she found
+where the king was on some of those days.
+The news was sent to the historian, just in
+time for him to make additions to his inaugural
+address to be delivered on taking his seat
+in the Academy of History. In this address
+he rejoiced to give full credit for the discovery
+to the American.</p>
+
+<p>But the woman was not satisfied; there
+was still a gap to be filled. She made further
+trials, and failed. Again intuition led her to
+documentary sources that had hardly been
+touched since they were filed away nearly
+three hundred years before. She succeeded,
+and now that bit of history is complete.</p>
+
+<p>A well known writer for young people was
+also persistent in tracing a story to its source.
+When he came to America from his native
+Holland he heard for the first time the story
+of the Dutch hero who stopped the hole in
+the dike, a story unknown in Holland. He
+resolved to prove or disprove this. The record
+of his long search was published later.
+Not only did he prove the existence of the
+boy, but he proved that the boy's sister was
+a partner in the heroic deed. Thus the helpful
+story has been saved for future generations.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>These incidents make interesting reading.
+But do they not do more? Surely it is unnecessary
+to urge the lesson of persistence
+in a task seriously undertaken. Often there
+is temptation to slight some worth-while task,
+after one has worked on it painstakingly for a
+time. "Why pay so much attention to detail?"
+is asked. "Surely no real harm will be done
+if I give less time to some of these things that
+seemed so important at the beginning!"</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately there are multitudes of workers
+who are constitutionally unable to slight
+a task. The proofreader on a paper of large
+circulation is an example. It is a part of
+her work to prove statements made, to verify
+facts and figures, to see that these are altogether
+accurate. Once when there was an
+unusual pressure of work the editor suggested
+that she might wish to take certain things
+for granted, but she showed her conscientious
+<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'throughness'">thoroughness</ins> by performing the task to the end,
+according to the rules of the office, and in the
+face of weariness that was almost exhaustion.</p>
+
+<p>It may not be given to you to be a historian.
+You may not be called upon to prove the
+story of a hero. It may not be your task to
+read proof or to verify manuscripts. But each
+one has a definite part in the work of the world<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+and there is no one to whom the example of
+historian and proofreader is without value.
+All need to remember the truth in the assurance,
+"There is nothing so hard but search
+will find it out."</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />V<br />
+TOILING</div>
+
+<p>Two young people were passing out of a
+building where they had just listened to a
+speaker of note.</p>
+
+<p>"What a wonderful talk that was!" said
+one who found it a heavy cross to make the
+simplest address in public. "I wish I had such
+a gift of speech."</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't a gift in his case; it is an acquirement,"
+was the response. "If you had known
+that man five years ago, you would agree with
+me. When I first knew him he could not get
+up in a public meeting and make the simplest
+statement without floundering and stammering
+in a most pitiful manner. But he had
+made up his mind to be a public speaker, and
+he put himself through a severe course of
+discipline. To-day you see the result."</p>
+
+<p>The biography of Dr. Herrick Johnson tells
+of courageous conquest of difficulties that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+seemed to block the way to success: "Hamilton
+College has always given great attention
+to public speaking and class orations. The
+high standard was set by a remarkably gifted
+man, Professor Mandeville, who instituted a
+system in the study of oratory and public
+speaking which has been known ever since, with
+some modification, as the 'Mandeville System.'"</p>
+
+<p>"In 1853, Dr. Anson J. Upson was in the
+Mandevillian chair, and had lifted up to still
+greater height the standard of public speaking,
+and had awakened a great, inextinguishable
+enthusiasm for it. Not one of the boys
+who entered that year, and who were at that
+prize-speaking contest, could fail to be seized
+with the public-speaking craze. It especially
+met Herrick Johnson's taste and trend and
+gifts, and fired his highest aim. Probably
+there was nothing he wanted so much as the
+prize in his class at the next commencement.
+But unfortunately his standards and ideals
+of public speaking were just then as far as
+possible from the Mandevillian standard.
+He had acquired what was called a ministerial
+tone, and other faults fatal to any success,
+unless eradicated. The best speakers of the
+upper classes were the recognized and accepted
+'drillers' of the new boys, who at once put<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+themselves under their care and criticism.
+Every spring and fall a certain valley with a
+grove, north of the college, was the resort of
+the aspirants for success at this time. The
+woods would ring with their 'exercises' and
+strenuous declamation, and I presume it is
+the same to-day.</p>
+
+<p>"Herrick Johnson had a magnificent voice,
+well-nigh ruined by his sins against the right
+method of using it. He soon saw that it was
+going to be essential for him to go down to
+the foundation of his wrong methods and
+break them all up and absolutely eradicate
+his 'tone.' It was no easy thing to do, but the
+young man was intensely ambitious, and so
+he worked with the greatest energy. He
+failed of an appointment on the 'best four'
+of his Freshman class. But he worked away
+throughout his Sophomore year and failed
+again. The upperclassmen saw his pluck, they
+recognized his grand voice, and they worked
+with him during his Junior year, until he had
+mastered the Mandevillian style, wholly eradicated
+his 'tone,' corrected all defects, and got
+his appointment for one of the best four
+speakers of the Junior year; and on the prize-speaking
+night of that commencement, he
+went on the platform conscious of his power<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+and swept everything before him as the Junior
+prize speaker. It set the standard for that
+young man. Voice, manner, address, were
+all masterful and accounted easily for his
+great success as a public speaker through all
+his subsequent prominent and successful career
+in his profession."</p>
+
+<p>A part of the good of "speaking a piece" is
+to try again, determined to retrieve failure.
+Success is not always a good thing for a boy
+or a girl, any more than for a man or a woman.
+The discipline of failure is sometimes needed.
+To fail is not always a calamity, if the failure
+leads to the correction of the faults that lead
+to failure. Whether it be speaking a piece
+or learning a lesson or facing a trying situation
+in business, no matter how many times one
+has failed, he needs to take to heart the message
+of Macbeth:</p>
+
+<div class='poem'>
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">We fail!</span><br />
+But screw your courage to the sticking-point,<br />
+And we'll not fail.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Always there is a reward for those who fight
+against difficulties, who persist in their struggle
+even when failure follows failure. Everyday the
+glad story of the sequel to such persistent struggles
+is recorded. The records of commercial
+life, of school life, of home life are full of these.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />VI<br />
+CONQUERING INFIRMITY</div>
+
+<p>Of all obstacles that can stand in the way
+of courageous conquest, one of the most
+fatal, in the opinion of many, is blindness.
+Yet it is not necessary that the loss of the eyes
+should be the fatal handicap it is almost universally
+considered. It is a mistake to feel
+that when a worker has anything seriously
+and permanently wrong with his eyes he cannot
+be expected longer to perform tasks that
+are normal for one who has the full use of all
+his five senses. In fact, when we hear that a
+man is going blind we are apt to dismiss with
+a sigh his chance for continuing productive
+labor of any sort; we feel that there is little
+left for him but sitting resignedly in a chimney
+corner and listening to others read to him
+or patiently fingering the raised letters provided
+for the use of the blind.</p>
+
+<p>In protest against this error a novelist has
+taken for his hero a young man who lost his
+sight. His friends pitied him, talked dolefully
+to him, promised to look after him in
+the days of incapacity. Of course he sank
+lower and lower in the doleful dumps. Then
+one came into his life who never seemed to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+notice his blindness, who talked to him as
+if he could see, who encouraged him to do
+things by taking it for granted that they
+would be performed. Her treatment proved
+effective; before long the blind man was
+learning self-reliance, and was well on the
+road to achievement.</p>
+
+<p>The story was true to life for, times without
+number, blind men and women have shown
+their ability to work as effectively as if they
+could see. More than two hundred years
+ago a teacher in London named Richard Lucas
+lost his eyesight. Many of his friends thought
+that he would, of course, give up all idea of
+being a useful man; in that day few thought
+of the possibility of one so afflicted doing anything
+worth much. But the young man
+thought differently. He listened to others as
+they read to him, and completed his studies.
+He became the author of a dozen volumes,
+and was among the leaders of his day. One
+of his greatest works was the book "An Enquiry
+after Happiness." He knew how to
+be happy, in spite of his affliction, so he could
+teach others to follow him.</p>
+
+<p>A little earlier there lived on the farm of
+a poor Irishman the boy Thomas Carolan.
+When he was five years old, he had smallpox,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
+a disease that was much more virulent in
+those days than it is to-day because the treatment
+required was not understood. As a
+result the boy lost his sight. Soon he showed
+a taste for music, and he was able to take a
+few lessons, in spite of the poverty at home.
+As a young man he composed hundreds of
+pieces of music, and it has been said of
+him that he contributed much towards correcting
+and enriching the style of national
+Irish music.</p>
+
+<p>Another youthful victim of smallpox was
+Thomas Blacklock, the son of a bricklayer in
+Scotland. "He can't be an artisan now,"
+his friends said. But it did not occur to them
+that he could be a professional man. His
+father read him poetry and essays. When he
+was only twelve the boy began to write poetry
+in imitation of those whose verses he had
+heard. After his father's death, when the
+blind boy was but nineteen, he was more
+than ever dependent on himself. By the help
+of a friend he was enabled to go to school
+for a time. Then he became an author, and,
+later, a famous preacher. Often, as he walked
+about, a favorite dog preceded him. On one
+occasion he heard the hollow sound of the
+dog's tread on the board covering a deep well,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+and just in time to avoid stepping on the board
+himself. The covering was so rotten that he
+would surely have fallen into the water.</p>
+
+<p>As a boy Francis Huber, of Geneva, Switzerland,
+was a great student. He insisted on
+reading by the feeble light of a lamp, or by the
+light of the moon, even when he was urged
+not to do so, and the result was blindness.
+A few years later he married one who rejoiced
+to be "his companion, his secretary and his
+observer." He became the greatest authority
+of his day on bees, although he knew nothing
+of the subject until after his misfortune. The
+strange thing is that all his conclusions were
+based on observation. Among other things
+he studied the function of the wax, the construction
+of their combs, the bees' senses
+and their ability to ventilate the hive by
+means of their wings. In recognition of his
+work he was given membership in a number
+of learned societies. His name must
+always be connected with the history of
+early bee investigation.</p>
+
+<p>Not long after the close of the American
+Revolution James Holman, a British naval
+officer, lost his eyesight while in Africa. He
+was then about twenty-five years old. Later
+he became one of the best known travelers of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+his day. The world was told of his travels in
+lectures and in books, and others were also
+inspired to travel. "What is the use of traveling
+to one who cannot see?" he was asked
+at one time. "Does every traveler see all
+he describes?" he replied. He said that he
+felt sure he visited, when on his travels,
+as many interesting places as others, and
+that, by having the things described to him
+on the spot, he could form as correct a judgment
+as his own sight would have enabled
+him to do.</p>
+
+<p>In 1779 Richmond, Virginia, gave birth to
+James Wilson, who lost his sight when he was
+four years old, because of smallpox. He was
+then on shipboard, and was taken to Belfast,
+Ireland, where he grew to manhood. When
+a boy he delivered newspapers to subscribers
+who lived as far as five miles from the city.
+When fifteen he used part of his earnings to
+buy books which he persuaded other boys to
+read to him. At twenty-one he entered an
+institution for the blind, for fuller instruction.
+Then he joined with a circle of mechanics in
+forming a reading society. One friend promised
+to read to him every evening such books
+as he could procure. The hours for reading
+were from nine to one every night in summer<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+and from seven to eleven every night in the
+winter. "Often I have traveled three or
+four miles, in a severe winter night, to be at
+my post in time," he said once. "Perished
+with cold and drenched with rain, I have
+many a time sat down and listened for several
+hours together to the writings of Plutarch,
+Rollins, or Clarendon." After seven or eight
+years of this training, he was "acquainted
+with almost every work in the English language"
+his biographer says, perhaps a little
+extravagantly. His education he used in
+literary work.</p>
+
+<p>B. B. Bowen was a Massachusetts boy just
+a century ago. When a babe he lost his sight.
+In 1833 Dr. Howe&mdash;husband of Julia Ward
+Howe&mdash;selected him as one of six blind boys
+on whom he was to make the first experiments
+in the instruction of the blind. Later he
+wrote a book of which eighteen thousand
+copies were sold.</p>
+
+<p>Another of the men who proved the loss of
+sight was not a bar to successful work was
+Thomas R. Lounsbury, the Yale scholar
+whose studies in Chaucer and Shakespeare
+made him famous. Toward the close of his
+busy life he was engaged in a critical study of
+Tennyson, preparatory to writing an exhaustive<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
+book on the life of the great poet. He did
+not live to complete the work, but he left it
+in such shape that a friend was able to put
+it in the hands of the publishers.</p>
+
+<p>In the Introduction to the biography this
+friend told of the courageous manner in which
+Professor Lounsbury faced threatening blindness
+and continued his writing in spite of
+the danger. We are told that his eyes, never
+very good, failed him for close and prolonged
+work. "At best he could depend upon them
+for no more than two or three hours a day.
+Sometimes he could not depend upon them
+at all. That he might not subject them to
+undue strain, he acquired the habit of writing
+in the dark. Night after night, using a pencil
+on coarse paper, he would sketch a series of
+paragraphs for consideration in the morning.
+This was almost invariably his custom in
+later years. Needless to say, these rough
+drafts are difficult reading for an outsider.
+Though the lines could be kept reasonably
+straight, it was impossible for a man enveloped
+in darkness to dot an <i>i</i> or to cross a <i>t</i>. Moreover,
+many words were abbreviated, and
+numerous sentences were left half written
+out. Every detail, however, was perfectly
+plain to the author himself. With these detached<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+slips of paper and voluminous notes
+before him, he composed on a typewriter his
+various chapters, putting the paragraphs in
+logical sequence."</p>
+
+<p>Francis Parkman, the historian who made
+the Indian wars real to fascinated readers,
+was a physical wreck on the completion of
+"The Oregon Trail," when he was but twenty-five
+years old. He could not write even
+his own name, except with his eyes closed;
+he was unable to fix his mind on a subject,
+except for very brief intervals, and his
+nervous system was so exhausted that any
+effort was a burden. But he would not
+give up. During the weary days of darkness
+he thought out the story of the conspiracy
+of Pontiac and decided to write it.
+Physicians warned him that the results would
+be disastrous, yet he felt that nothing could
+do him more harm than an idle, purposeless
+life.</p>
+
+<p>One of his chief difficulties he solved in an
+ingenious manner. In a manuscript, published
+after his death, his plan was described:</p>
+
+<p>"He caused a wooden frame to be constructed
+of the size and shape of a sheet of
+letter paper. Stout wires were fixed horizontally
+across it, half an inch apart, movable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
+back of thick pasteboard fitted behind them.
+The paper for writing was placed between the
+pasteboard and wires, guided by which and
+using a black-lead crayon, he could write not
+illegibly with closed eyes."</p>
+
+<p>This contrivance, with improvements, he
+used for about forty years of semi-blindness.</p>
+
+<p>The documents on which he depended for
+his facts were read to him, though sometimes
+for days he could not listen, and then perhaps
+only for half an hour at a time. As he listened
+to the reading he made notes with closed eyes.
+Then he turned over in his mind what he
+had heard and laboriously wrote a few lines.
+For months he penned an average of only
+three or four lines a day. Later he was able
+to work more rapidly and he completed the
+book in two years and a half. No publisher
+was found who was willing to bear the expense
+of issuing the volume, and the young man
+paid for the plates himself.</p>
+
+<p>Friends thought that now he would have
+to give up. His eyes were still troubling
+him, he became lame, his head felt as if great
+bands of iron were fastened about it, and
+frequently he did not sleep more than an
+hour or two a night. Then came the death
+of his wife, on whom he had depended for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+some years. At one time his physician warned
+him that he had not more than six months
+to live. But when a friend said that he had
+nothing more to live for, he made the man
+understand that he was not ready to hoist the
+white flag.</p>
+
+<p>He lived for forty-five years after it was
+thought that he could never use his eyes
+again, and during all this time he worked
+steadily and patiently, accomplishing what
+would have been a large task for a man who
+had the full use of all his powers.</p>
+
+<p>An Englishman was told by his physician
+he could never see again. For a time the
+news weighed heavily upon him. Afterward
+he said: "I remained silent for a moment,
+thinking seriously, and then, summoning up
+all the grit I possessed, I said, 'If God wills
+it, He knows best. What must be will be.
+And,' I added, putting my hand up to a tear
+that trickled down my face, 'God helping me,
+this is the last tear I shall ever shed for my
+blindness.'" It was. He secured the degrees
+of doctor of philosophy and master of arts.
+He was a fellow of the Royal Geographical
+Society and the Chemical Society. He made
+many valuable scientific discoveries and inventions,
+saved a millionaire's life, and received<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+the largest fee ever awarded any
+doctor&mdash;$250,000.</p>
+
+<p>To these men difficulties were a challenge
+to courage. They accepted the challenge
+and proved themselves superior to circumstances.
+Thus their lives became a challenge
+to the millions of their countrymen
+who read of their triumph.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER THREE</h2>
+
+<h3><i>THE COURAGE OF INDUSTRY</i></h3>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>ANYBODY can drift, but only the man or
+woman of courage can breast the current,
+can fight on upstream.</div>
+
+<p>It is so easy to be idle or to work listlessly.
+Average folks drift heedlessly into occupations
+in which they have no special interest and
+for which they have as little fitness. Most
+people waste their evenings or use them to
+little profit: it never occurs to them that each
+day they waste precious hours. They give
+more thought to schemes to do less work than
+to attempts to increase output.</p>
+
+<p>And so they show their weakness, their
+unfitness for bearing responsibility, their cowardice
+when the world is calling for courage.</p>
+
+<p>Worth-while work demands the finest kind
+of courage, and with perfect fairness work
+gives back courage to those who put courage
+into it.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />I<br />
+BEGINNING</div>
+
+<p>"Yes, he's a right good worker, when you
+once get him started," a country newspaper
+editor said to a friend who was inquiring
+about a boy who had been in the office three
+months. "Watch him now; you'll see what
+I mean."</p>
+
+<p>The boy had just brought from the express
+office the package of "patent insides,"
+as the papers for the weekly edition of the
+newspaper, already half printed in the nearby
+city, were called. With a sigh he dragged
+these up the stairs and laid them on the folding
+table. With another sigh he contemplated
+the pile and thought how much time would
+be required to fold the eight hundred papers.
+After lengthy calculation he stopped to read a
+column of jokes from the top paper in the pile.
+At least five minutes passed before the first
+paper was folded. At the end of ten minutes
+he had succeeded in folding perhaps twenty-five
+papers. When the noon hour arrived
+not one third of the task was completed.</p>
+
+<p>While he ate his lunch he was thinking of
+the dread ordeal of the afternoon&mdash;six hundred
+more papers to be folded! Would he ever be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+done? He was still pitying himself as he walked
+slowly back to the office. Just before reaching
+the doorway into which he must turn,
+he spied an acquaintance. He made his way
+over to the boy who had attracted him,
+not because he had anything to say to him,
+but that he might delay a little longer the
+moment of beginning work at the folding table.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to do?" he asked
+idly of the boy, who had taken off his coat
+and was rolling up his sleeves.</p>
+
+<p>"The boss wants me to sort that lot of
+old iron," was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>"What, that huge pile! It will take you
+a week, won't it? Just think how much of
+it there is!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, there isn't time to think how much
+of it there is," was the reply. "And what
+would be the good? Not a bit of use getting
+discouraged at the very start, and that is
+what would happen if I didn't pitch in hard.
+The job is going to be done before night&mdash;that
+is, if I'm not interrupted by too many
+loafers coming in to ask fool questions."</p>
+
+<p>The boy from the printing office was about
+to resent this speech of the boy at the iron
+pile, but he thought better of it. "Perhaps
+there is something in what he says," he said<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
+to himself, as he went up the stairs. "Suppose
+I try to pitch in hard."</p>
+
+<p>So he surprised the foreman by beginning
+at the pile of six hundred papers as if he was
+to be sent to a ball game when he finished.
+And he surprised himself by finishing his
+task in a little more than an hour.</p>
+
+<p>The lesson he learned that day stood him
+in good stead when later he was taking his
+first difficult examination in a technical school.
+His neighbor stopped to look over the paper
+from beginning to end, and was heard to
+mutter, "How do they expect us to get
+through ten questions like these in an hour's
+time?" The boy from the printing office
+had no time for such an inquiry, but began
+work at once on the first question, without
+troubling himself about those that came later
+until he was ready for them.</p>
+
+<p>So it was when, his technical course completed,
+he was confronted by his first great
+railroad task, the clearing up of a wreck that
+looked to his assistants like an inextricable
+tangle. After one good look at it he pitched
+in for all he was worth, thus inspiring the men
+who had felt the task was impossible, and
+within a few hours the tracks were clear.</p>
+
+<p>The ability to pitch in at once on a hard job<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+is one characteristic of the man who accomplishes
+tasks that make others sit up and
+take notice. John Shaw Billings, the famous
+librarian, had this ability. To a friend who
+praised him for the performance of what others
+thought to be a most difficult task, he said:</p>
+
+<p>"I'll let you into the secret&mdash;it is nothing
+really difficult if you only begin. Some
+people contemplate a task until it looks so
+big it seems impossible, but I just begin, and
+it gets done somehow. There would be no
+coral islands if the first bug sat down and
+began to wonder how the job was to be done."</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />II<br />
+PURPOSE FORMING</div>
+
+<p>One of the interesting points the fascinated
+reader of biography comes to look for is the
+first hint of the formation of the purpose
+that later characterized the life of the subject.
+There is infinite variety, but in every case
+there is apt to be something that takes the
+purposeful reader back to the days when his
+own ambition was taking shape.</p>
+
+<p>For instance, there is Daniel Boone. One
+would not be apt to select him as an example
+of one whose life was ruled by a purpose<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+deliberately formed and adhered to for many
+years. Yet he had his vision of what he desired
+to accomplish when, at twenty-one
+years of age, he was marching from North
+Carolina to Pennsylvania to join Braddock's
+company. On the way he met John Finley,
+a hunter who had traveled through Ohio
+and into the wild regions to the south. His
+tale of Kentucky fired Boone's imagination,
+and the two men planned to go there just
+as soon as the trip to Fort Duquesne was
+at an end. It proved impossible to carry
+out the plan for many years, but Boone never
+lost sight of his purpose, and ultimately he
+carved out the Wilderness Road and opened
+the way for the pioneers to seek homes in the
+Kentucky Wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>Alexander Hamilton was but twelve years
+old when he wrote from his home in St. Croix,
+in the West Indies, to a friend in America:</p>
+
+<p>"I contemn the grovelling condition of a
+clerk, or the like, to which my fortune condemns
+me, and would willingly risk my life,
+though not my character, to exalt my station.
+I am confident, Ned, that my youth excludes
+me from any hope of immediate preferment,
+nor do I desire it, but I mean to prepare the
+way for futurity."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Not for a day did he lose sight of his purpose.
+The opportunity he sought came years later.
+He sailed for America, and began the career
+that led to usefulness and fame.</p>
+
+<p>As a boy Robert Fulton was ambitious. He
+had two dreams. He wished to go to Europe
+to study art, and he wished to buy a farm for
+his widowed mother. For these objects he
+saved every dollar he could. On his twenty-first
+birthday he took his mother and sister to the
+home he had bought for them, and later in the
+same year he sailed for Europe.</p>
+
+<p>When Peter Cooper was making his way
+against odds in New York City he felt the need
+of an education. But he had to work by day
+and there was no night school. Night after
+night he studied by the light of a tallow candle.
+And while he studied, his life purpose was
+formed: some day he would make it easy for
+apprentice boys to secure an education after
+working hours. Many years passed before
+he was able to carry this purpose into effect.
+By this time the apprentice system had been
+displaced, but he felt that young people still
+needed the school he had in mind. In 1859,
+nearly fifty years after his own boyhood struggle,
+he founded Cooper Union, in which thousands
+have had the opportunity "to open the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+volume of Nature by the light of truth&mdash;so unveiling
+the laws and methods of Deity that the
+young may see the beauties of creation, enjoy
+its blessings and learn to love the Being from
+whom cometh every good and perfect gift."</p>
+
+<p>As a boy Abraham Lincoln made up his
+mind "to live like Washington." He was
+twenty-two years old when, in New Orleans,&mdash;where
+he had taken a flatboat loaded with
+produce&mdash;he saw a slave auction and spoke the
+never-to-be-forgotten words: "If ever I get a
+chance to hit that thing, I'll hit it hard."
+Thirty-five years later came his chance, and
+he did "hit that thing hard" with the Emancipation
+Proclamation.</p>
+
+<p>Alexander Graham Bell's life ambition was
+to teach deaf children how to articulate.
+Funds were short. That he might have more
+funds he engaged in experiments that led to the
+invention of the telephone. When the telephone
+instrument was given the attention it
+deserved at the Philadelphia Centennial of
+1876, the inventor wrote triumphantly to his
+parents: "Now I shall have the money to promote
+the teaching of speech to deaf children."</p>
+
+<p>James Stewart, the Scotch boy who became
+a famous missionary in South Africa, was fifteen
+years old when, one day while following<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+the plow in Perthshire, he began to brood over
+the future. "What was it to be?" The
+question flashed across his mind, "Might I not
+make more of my life than by remaining here?"
+Then he said, "God helping me, I will be a
+missionary." At another time, while hunting
+with a cousin, he said "Jim, I shall never be
+satisfied till I am in Africa with a Bible in my
+pocket and a rifle on my shoulder, to supply
+my wants."</p>
+
+<p>James Robertson was a school teacher in
+Canada when he became a Christian. On the
+Sunday he was to take his vows as a follower
+of Christ, he walked two miles to church
+with a friend who has told of his memories of
+the day thus:</p>
+
+<p>"As we went along the Governor's Road
+there was a bush, 'Light's Woods,' on the
+south side of the road. Robertson suggested
+that we turn aside into the bush, not saying
+for what purpose. We penetrated it a short
+distance, when, with a rising hill on our right
+and on comparatively level ground, the tall
+maples waving their lovely heads far above us,
+and the stillness of the calm, sunny day impressing
+us with a sense of the awful, we came
+to a large stone. Robertson proposed that we
+engage in prayer. We knelt down together.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+He prayed that he might be true to the vows
+he was about to take, true to God and ever
+faithful in his service."</p>
+
+<p>From that day the young man's purpose was
+inflexible. He would be a minister. He did
+not dream of conspicuous places in the church.
+When the temptations came to seek place and
+position, he wrote to Miss Cowing, who had
+promised to be his wife, "We are no longer our
+own. The time for self is gone for us."</p>
+
+<p>William Duncan likewise was tempted to
+seek a position of prominence. When he decided
+to become a missionary, his employers
+sought to dissuade him. "You have one of
+the keenest brains in England," one of them
+said. "Don't you see you are making a fool
+of yourself?" "Fool or no fool, my mind is
+made up, and nothing can change it," was
+the positive reply. And he set his face like
+a flint, and in time began the wonderful work
+that has written his name indelibly in the
+history of the Indians of Western Canada
+and Alaska.</p>
+
+<p>Washington Gladden was a country newspaper
+man in Owego, New York, when he
+united with the church, and began to make
+definite plans for a larger future than he had
+yet dreamed of. First he went to the Academy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+and then to college, with the ministry
+always in view.</p>
+
+<p>George Grenfell, who became a missionary
+in Africa, was thirteen years old when he began
+to think of devoting his life to work for others.
+The reading of Livingstone's first book turned
+his thoughts to Africa.</p>
+
+<p>William Waddell was fifteen years old
+when he became a Christian. At the time he
+was working for a ship-joiner at Clydebank,
+Scotland. The ambition took possession of
+him to become a missionary to Africa.
+Neither lack of education nor scarcity of funds
+was allowed to stand in his way. He kept at
+his work until he saw an advertisement asking
+for men to go to the Orange Free State
+to assist in building a church. He volunteered,
+and, as a layman and a mechanic,
+began his wonderful career in Africa.</p>
+
+<p>David Lloyd-George was an orphan in Wales
+when he determined to be a lawyer. So he
+read, under the guidance of his shoemaker
+uncle, and when he was fourteen he was
+ready for the preliminary examination. For
+six years more he continued his preparation.
+Before he was twenty-one he set out on the career
+that has made him the leader to whom King
+and people of England alike turned eagerly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>These men found their place and did their
+work, not because they sought great things
+for themselves, but because they lived in the
+spirit of the advice given by a celebrated
+Canadian to a company of young people:</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot all attain high positions:
+there are not enough to go around. You cannot
+all be preachers or premiers, but you can
+all do thoroughly and well what is set you
+to do, and so fit yourselves for some higher
+duty, and thus by industry and fidelity and
+kindness you can fill your sphere in life and
+at last receive the 'Well done' of your Lord."</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />III<br />
+USING TIME WISELY</div>
+
+<p>A remark made by an acquaintance in
+the street car showed such familiarity with
+the work and trials of the busy conductor
+that inquiry followed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I was a conductor once," the man
+said, "but I had my eye on something
+else. At night I took a business course, and
+soon was able to take a position with a
+railroad company."</p>
+
+<p>"That was fine!" was the answering comment.
+"How you must have enjoyed resting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
+on your oars as you reaped the fruits of
+extra toil."</p>
+
+<p>"Enjoyment&mdash;yes! But rest&mdash;no!" came
+the reply. "I wasn't done. I still had my
+evenings, and I kept on studying. The things
+I learned in these extra hours came in handy
+when the Superintendent asked me to become
+his secretary."</p>
+
+<p>Service in the railroad office was interrupted
+by enlistment in the army, although
+the worker was well beyond the age of the
+draft. "How could I think of anything but
+service at the front?" he said, with a matter-of-fact
+accent. While in the service the habit
+of study in spare hours persisted; becoming
+familiar with the military manual he attracted
+the attention of his officers, and was marked
+for added responsibility. At the close of the
+war he resumed his work for the railroad
+and entered a technical school which provides
+night courses for the ambitious.</p>
+
+<p>Forty years of age, and still learning!</p>
+
+<p>An employer has written of an employee
+who, ten years ago, was securing fifteen dollars
+per week. But he was studying, and he soon
+attracted the attention of the head of the
+business, who called him "a rough diamond."
+He knew that the ambitious man seemed to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
+lack some of the vital elements of success.
+But he watched him as he took evening
+courses in business psychology and salesmanship.
+"This man is paid by me to-day from
+$12,500 to $15,000 a year," was the gratifying
+conclusion of the employer's story.</p>
+
+<p>A great executive recently told in a magazine
+article of a young man in the office of his
+employment director who attracted attention
+because of an exceptionally pleasing personal
+appearance. Before the director saw him
+the executive asked him what he was studying.
+"When I left school," was the reply,
+made with something of a sneer, "I promised
+myself I would never open a book
+again as long as I lived, and I'm keeping
+my promise."</p>
+
+<p>The executive was about to leave the office
+for a two weeks' vacation. First, however,
+he wrote a few words about the applicant,
+placed them in a sealed envelope, and left
+this with the employment director, to be kept
+for him. On his return he asked about the
+applicant, by name. The answer came, with
+prompt disgust:</p>
+
+<p>"That fellow was the limit! Fired him
+two days after he was hired. Dead from the
+neck up!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then the sealed letter was produced and the
+message enclosed was read:</p>
+
+<p>"You will hire A&mdash;&mdash; H&mdash;&mdash; on his looks. Within
+two weeks you will fire him. He's dead from
+his neck."</p>
+
+<p>A writer in <i>Association Men</i> has made a
+comparison between two men, and the way
+they spent their leisure:</p>
+
+<p>"Here is my friend Chris Hall&mdash;that is not
+his real name, but I assure you he is a real
+person. I like Chris, and so does everybody
+who knows him. He is honest and kind and
+clean, but in spite of these splendid characteristics
+he never makes progress. Five years
+ago he was promoted to his present position,
+and he draws as salary just about what he did
+then. And there is no prospect that he will
+ever draw much more. Yet he could make
+himself worth four times as much in a very
+short while&mdash;$200 a week instead of $50&mdash;if
+he would only fit himself for the job ahead.
+But he lives entirely in the present. Perhaps
+the best way to describe him is to give his
+diary for a week, a record of how he spent his
+time when not actually working. And, please
+notice that everything he did was perfectly
+legitimate and honorable; but also notice, that
+everything was for immediate personal pleasure:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="hang1"><i>Monday</i>&mdash;Rainy evening; went to bed early after playing
+a while with the kids.</div>
+
+<div class="hang1"><i>Tuesday</i>&mdash;Strolled over to see Mollie's brother, who is
+just back from France; he looks well but would not
+talk much about the fighting; advised him not to
+hurry about getting a job, as he deserved a good
+long spell of rest after the hard campaign.</div>
+
+<div class="hang1"><i>Wednesday</i>&mdash;Left office early; first big league game this
+year; went around to the club and talked it all over
+with the boys after supper.</div>
+
+<div class="hang1"><i>Thursday</i>&mdash;Office closed all day on account of parade of
+returning troops; took Mollie and children to see it;
+awfully tired and went to bed early.</div>
+
+<div class="hang1"><i>Friday</i>&mdash;Sold my two Liberty Bonds which I had
+bought on installments; Mollie needed summer
+dresses and there were several small debts I had to
+pay; took Mollie to the movies after supper.</div>
+
+<div class="hang1"><i>Saturday</i> (afternoon)&mdash;Whole family went to Seaside
+Park by steamer&mdash;children enjoyed it for a while
+but soon got tired and fretful; what with the heat
+and the crowds and the late hour of getting home it
+really didn't pay.</div>
+
+<div class="hang1"><i>Sunday</i>&mdash;In bed till nearly noon; read the papers;
+changed the soil in Mollie's potted plants; afternoon,
+Tom and his wife and Charlie Nichols and
+his best girl came over and all stayed to supper;
+strolled over to Mother's and found everyone there.</div>
+
+<p>"Over against that let me put a few lines
+from the diary of Elihu Burritt:</p>
+
+<div class="hang1"><i>Monday</i>&mdash;Headache; 40 lines Cuvier's 'Theory of the
+Earth'; 64 pages French; 11 hours forging.</div>
+
+<div class="hang1"><i>Tuesday</i>&mdash;60 lines Hebrew; 30 pages French; 10 pages
+Cuvier; 8 lines Syriac; 10 lines Danish; 10 lines<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
+Bohemian; 9 lines Polish; 15 names of stars; 10
+hours forging.</div>
+
+<div class="hang1"><i>Wednesday</i>&mdash;25 lines Hebrew; 8 lines Syriac; 11
+hours forging.</div>
+
+<p>"Who was Elihu Burritt? He was a New
+England blacksmith who worked on an average
+10 hours a day at his forge; but who studied in
+his spare moments until he became known and
+honored all over the world as 'the learned blacksmith.'
+He became great&mdash;not by forging&mdash;but
+by the way he used his afterwork hours."</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />IV<br />
+WORKING HARDER</div>
+
+<p>"It was the rule of his life to study not how
+little he could do, but how much."</p>
+
+<p>These words were spoken of a great publisher
+and might have been made the text of the
+volume issued to commemorate the centenary
+of the business house founded by the man of
+whom they were spoken.</p>
+
+<p>The young man was sixteen when his father
+drove him from their country home to the city,
+and apprenticed him to a firm of printers.</p>
+
+<p>As an apprentice he and another young
+man were frequently partners in working an
+old-fashioned hand press. "One applied the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
+ink with hand-balls, and the other laid on
+sheets and did the pulling. They changed
+work at regular intervals, one inking and the
+other pulling." The biographer who gives
+this description of the work of the two, adds
+that his hero was accustomed to remain at his
+press after the other men had quit work whenever
+he could secure a partner to assist him.</p>
+
+<p>The young man's fellow worker was often
+persuaded to assist him in these extra efforts&mdash;usually
+much against his will. While he often
+felt like rebelling because of his partner's ambition
+to do his utmost for his employers, he
+could not restrain his admiration for the
+man's industry.</p>
+
+<p>Once the unwilling partner said: "Often,
+after a good day's work, he would say to me,
+'Let's break the back of another token (two
+hundred and fifty impressions)&mdash;just break
+its back.' I would often consent reluctantly
+but he would beguile me, or laugh at my complaints,
+and never let me off till the token was
+completed, fair and square. It was a custom
+for us in the summer to do a clear half-day's
+work before the other boys and men got their
+breakfast. We would meet by appointment in
+the grey of the early morning and go down to
+the printing-room."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Fellow workmen made sport of the ambitious
+young man, not only because of what
+they felt was his excessive industry, but because
+of his homespun clothes and heavy cow-hide
+boots. He seldom retorted, but once,
+when jests had gone further <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'then'">than</ins> usual, he said
+to a tormentor: "When I am out of my time
+and set up for myself, and you need employment,
+as you probably will, come to me and I
+will give you work." The man little thought
+the prophecy would be fulfilled, but forty
+years after, when the industrious apprentice was
+mayor of the city and one of the world's leading
+publishers, he was reminded of the promise
+made to the tormentor, and the promised
+position was given to him. The workman who
+believed in doing more than was expected of
+him had won his way to fame and fortune,
+while his derider had made no progress.</p>
+
+<p>In 1817 the industrious apprentice asked a
+brother&mdash;who in the meantime had served his
+apprenticeship in a printing office&mdash;to go into
+business with him. Later two other brothers
+were taken into the firm. All were believers in
+the doctrine that had led the oldest member of
+the firm to success&mdash;the doctrine of doing as
+much instead of as little as possible.</p>
+
+<p>Their readiness to work constantly enabled<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
+the four brothers, who started with little capital
+except their knowledge of their trade, to
+build up within a generation one of the world's
+greatest publishing houses. They improved
+every moment. But they were never tempted
+to work on Sunday; business was never so
+pressing that they would break into the day of
+rest, or make their men do so. In this they
+were only living in accordance with purposes
+formed during their days of working for others.
+It is stated of one of the brothers, whose employer
+rejoiced in his readiness to do hard work
+and plenty of it, that he was expected to work
+on Sunday, in order to get ready the catalogue
+of an auction sale which was to be held next
+day. "That I will not do," he said, respectfully
+but firmly: "I cannot work on Sunday." He
+did work till midnight; then&mdash;in spite of the
+threat that he would be discharged&mdash;he laid
+down his composing stick on the case. On
+Monday morning his employer apologized and
+asked him to return to work.</p>
+
+<p>Thirty-six years after the founding of the
+house, it occupied five five-story buildings on
+one street and six on another street. Then a
+careless plumber started a fire that&mdash;within a
+few hours&mdash;destroyed the entire property.
+But the energetic men who knew how to work<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+were not discouraged at the thought of <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'begining'">beginning</ins>
+again. The night after the fire they met for
+conference. As they separated one of them remarked
+that the evening had seemed more like
+a time of social festivity than a consultation
+over a great calamity.</p>
+
+<p>Business associates hastened to make offers
+of loans. Within forty-eight hours the firm
+was tendered more than one hundred thousand
+dollars. Publishers offered their presses, printing
+material and office room. Authors wrote
+that they were ready to wait indefinitely for
+pay, while employees not only made a like suggestion,
+but said they were willing to have
+their pay reduced. While none of these offers
+were accepted, they were greatly appreciated,
+for they told of the place the brothers had
+won for themselves by untiring industry and
+sterling integrity.</p>
+
+<p>After the fire the house became greater than
+ever, so that to-day it stands as an example of
+what "hard work coupled with high ideals"
+may accomplish. And to every young man the
+thought of it gives inspiration to follow in the
+steps of the founder who "made it the rule
+of his life to study not how little he could do,
+but how much."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />V<br />
+ABUSING THE WILL TO WORK</div>
+
+<p>There are times when the real test of a
+worker's courage is not his readiness to work
+but his will to curb the temptation to be intemperate
+in work.</p>
+
+<p>When the word "intemperance" is mentioned
+most people think at once of strong
+drink; many people are unwilling to think of
+anything but strong drink. As if where there
+is no temptation to drink there can be no
+temptation to intemperance!</p>
+
+<p>Paul had a different idea. When he wrote
+to the Corinthians, "Every man that striveth
+for the mastery is temperate in all things," he
+must have had in mind scores of different ways
+in which intemperance endangers success.</p>
+
+<p>If people were to make a list of some of the
+aspects of intemperance that are characteristic
+of modern life, it is quite likely that a large proportion
+would omit one of the most serious of
+all&mdash;the intemperance of the man who lives to
+work, who drives himself to work, who is never
+happy unless he is working, who makes himself
+and others unhappy because he labors
+too long, and too persistently, perhaps with
+the result that his own promising career is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+wrecked and the industry of others is interfered
+with seriously.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most striking illustrations of intemperance
+in work is supplied by the life of
+Samuel Bowles, editor of the Springfield, Massachusetts,
+<i>Republican</i>, one of the famous editors
+of the generation beginning a few years
+after the Civil War.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bowles was but eighteen years old when
+he had his first warning that his system could
+not stand the strain of the work to which a
+strong will drove him. His mother used to set
+a rocking chair for him at the table at meal-time,
+because, as she said, "Sam has so little
+time to rest." But the rocking chair was
+empty for months, when a breakdown sent
+him South for a long period of recuperation.</p>
+
+<p>When he returned home he plunged into
+work with all his might. "He worked late at
+night; vacations and holidays were unknown;
+of recreation and general society he had almost
+nothing," his biographer says. For years his
+office hours began before noon and continued
+until one or two in the morning. Finally the
+strain became too great, and loss of sight was
+feared. Still he forced himself to work, and
+the injury to his brain was begun that was
+later to cause his death. He would take a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+bottle of cold tea to the office, that by its use
+he might aid his will to work when nature
+said, "Stop!" For a long time his only sleep&mdash;and
+it was sadly broken sleep&mdash;was on a lounge
+in the office, from two to six or seven in the
+morning. Then he would set to work again.
+"By his unceasing mental activity he wore
+himself out," the comment was made on his
+career. "For the last twenty years of his
+life his nerves and stomach were in chronic
+rebellion. Heavy clouds of dyspepsia, sciatica,
+sleeplessness, exhaustion, came often and
+staid long."</p>
+
+<p>The intemperate worker knew what he was
+doing. Once he wrote to a friend, "You can't
+burn the candle at both ends, and make anything
+by it in the long run; and it is the long
+pull that you are to rely on, and whereby you
+are to gain glory." Persistent headaches,
+"nature's sharp signal that the engine had
+been overdriven," added to the warning. At
+last, when he was thirty-seven, he wrote:
+"My will has carried me for years beyond my
+mental and physical power; that has been the
+offending rock. And now, beyond that desirable
+in keeping my temper, and forcing me
+up to proper exercise and cheerfulness through
+light occupation, I mean to call upon it not at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+all, if I can help it, and to do only what comes
+freely and spontaneously from the overflow
+of power and life. This will make me a light
+reader, a small worker."</p>
+
+<p>Well for him if he had kept his resolution.
+Still he drove himself to work beyond what his
+body and brain could stand. Then came paralysis.
+"Nothing is the matter with me
+but thirty-five years of hard work," he said.
+At the time of his death he was not fifty-one
+years old.</p>
+
+<p>His friends could not but admire him for
+strength of will, for achievement in the face of
+ill health, for triumph, by sheer will-power,
+over every obstacle except the will that drove
+him to his death. He accomplished much, but
+how much more he might have accomplished
+if he had been temperate in his use of the wonderful
+powers of mind and body which God
+had given him!</p>
+
+<p>In connection with this glimpse of the life of
+one who illustrates the disaster brought by the
+will to be intemperate, it is helpful to think
+of the life of another American man of
+letters whose will to be temperate in his treatment
+of a body weak and frail prolonged life
+and usefulness.</p>
+
+<p>Francis Parkman, the historian, was never a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
+well man after his trip that resulted in the
+writing of <i>The Oregon Trail</i>. In fact, he was a
+physical wreck at twenty-five years of age. He
+could not even write his own name, until he
+first closed his eyes; he was unable to fix his
+mind on a subject, except for very brief intervals,
+and his nervous system was so exhausted
+that any effort was a burden. However, in
+spite of this limitation, which became worse,
+if possible, instead of better, he managed to
+accomplish an immense amount of the finest
+literary work by doing what he could and stopping
+when this was wise. His will to take care
+of himself was given the mastery of his will to
+work. For forty-four years after the completion
+of <i>The Oregon Trail</i> he labored on, preparing
+history after history. He was seventy
+years old when he died, leaving behind him
+achievements that would have been a tremendous
+task for a man in perfect health.</p>
+
+<p>To everyone is given the marvelous equipment
+of body and brain, as well as the will
+which makes possible their judicious investment
+or their prodigal waste in the struggle
+to make life count.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER FOUR</h2>
+
+<h3><i>THE COURAGE OF FACING CONSEQUENCES</i></h3>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>YOUNG people sometimes play the game of
+"Consequences." The sport increases in
+proportion to the strangeness of the results.</div>
+
+<p>Perhaps the reason the game has so many
+attractions is the fact that life is a long story
+of consequences.</p>
+
+<p>There are people who do not like to play the
+game of life seriously because they say the consequences
+of self-denial and self-sacrifice are too
+uncertain; they prefer the cowardice of inaction
+to the courage of purposeful living.</p>
+
+<p>The folks worth while are those who, refusing
+to be troubled by what may or may not be
+the consequences of their acts, still have the
+pluck to go on with what they know is right.
+Let the results be what they may, they propose
+to be straightforward and true. This is the
+courage that counts.</p>
+
+<p>There may be uncertainty as to the specific
+form the results of their stand may take, yet
+that result is sure to be pleasing and helpful.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />I<br />
+VENTURING</div>
+
+<p>When Washington Irving was about to return
+to America from Madrid, where he had
+been minister of the United States to the court
+of Spain, the Philadelphia house that had been
+publishing his books, discouraged by the decreasing
+sales, sent word to him that the public
+was not able to appreciate his books, and
+they would have to allow them to go out of
+print. The books had been printed directly
+from the type, so there were no plates which
+another publisher might use to bring out
+further editions at small expense.</p>
+
+<p>The author, who was then sixty-five years
+of age, sorrowfully accepted the verdict of his
+publisher, and planned to take desk-room in
+the New York office of his brother, John Treat
+Irving, where he hoped to make a living by the
+practice of law.</p>
+
+<p>But this was not to be. In New York was a
+young publisher who believed that Washington
+Irving's works were classics, and that the
+American public would buy them eagerly if
+properly approached. Friends told him that
+he might make a mistake, but he had the courage
+to go ahead. So he wrote to the discouraged<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+author what must have seemed to other
+publishers a daring letter; he proposed to publish
+new editions of all Irving's old books, on
+condition that new books, also, be given to
+him; and he promised that royalties for the
+first year should be at least one thousand dollars,
+for the second year two thousand dollars,
+and for the third year three thousand dollars.</p>
+
+<p>When Irving received the letter, he kicked
+over the desk in front of him, at the same time
+saying to his brother:</p>
+
+<p>"There is no necessity, John, for my bothering
+with the law. Here is a fool of a publisher
+going to give me a thousand dollars a year for
+doing nothing."</p>
+
+<p>But the publisher was not so foolish as he
+seemed. His promises were more than made
+good. Sales were large. Other authors were
+attracted, until the publishing house became
+one of the leaders among American publishers.</p>
+
+<p>Nine years later Washington Irving had an
+opportunity to show his gratitude. Just before
+the panic of 1857 a young man whom the
+generous publisher had taken into partnership,
+involved him seriously. The defalcations were
+not discovered until the accidental death of
+the partner. Thus weakened, the firm was unable
+to survive the panic; its affairs were put in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
+the hands of a receiver, and all accounts were
+sold. At the age of forty-two, the head of the
+firm bravely faced the necessity of beginning
+life over.</p>
+
+<p>At the receiver's sale Washington Irving
+bought the plates of all his books. A number
+of publishers offered him fancy terms if he
+would permit them to bring out new editions,
+but he turned a deaf ear to their entreaties
+and offered the plates to their former owner,
+to be paid for in annual installments. Touched
+by the gratitude of his friend, the publisher
+accepted the offer.</p>
+
+<p>The author never had cause to regret his action.
+During the years that elapsed before his
+death the results of the new venture were more
+satisfactory than ever. The courageous action
+of both publisher and author had been amply
+vindicated by results.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />II<br />
+FORMING CHARACTER</div>
+
+<p>The best time to learn the courage that
+proves so effective in the struggle of life is in
+youth. More than fifty years ago two boys in
+Scotland were hunting rabbits. Tiring of the
+comparatively easy hunting on the ground,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+they looked longingly at a cliff of hard clay several
+hundred feet high, in whose precipitous
+side were many rabbit burrows. They managed
+to climb the cliff. At length they were
+making their way along an almost perpendicular
+parapet, cutting their way with their knives.
+Then one of the boys fell, with a scream, to the
+bottom of the cliff. There was a moment of
+terror. This was succeeded by a grim determination
+to go forward, the only way of escape.
+Driving his knife deep in the clay, he
+rested on this for a moment. That moment,
+it has always since seemed to him, marked the
+first momentous period in his life, the time
+when his personality first emerged into consciousness.
+He says: "I whispered to myself
+one word, 'Courage!' Then I went on with
+my work." At length he reached the ground.</p>
+
+<p>The lesson learned at such fearful cost told
+emphatically on the boy's character. From
+that day he showed that there was in him the
+making of a man who would not be balked by
+unfavorable circumstances. He did not understand
+how or why, but he felt that new will-power
+had come to him with the appeal to himself
+to take courage in the face of death.</p>
+
+<p>A few years later he went to Brazil. A Spaniard
+told him that moral deterioration within<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+six months was all but certain to come to every
+young man who began life there. But he was
+determined not to give way to bad habits.
+When he reached Santos, his companions urged
+him to give himself up to all kinds of vice;
+they told him that it was either this or death,
+or perhaps something worse than death. They
+emphasized their words by pointing to a young
+man who had determined to keep straight, and
+had been left to himself until he was demented.
+But the boy who had learned courage on the
+precipice made up his mind that he must live
+as God wished him to live, and he turned a
+deaf ear to all entreaties.</p>
+
+<p>Another book of biography tells of a boy
+who delighted in playing cards with his father
+and mother. But when he united with the
+Church and became President of the Christian
+Endeavor Society he began to wonder if he was
+doing right. One night his father took up the
+cards and called him to play whist.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I'll play whist any more," he
+said quietly. "I've been thinking that perhaps
+it wasn't right for me to play."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you setting yourself up to judge your
+father and mother, young man?" his father
+asked, sternly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I didn't say it isn't all right for you<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
+to play," was the reply. "But you know I am
+President of the Christian Endeavor Society
+and some of the members don't think it is
+right to play. So I guess I'd better not."</p>
+
+<p>His father looked at him thoughtfully for a
+minute, then picked up the cards and threw
+them back into the drawer.</p>
+
+<p>"Charlie," he said, "I want you to understand
+that I think you have done a
+manly thing to-night, and I honor you for
+your courage."</p>
+
+<p>That was the end of whist in that house.</p>
+
+<p>Courage showed itself in much the same way
+in the life of J. Marion Sims, the great surgeon.
+He used to tell how, when he was a boy at a
+South Carolina School, he was able to take a
+stand that had its effect on his whole after-life.
+Many of his fellow students were sons of
+wealthy planters, and their habits were not
+always the best. On several occasions they
+tried to lead him into mischief. They were particularly
+anxious to make him a companion in
+their drinking bouts. Twice he gave way to
+their pleas, but after sorrowful experience of
+the results of his lapses, he decided to make a
+brave stand. So he said to his tempters:</p>
+
+<p>"See here, boys, you can all drink, and I
+cannot. You like wine and I do not. I hate<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+it; its taste is disagreeable, its effects are dreadful,
+because it makes me drunk. Now, I hope
+you all will understand my position. I don't
+think it is right for you to ask me to drink wine
+when I don't want it, and when it produces
+such a bad effect on me."</p>
+
+<p>To say this required real courage, but the
+results were good, not only in himself, but also,
+fortunately, in some of his companions.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />III<br />
+TRUTH TELLING</div>
+
+<p>Those who, in early life, learn to be courageous
+in the face of difficult tasks will be ready
+for the temptation that is apt to come to most
+young people to compromise with what they
+know to be right and true, to allow an exception
+"just this once!" in the straightforward
+course they have marked out for themselves.
+And the worst of it is that such a temptation is
+apt to come without the slightest warning and
+to present itself in such a light that it is easy to
+find an excuse for yielding, and to deem it
+quixotic and unreasonable not to yield.</p>
+
+<p>Once a young teacher who later became famous
+at Harvard, had occasion to censure a
+student who had given, as he believed, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+wrong solution of a problem. On thinking the
+matter over at home, he found that the pupil
+was right and the teacher wrong. It was late
+at night and in the depth of winter, but he immediately
+started for the young man's room,
+at some distance from his own home, and asked
+for the man he had wronged. The delinquent,
+answering with some trepidation the untimely
+summons, found himself the recipient of a
+frank apology.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, in the name of reason, do you walk a
+mile in the rain for a perfectly unimportant
+thing?" this man was asked on another occasion.
+"Simply because I have discovered that
+it was a misstatement, and I could not sleep
+comfortably till I put it right," was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>Again the story is told of him that he borrowed
+a friend's horse to ride to a town where
+he expected to take the stage. He promised to
+leave the animal at a certain stable in the
+town. Upon reaching the place he found that
+the stage was several miles upon its way. This
+was a serious disappointment. A friend urged
+him to ride to the next town, where he could
+come up with the vehicle, promising himself to
+send after the borrowed horse and forward it
+to its owner. The temptation to accept the offer
+was great. The roads were ankle deep in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
+mud, and the stage rapidly rolling on its way.
+The only obstacle was his promise to leave the
+horse at the appointed place. He declined the
+friendly offer, delivered the horse as he had
+promised, and, shouldering his baggage, set off
+on foot through the mud to catch the stage.</p>
+
+<p>At this time he was eighteen years old, but
+he had learned the lesson that made him remarkably
+efficient and dependable through life.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. W. T. Grenfell has told of a hardy trapper
+in Labrador, the partner of a man who was
+easily discouraged; the arrangement was that
+they should share equally the hardships and
+the rewards of the trapping expeditions. Both
+were very poor. The stronger man was most
+unselfish in his treatment of his associate. One
+winter their lives were all but lost during the
+severity of a storm which burst on them while
+they were setting their traps on an ice-girt
+island. On reaching the mainland the timid
+man insisted on dissolving the partnership; he
+was unwilling to repeat the risks, even for the
+sake of his needy family. In a few days the
+hardy trapper revisited the traps on the mainland.
+To his great joy he found in one trap a
+magnificent silver fox, whose skin was worth
+five hundred dollars&mdash;a fortune to the Labrador
+trapper, especially welcome during that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
+hard winter. "How glad I am the partnership
+has been dissolved, and that the fox is all
+mine," was his first thought. But first
+thought was not allowed to be last thought.
+There was a struggle. At length the decision
+was made that the needy man who had set the
+trap with him should share in the prize; the
+argument that he had forfeited all right to a
+share was not allowed to weigh against the unselfish
+arguments for division.</p>
+
+<p>A friend of young people has told of an incident
+which occurred in a great Boston department
+store where she sought to match some
+dress goods. After turning away from several
+discourteous clerks she showed her sample to a
+salesman who gave respectful attention to her.
+Glancing at the slits cut in the side of the bit
+of goods, he remarked:</p>
+
+<p>"That isn't one of my samples. I will
+ask the clerk who mailed this sample to wait
+on you."</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't want any other clerk to wait
+on me," responded the women, hastily, fearing
+that the sample might have come originally
+from one of the discourteous clerks first encountered;
+"I want you to have this sale."</p>
+
+<p>"If you had asked for goods of that quality,
+width and price, without showing me the sample,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+I could have found it for you at once," replied
+the clerk, with a smile, "but now, this sale
+belongs to the clerk who sent out the sample."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I won't give you this sample to hunt
+it up by," said the woman, wishing to see if she
+could carry her point, and she proceeded to
+tuck the sample away in her purse.</p>
+
+<p>"But I know that I have seen it, and my
+conscience knows it," was the clerk's comment,
+as he laughingly laid his hand on his heart and
+turned to look for the other salesman.</p>
+
+<p>The purchaser went on to tell thus of the
+salesman's unerring loyalty to his principles:
+"In a moment he returned. The other clerk
+was at lunch. What a sigh of relief I gave!
+'I will make out the sale and turn it over to
+him when he comes in,' he said, displaying the
+shining black folds of the goods I desired."</p>
+
+<p>A real estate dealer in a Texas city was once
+tempted to be false to his principles, "just
+once," when he felt sure a sale depended on it.
+His prospective customer was a foreigner, who
+wished the salesman to drink with him after a
+trip to examine the property on Saturday and
+then to promise to make an engagement to
+continue the search next morning. But the
+business man was opposed to the use of liquor,
+and he had never done business on Sunday.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
+What was he to do on this occasion? Would
+it hurt anything if he should make an exception
+in favor of this customer who could not
+be expected to understand his scruples?</p>
+
+<p>The temptation was acute; but it was conquered.
+Respectfully but firmly the buyer
+was told why the salesman could not join him
+in taking a drink, and why he could not go
+with him again until Monday morning. The
+man went away in a rage.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning the real estate man saw the
+foreigner in the hands of a rival. "That sale
+is gone!" he thought. When three days more
+passed without the return of the buyer he decided
+that he had paid heavily for being true
+to his better self.</p>
+
+<p>But on Thursday evening the foreigner
+sought the conscientious real estate dealer and
+surprised him by saying:</p>
+
+<p>"Those other fellows showed me lots of
+farms, but you wouldn't drink with me, nor
+show me land on Sunday because you think it
+wrong. So, maybe, I think you won't lie to
+me. I buy my farm of you."</p>
+
+<p>Many times the reward of being true to
+one's conscience will not come so promptly&mdash;except
+in the satisfaction the man has in knowing
+that he has done the right thing. But the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+sure result is to bring him a little nearer to the
+great reward that must come to a man whose
+integrity has stood the test of years&mdash;the appreciation
+of those who know him and their
+confidence in his honor.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />IV<br />
+DUTY DOING</div>
+
+<p>It is not always necessary that a man should
+be aquainted with another to be able to repose
+implicit confidence in him. A life of fearless,
+straightforward duty-doing will inevitably
+leave its record in the face. Sometimes a frank,
+open countenance that cannot be misread
+is far better than any letter of introduction.</p>
+
+<p>"We are suspicious of strangers," a man said
+to one who had sought at his hands a favor that
+called for trust; then he added, with a smile,
+"but some faces are above suspicion," and proceeded,
+with overwhelming generosity, to
+grant far more than had been asked.</p>
+
+<p>Years ago a business man unexpectedly
+found himself without sufficient funds to continue
+his journey through Europe. As this
+was before the days of travelers' checks or the
+ocean cable, he was at a loss what to do. In
+his uncertainty he went to an Italian banking<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
+house and asked them to cash a large draft on
+his home bank. After an instant's pause the
+request was granted. Years later the merchant
+again saw the accommodating banker,
+and asked why a stranger was given such a
+large sum. "In plain truth, it was just your
+honest face, and nothing else," was the reply.
+On another trip abroad the merchant had a
+similar experience. During a thunderstorm he
+took refuge with his wife in a curio shop. The
+English-speaking woman in charge was so
+cordial, and her goods were so pleasing, that
+the visitor said he would have liked to make
+some purchase, but his remaining funds were
+not more than sufficient for his journey home.
+The reply was: "Take whatever you please,
+sir. No one could look in your face and distrust
+you."</p>
+
+<p>A similar story was told by a Russian Jew
+who entered New York a penniless immigrant.
+After a disheartening period of working in the
+sweatshop he saw an opportunity to start in
+business for himself. But he had no capital.
+At a venture he asked a business man to trust
+him for the stock in trade. After gazing at him
+closely the man said, "You have a credit face,
+so I will do as you ask."</p>
+
+<p>It is worth while to have a face that insures<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+confidence. But let it be remembered that the
+possession of such a face is not an accident; it
+belongs only to those who have the courage to
+think honestly, deal fairly and live truly.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />V<br />
+FINDING HIS LIFE</div>
+
+<p>During the boyhood of Charles Abraham
+Hart, who was later the youngest soldier in the
+War with Spain, he was on confidential terms
+with his mother. One day when they were
+visiting together, she asked him about something
+that had happened the winter before,
+which she was unable to understand. His father
+had given to him and to his brothers two
+dollars each to spend for Christmas presents.
+William spent the entire sum, but Charles
+bought cheap presents, and it was evident that
+he had kept back a part of the amount. Other
+members of the family misunderstood him,
+but his mother thought she knew him well
+enough to be sure he had done nothing selfish.</p>
+
+<p>The record of the conversation between
+mother and son is told in the boy's biography:</p>
+
+<p>"The presents you bought were very cheap
+presents," she said to him. "I don't think they
+could have cost more than seventy-five cents."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"They cost sixty-five cents," he told her.</p>
+
+<p>"And your father asked what you had done
+with the rest of your money, and you said you
+didn't want to tell him."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I remember that father thought I was
+stingy, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mind telling me now what you did
+with the money?"</p>
+
+<p>The boy did not answer for a few moments.
+Then he said, quietly:</p>
+
+<p>"I bought a Bible for Fred Phillips. He
+didn't have a good Bible, and I thought he
+needed one more than you and the boys needed
+expensive presents."</p>
+
+<p>"But why didn't you tell your father?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because Fred was ashamed not to be able
+to buy the Bible for himself, and he wouldn't
+take mine until I had promised that I wouldn't
+tell anybody that I had given it to him. Since
+Fred has moved to Boston, I feel he wouldn't
+care if I told you. I want you to know, for I
+just heard to-day that Fred has joined the
+church. Isn't that good news?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed. Perhaps your giving him the
+Bible helped him to do it, too. Charles, when
+you get to be a man, do you suppose you will
+always be so careless of how others may misunderstand
+you?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I am not careless of that now," he declared.
+"The desire to be popular is one of the things I
+have to fight against all the time."</p>
+
+<p>What shall we choose? Comfort of service?
+Ease, or honorable performance of duty? The
+desire for popularity, or the purpose to be of
+use? Service is the best way to find comfort;
+honorable performance of duty is the sure road
+to the only ease worth while, and thoughtfulness
+for others is the open sesame to popularity.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing new in this statement. It
+is only one of the thousand and one possible
+applications of the lesson taught by the great
+Teacher when He said, "He that loseth his
+life for My sake shall find it."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER FIVE</h2>
+
+<h3><i>COURAGE FOR THE SAKE OF OTHERS</i></h3>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>FROM Norway comes a moving tale of a
+lighthouse keeper. One day he went to the
+distant shore for provisions. A storm arose, and
+he was unable to return. The time for lighting
+the lamp came, and Mary, the elder child, said
+to her little brother, "We must light the lamp,
+Willie." "How can we?" was his question. But
+the two children climbed the long narrow stairs
+to the tower where the lamp was kept. Mary
+pulled up a chair and tried to reach the lamp in
+the great reflector; it was too high. Groping
+down the stairs she ascended again with a
+small oil lamp in her hand. "I can hold this
+up," she said. She climbed on the chair again,
+but still the reflector was just beyond her
+reach. "Get down," said Willie, "I know
+what we can do." She jumped down and he
+stretched his little body across the chair.
+"Stand on me," he said. And she stood on the
+little fellow as he lay across the chair. She
+raised the lamp high, and its light shone far<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+out across the water. Holding it first with
+one hand, then with the other, to rest her
+little arms, she called down to her brother,
+"Does it hurt you, Willie?" "Of course
+it hurts," he called back, "but keep the
+light burning."</div>
+
+<p>The boy was wise beyond his years. He
+would do the important thing, no matter how
+it hurt. Here the thing of chief importance
+was looking out for the men at sea. To put
+them first took real courage. But what of it?
+That is the attitude toward life of the worker
+worth while; he does not stop to ask, "Is this
+easy?" Instead he asks, "Is this necessary?
+Will it be helpful?" Having answered the
+question he proceeds to do his best. It may
+hurt at first, but the time will come when it
+will hurt so much to leave the service undone
+that the inconvenience involved in doing it is
+lost sight of.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />I<br />
+IMPARTING COURAGE</div>
+
+<p>A young man won local fame as a bicycle
+long-distance rider. But over-fatigue, possibly
+coupled with neglect, caused contraction
+of certain muscles. He was unable to stand
+erect. He walked with bent back, like an old<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+man. "What useful work can he do, handicapped
+as he is?" his friends asked.</p>
+
+<p>But he did not lose courage. He continued
+to smile and make cheer for others. Finally he
+secured work in the office of the supervisor of a
+National Forest. And he made good. Most
+of his activities were at the desk; when he sat
+there his back was normal.</p>
+
+<p>According to the idea of many, it would have
+been enough for the crippled man to look out
+for himself. What could he do for others?
+But he had not been trained in such a school;
+the cheerfulness that enabled him to be useful
+made it impossible for him to see another in
+need and not plan to do something for him.</p>
+
+<p>The man who needed him was at hand&mdash;a
+cripple, whose feet were clumsy, misshapen.
+No one else thought that anything could be
+done for him but to speak dolefully and to assure
+him that he was fortunate in having parents
+and brothers who would look out for him.</p>
+
+<p>But the man in the Forestry Service urged
+the cripple to apply for a summer appointment
+on the rocky, windy summit of a mountain
+nine thousand feet high. There it would be
+his duty to keep a vigilant eye on the forest
+stretching far away below his lofty eyrie, and
+to report the start of a forest fire. At first he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+laughed at the idea; had he not been told that
+he could never hope to do anything useful?
+Yet as he listened to his friend his eyes began
+to sparkle. Finally he dared to agree to make
+application for the position.</p>
+
+<p>During the winter months the forester spent
+many evenings with his friend, coaching him in
+some of the lore of the forests, giving him books
+to read, and showing him what his specific
+duties would be, and how to perform them.</p>
+
+<p>In the spring the situation was secured, and
+when the season of forest fires came the young
+man bravely climbed the steep trail over the
+snow to his lonely cabin. An able-bodied man
+is able to make the climb from the end of
+the wagon road in much less than an hour;
+the cripple required more than five hours to
+reach the top. Then he took up his residence
+there, cooking his own food, making his observations
+from morning until night, receiving his
+mother and his brothers when from time to
+time they came to see how he was getting on
+and to help him in some of the rougher tasks
+about the cabin. They thought they would
+need to speak words of cheer to a lonely, discouraged
+man, but they soon learned their
+error; not only did he have cheer enough for
+himself, but he was able to send his visitors away<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+happier than when they came because of their
+contact with the man for whom life had been
+made over by the acts of a thoughtful friend,
+a friend whose own courage had been increased
+by his efforts to encourage a friend.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />II<br />
+CONQUERING HAPPINESS</div>
+
+<p>In a volume of short stories published some
+years ago there is included the vivid narrative
+of two humble citizens of an Irish village, a
+husband and wife, upon whom hard times have
+come. The husband is too feeble to make his
+living as of old at his trade as a road-mender.
+Their only hope is a son in America, and not a
+word comes from him, so they are compelled to
+go to the poor house.</p>
+
+<p>Friends condole with them, and they are sad
+enough to suit the notions of those who feel
+that an awful ending is coming to their lives.
+One of the saddest of their friends is their physician
+who dreads going to see the unhappy old
+people in their new home. At last, however, he
+drives to the entrance to the poor farm. There
+he has his first surprise. Instead of seeing the
+disreputable place he had been accustomed to,
+he notices that the gate is on its hinges, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
+weeds by the side of the driveway are no longer
+in evidence, and an attempt has been made to
+give the house itself a more presentable appearance.
+About the doors are no discontented-looking
+old people, quarreling with one another.
+And when the wife of the poor farm keeper
+answers his knock at the door, the doctor
+hardly recognizes her; instead of a discouraged-looking
+slattern she is actually neat and
+cheerful looking.</p>
+
+<p>"You wonder what has happened here,
+don't you?" the woman remarks. "It's all because
+of those blessed old folks you are asking
+for. They were disheartened, just at first, but
+soon they began to do helpful things for the
+rest of the folks. That cheered us all up,
+and it's made a different place of the farm."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor's errand that day is to take word
+to the couple that their son from America
+wishes them to spend the remainder of their
+days with him. He has expected them to be
+overjoyed by the news. But, after talking
+together of the invitation, they assure him
+that their place is where they are. "We be
+road-mending here, making ways smoother
+for the folks that have rough traveling," is
+the explanation. "We think we ought to bide
+at the farm."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Thus the old people took the way of conquering
+unhappiness made known so long ago
+by Him who set the example of finding joy in
+caring for other people, the way taken by a
+modern follower of His who wrote home from
+the army:</p>
+
+<p>"I cast my lot where I knew the road would
+be rough, and why should I complain? It
+seems to me at times that I must give way to
+my lower self and let the work slip off my back
+on others perhaps more tired than myself.
+But I have a tender, kind Father in heaven
+who tells me that my way is right. I have very
+little to uphold me in this work away from my
+friends. My happy moments are those which
+I spend with my Bible during my night
+watches, or thinking of happy days gone by,
+or building me air-castles for days to come.
+I am happy, too, when I read the little verse
+written in the front of my Testament, and so
+thankful for the power to understand it:</p>
+
+<div class='poem'>
+"So nigh is grandeur to our dust,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">So near is God to man,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">When duty whispers low, 'Thou must,'</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">The youth replies, 'I can.'"</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Yet there are those who insist that it is the
+duty of one whose lot is hard to be morose and
+sad; that by covering his sadness with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
+gladness of service he is making a cheat of
+himself! In verse a writer with insight has
+pilloried such critics:</p>
+
+<div class='poem'>
+"He went so blithely on his way,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">The way men call the way of life,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">That good folks who had stopped to pray,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Shaking their heads, were wont to say,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">It was not right to be so gay</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Upon that weary road of strife.</span><br />
+<br />
+"He whistled as he went, and still<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">He bore the young where streams were deep,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">He helped the feeble up the hill,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">He seemed to go with heart athrill,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Careless of deed and wild of will&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">He whistled, that he might not weep."</span><br />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />III<br />
+MAKING LITTLE THINGS COUNT</div>
+
+<p>There are people who spend so much time
+looking for the large, spectacular opportunities
+for serving others, that they pass by as unworthy
+of notice the opportunities for doing
+what seem to be little kindnesses. Fortunately,
+however, there are people who are so taken
+up with rendering what they call little services,
+that they have no time to worry because the
+big opportunities do not come their way.</p>
+
+<p>A magazine writer tells of one of these doers
+of simple kindnesses:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I was the shabbiest girl in the office," she
+says. "It was no one's fault and no one's
+shame that we were poor. I had intelligence
+enough to know that. I knew, too, what a sacrifice
+mother had made to pay for my tuition
+at business school. Still, the knowledge of my
+shabby clothes forced itself upon me, particularly
+my old black skirt! Mother had cleaned
+it and pressed it and cleaned it, but it seemed
+bent with age, and all the office girls looked so
+fresh and pretty in their trim business suits.
+I imagined all the first morning that they were
+pitying me and felt them looking at my shabbiness,
+and during noon hour I was so miserable;
+but when I went back next morning, I noticed
+that one of the girls had on nearly as old clothes
+as I did, and she was so nice to me that I fancied
+she was glad I had come because of our
+mutual poverty. Not until after I earned
+enough money to buy some suitable, nice clothes
+did I realize that the 'poor girl,' as I thought
+her, had drifted back into the prettiest, most
+tasteful clothes worn by any of the girls. She
+had only borne me company at a most trying
+time, and she knew, because her fellow-workers
+all admired her, that the little object lesson
+would keep them from hurting my feelings.
+The day has come now when new clothes are<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
+usual, when I may even achieve an appearance
+that is known as 'stylish.' But in my office,
+when a girl comes in shabby, painfully sensitive,
+as I was, I 'bear her company' until the
+better times shall come."</p>
+
+<p>From another observer comes the story of
+the simple deeds of kindness done by a company
+of young people in Brooklyn to a young
+woman married to an elderly and uncongenial
+man. She showed symptoms of taking
+her life into her own hands. She felt that
+the world owed her happiness, and she was
+tempted to take it anywhere it might be found,
+especially in one undesirable direction. She
+was poor and outside of many ordinary social
+pleasures. The word was passed along the line
+that Mrs. D.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. needed especial attention and
+friendliness shown her. Immediately one girl,
+whose notice was in itself a compliment, invited
+her to attend a concert with her. Two
+more volunteered to see her home from Sunday
+school, and call for her as well. Books were
+loaned her, calls made, and in brief, a rope of
+warm sturdy hands steadying her over the hard
+place in the road, until she found herself and
+settled down to the duty she was on the point
+of leaving forever.</p>
+
+<p>The widespread hunger for such little kindnesses<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+was shown one day when a New York
+man accosted in Central Park a poor foreigner,
+who could speak little English. Noting that
+the man looked dejected, he offered him his
+hand. Then he asked the man if he was in
+need. "No, I don't need money," was the reply;
+"I was just hungry for a handshake."
+Blessings on those who are not too busy to
+think of the poor who are hungry for the little
+services they can render.</p>
+
+<p>If they could know the ultimate effect of
+some of their deeds, these would not always
+seem insignificant. The man who is always on
+the lookout for little chances for service is more
+apt to perform services that are of great importance,
+than the man who spends his time
+dreaming of big things he will do some day.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />IV<br />
+DID HE GO TOO FAR?</div>
+
+<p>When an urgent call went out from Washington
+for physicians to go to France for hospital
+work among the men of the American Expeditionary
+Force, a specialist in a city of the
+Middle West decided to respond. Of course
+some of his friends told him he was foolish;
+they urged that he was needed for service at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+home. "Let doctors go who can be spared
+better than you," they said. "Think of the
+great work you are doing&mdash;work that will be
+more than ever necessary because thousands
+of others are leaving practices and going to the
+Front. Think of your past&mdash;how you worked
+your way through medical college at cost of
+severe toil; think of your family and the increasing
+demands on you; think of the future&mdash;what
+will become of your lucrative practice?"</p>
+
+<p>The specialist did think of these things; he
+had delayed decision because the arguments
+had presented themselves forcibly to his
+own mind.</p>
+
+<p>At last, however, his mind was made up.
+He would go to France. He would leave his
+patients in charge of two capable friends who
+would do everything possible to turn over, on
+the return of the volunteer, the lucrative office
+practice built up through many years.</p>
+
+<p>He spent six months in camp with the members
+of the hospital unit of which he was given
+charge. Just before he went "over there" a
+friend said to him:</p>
+
+<p>"It is fortunate that your practice is to be
+cared for so efficiently."</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?" was the reply. "Oh, you
+mean the colleagues who took over my patients?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+They, too, have enlisted, and will soon
+be going abroad."</p>
+
+<p>"But what of your $35,000 income?" was
+the dismayed rejoinder. "Surely you haven't
+the courage to give up all that!"</p>
+
+<p>The major snapped his fingers, and said,
+with a smile, "<i>That</i> for the practice! It is
+my business to respond to my country's
+call. Don't talk of the sacrifice. What if
+I do have to start all over again when I
+come home? Just now I don't have to think
+about that."</p>
+
+<p>This incident came to mind when reading in
+a popular weekly a telling story, camouflaged
+as to names, location and business, but recorded
+as the experience of a captain of industry.
+The story made him a manufacturer of
+shoes who, in the beginning, was rejoicing that
+his plants were running full time, turning out
+so many shoes for the regular trade that the
+profits of the year were bound to be tremendous.
+With others, he heard the plea of the
+Government for shoes for the soldiers. Carefully
+he assured himself that he would not need
+to respond; there were many manufacturers
+who would rush headlong for government contracts.
+When he learned that there were not
+enough volunteers he felt uncomfortable.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+Then, to his relief, he was asked to take the
+chairmanship of the subcommittee on shoes
+of the State Council of Defense.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do it!" he decided. "That will let me
+out honorably. As chairman I shall be criticized
+if I bid on the contracts myself."</p>
+
+<p>Of course he learned his mistake. At length
+he decided to turn over one of his six plants to
+government contracts. The decision made
+him feel quite virtuous. Content was his only
+a little while, however. So he decided to devote
+another plant. Yet when he made his
+figures he thought he would add five cents a
+pair to his bid, as an extra margin of safety.
+Again his calculations were upset when his son
+told him that he had enlisted.</p>
+
+<p>"That wasn't necessary," the father said.
+"What made you do it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, dad, you know you'd expect me to
+feel ashamed if you didn't do just every little
+thing you could in a business way to help win
+this war&mdash;if you held back a shoe that would
+help the Government or charged a cent more
+than you ought to. You furnish the shoes and
+I'll furnish the shoots!"</p>
+
+<p>Of course more had to be done after that.
+Soon half the plants were enlisted for the country.
+Surely nothing more could be asked than<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+that he should go fifty-fifty, half for the country
+and half for himself.</p>
+
+<p>The remainder of the story can be imagined&mdash;in
+one form it was lived out in the experience
+of millions. "Why don't you have done with
+that half-way patriotism?" came a voice that
+he could not silence.</p>
+
+<p>The battle between Patriotism and Private
+Profits was decided gloriously&mdash;in the only
+possible manner. Away with fifty per cent.
+patriotism! Every one of the plants was put
+on Government orders.</p>
+
+<p>Naturally there were those who asked,
+"Was such a sacrifice necessary?" But the
+reply was convincing.</p>
+
+<p>That is the question that has been asked of
+Christians ever since the day when Christ said
+to Peter and Andrew, "Follow me." Our
+hearts are stirred by the simple record of what
+followed: "Straightway they left their nets,"&mdash;their
+livelihood, their associates, their families,
+their position in the world, everything&mdash;"and
+followed Him." The question was put to
+Prince Gallitzin when he renounced title and
+fortune and went to the mountains of Pennsylvania
+to make a home for some of his oppressed
+Russian countrymen. The words were
+hurled at the son of a wealthy English brewer,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+because he decided that if he would obey
+Christ fully he must renounce the source of his
+wealth as well as the money that had been
+made in an unrighteous business. The inquiry
+was heard many times by Matthias W. Baldwin,
+the builder of Old Ironsides and founder
+of the Baldwin Locomotive Works, when he
+gave up the making of jewelry because he
+thought that, as a Christian man, he ought to
+make his talents count for something more
+worth-while, and later on when he insisted on
+borrowing from the banks in time of financial
+panic to pay his pledges to Christian work.</p>
+
+<p>Still the query persists, as it will persist long
+as the world stands.</p>
+
+<p>You have heard it yourself, if you, like Caleb
+of old, are trying to follow God wholly. "Was
+the sacrifice necessary?"</p>
+
+<p>Beware of the question, for it is a temptation
+to slack service, though often spoken by one
+who would show himself a friend. Necessary?
+Of course. Isn't it involved in courageous
+following of Christ?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER SIX</h2>
+
+<h3><i>GOLDEN RULE COURAGE</i></h3>
+
+<div class='poem'>
+"There is so much good in the worst of us,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And so much bad in the best of us,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">That it hardly becomes any of us</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">To talk about the rest of us."</span><br />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>THAT popular rhyme hits the nail squarely
+on the head. We are not to judge others.
+The world would be a pleasanter dwelling
+place if we would lay aside our critical attitude,
+and look on the best side of the men
+and women about us. Instead, however, it
+sometimes seems as if we were determined to
+forget all the good, and remember only the evil.
+Our additions to the comments of others are
+not praise, but blame. We do not seek to correct
+an unfavorable comment by saying, "But
+think of the good there is in his life"; we insist
+on drowning merited praise by saying, "But
+think how selfish he is; how careless of the comfort
+of others!" That is the cowardly thing to
+do. And life calls for courage.</div>
+
+<p>The worst thing about the maker of such
+<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'mments'">comments</ins> is that the readier he is to see&mdash;or<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
+imagine&mdash;faults in another, the more blind he
+is apt to become to faults in himself. This
+inability to see his own shortcomings would be
+ludicrous if it were not so pitiful. Yet these
+shortcomings are apparent to all who know
+him. Jesus, who knew human nature, said,
+"Judge not, that ye be not judged .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. first
+cast out the beam out of thine own eye; then
+shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out
+of thy brother's eye."</p>
+
+<p>The courageous task of reforming ourselves
+seems prodigious when we think what good
+opinions we have of ourselves and what poor
+opinions we have of others, but the task is not
+impossible, for God has promised to give us
+the help we need, and He will never disappoint
+us. An earthly father knows how to give
+good things to his children; shall not the
+Heavenly Father do as much and more?</p>
+
+<p>Since we have such a Father, it is the least
+we can do to learn of Him the true philosophy
+of life. Listen while He tells us what it is:</p>
+
+<p>"All things, therefore, whatsoever ye would
+that men should do unto you, even so do ye also
+unto them."</p>
+
+<p>Impossible and impracticable? Let us see.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />I<br />
+LOOKING OUT FOR OTHERS</div>
+
+<p>The president of a big manufacturing concern,
+who is also its active operating head,
+is quoted as saying that he finds a growing
+tendency among young men to go after business
+by sharp practice when they cannot get it
+any other way. They will "cut the corners of
+a square deal to land an order." In applying
+for positions, he goes on to say, some young
+fellows have tried to recommend themselves
+by telling how they got orders for former
+employers by some neat trick.</p>
+
+<p>"I have had to tell them, square and plain,"
+he adds, "that there wasn't any recommendation
+in that kind of talk with me. I have made
+up my mind that I am going to write out some
+plain talks on righteousness and post them up
+around the offices and shops where everybody
+will have a chance to read them. I have explained
+my plan about these bulletins to a
+number of other manufacturers, and I think
+several of them are going to do the same thing.
+Besides the moral reasons for the policy, it's
+the only policy to build up a sound business on.
+Take even the men who would be willing to
+make profit for themselves by shady deals,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
+and they all want to buy goods for themselves
+of a firm that they can depend on. I think our
+history this past year has proved the wisdom
+of it; business has been rolling in from points
+that we never had an idea of getting anything
+from. The Golden Rule works."</p>
+
+<p>Nathan Strauss was once asked what contributed
+most to his remarkable success. "I
+always looked out for the man at the other end
+of the bargain," he said.</p>
+
+<p>In 1901 the State of Wisconsin struck a
+beautiful bronze medal in honor of Professor
+Stephen Moulton Babcock, the inventor of
+the milk test machine. Professor Babcock, so
+one admirer says, "knew its value to farmer
+and dairyman. He also knew its possibilities
+of fortune for himself. This invention has
+'increased the wealth of nations by many millions
+of dollars and made continual new developments
+possible in butter and cheesemaking.'
+All this Professor Babcock knew it would do
+when he announced his discovery in a little
+bulletin to the farmers of Wisconsin. But at
+the bottom of that bulletin he added the brief
+and unselfish sentence, 'this test is not patented.'
+With that sentence he cheerfully let
+a fortune go. He wanted his invention to help
+other people, rather than make himself rich."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>What a difference it would make if everyone
+should take the Golden Rule as the motto for
+each day, asking Christ's help in living in accordance
+with it! What a difference it would
+make in every home if father and mother and
+all the sons and daughters should resolve to
+make theirs a Golden-Rule household! The
+first thing necessary in bringing about such a
+change in the home is for one member to make
+the resolution and to do his best to live up to it.
+Others will follow inevitably when they note
+his careful, unselfish life and helpful acts.</p>
+
+<p>There is a Jewish tradition that a Gentile
+came to Hillel asking to be taught the law, in a
+few words, while he stood on one foot. The
+answer was given, "Whatsoever thou wouldst
+that men should not do to thee, that do not
+thou to them." This was good, as far as it
+went, but there was nothing positive about it.
+Christ's teaching supplies the lack, showing
+what we are to do as well as what we are to
+leave undone. Christ always gives the touch
+required to make old teachings glow with life.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />II<br />
+SUCCEEDING BY COURAGEOUS SERVICE</div>
+
+<p>When John E. Clough was a student working
+his way through college, he was employed
+in a menial capacity at a hotel in a western
+town. His employer was absent for a season
+and the student was compelled to take charge
+of the hotel. He was successful, for he learned
+how to handle men of many sorts, how to provide
+for their comfort, how to make them feel
+that he was doing his best for them.</p>
+
+<p>Years later, when he was a missionary in India,
+it became necessary for him to plan for the
+temporary entertainment of the men and
+women who came to the mission station by
+hundreds, and even by thousands, seeking
+Christian baptism. For days it was necessary to
+provide for their comfort. Many men would
+have been dismayed by the task, but to Dr.
+Clough the problem presented was simple; he
+had only to do on a large scale the very things
+which made his boyhood efforts at hotel-keeping
+such a pronounced success.</p>
+
+<p>Experience in a hotel is a good course of preparation
+for any young man, whether he plans
+to be a missionary or to serve in any of the home
+callings that demand the Christian's time and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+thought. However, it is not possible for more
+than a very small proportion of young people
+to serve a period in a hotel; so it will be helpful
+to them to read some of the suggestions that
+have been made by a successful hotel proprietor.
+Those who heed these suggestions are
+apt to be successful in dealing with men and
+women anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>It is worth while to note some of these rules:</p>
+
+<p>"The hotel is operated primarily for the
+benefit and convenience of its guests.</p>
+
+<p>"Any member of our force who lacks the intelligence
+to interpret the feeling of good will
+that this hotel holds toward its guests, cannot
+stay here very long.</p>
+
+<p>"Snap judgments of men often are faulty.
+The unpretentious man with the soft voice
+may possess the wealth of Croesus.</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot afford to be superior or sullen
+with any patron of the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>"At rare intervals some perverse member of
+our force disagrees with a guest as to the rightness
+of this or that.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Either may be right.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
+In all discussions between hotel employees and
+guests, the employee is dead wrong from the
+guest's standpoint, and from ours.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>"Each member of our force is valuable only
+in proportion to his ability to serve our guests.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Every item of extra courtesy contributes
+towards a better pleased guest, and every
+pleased guest contributes toward a better,
+bigger hotel.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;."</p>
+
+<p>Yet a young man should not have to go to a
+hotel to learn these lessons. They were taught
+in the Book that every one of us should know
+better than any other book in our library.
+Listen to these messages of the Book, and compare
+them with the rules of the hotel:</p>
+
+<p>"Not looking each of you to his own things,
+but each of you also to the things of others.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>"Be tenderly affectioned one to another, in
+honor preferring one another.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>"Judge not that ye be not judged.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The
+rich and the poor meet together: Jehovah is
+the maker of them all.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>"Better it is to be of a lowly spirit.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>"He that is slow in anger appeaseth strife.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>"I am among you as he that serveth.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye are the light of the world.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;."</p>
+
+<p>The best book for anyone who is trying to be
+a success in the world is the Bible, for the Bible
+teaches how to serve, and he who has the courage
+best to serve his fellows in the name of the
+great Servant is the most successful man.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />III<br />
+SERVICE BY SYMPATHY</div>
+
+<p>It has been said that, while the word
+"sympathy" does not occur in the Bible,
+the idea is there; it is in bud in the Old
+Testament, but it is in full blossom in the
+New Testament. Christ was always sympathetic.
+He felt for the disturbed host at the
+wedding; His heart went out to Zaccheus;
+He wept with Mary and Martha; He listened
+to the plea of the blind and the lepers; He
+was deeply stirred as He saw the funeral procession
+of him who was the only son of his
+mother, a widow.</p>
+
+<p>An eloquent preacher was talking to his people
+of this glorious flower of the Christian life.
+"Beholding the lily," he said, "sympathy
+breathes a prayer that no untimely frost may
+blight the blossom; beholding the sparrow,
+sympathy fills a box with seeds for the birds
+whose fall 'the Heavenly Father knoweth'; beholding
+some youth going forth to make his
+fortune, sympathy prays that favorable winds
+may fill these sails and waft the boy to fame
+and fortune. Do the happy youth and maiden
+stand before the marriage altar, the Christian
+breathes a prayer that love's flowers may<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
+never fall, and that 'those who are now young
+may grow old together.'"</p>
+
+<p>One of the pleasing stories told of Richard
+Harding Davis, the writer and war correspondent,
+was of an incident when real sympathy
+transformed him.</p>
+
+<p>In May, 1898, when the Massachusetts
+troops were about to go from Florida to Cuba,
+Mr. Davis entered the encampment as the
+men were saddened by the first death in the
+company. At once his cheerful face took on a
+subdued look. The next day proved to be "a
+broiling dry hot day which set the blood
+sizzling inside of one," but Davis tramped for
+two hours in the search of flowers. Then he
+learned that eight miles away he might secure
+some. Though no one was abroad who did
+not have to be, Mr. Davis started on a
+sixteen-mile horseback trip. Securing the
+flowers, he brought them back and made a
+cross of laths on which he tied them. Then
+came the search for colors to make the flag.
+Again he tramped a weary distance, but at
+last he found red, white and blue ribbon.
+That night he laid his tribute on the casket.</p>
+
+<p>An American author who lived several generations
+before Davis was noted for his sympathetic
+attitude to the suffering. Richard<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
+Henry Dana was compelled when a young man
+to take a voyage around Cape Horn on a sailing
+ship. That classic of the sea, "Two Years
+Before the Mast," was one of the results of
+that experience. Another result was that
+when the author became a lawyer in Boston,
+his knowledge of ships made him a favorite advocate
+in nautical cases. His knowledge of the
+sufferings of the men before the mast, who
+were so often abused, was responsible for his
+taking their part in many an unprofitable case.
+He had learned by bitter experience what the
+sailors under a brutal captain had to suffer,
+and any mistreated seaman had in him a firm
+friend and a fearless pleader.</p>
+
+<p>The truest sympathy comes from those who,
+like Dana, know what suffering means. An
+author in Scotland, who lived in Dana's generation,
+never heard of the American friend of
+seamen, but he had the same spirit, born of
+his own suffering. He was not accustomed to
+complain, and was always reticent in speaking
+of himself. Once, however, for the sake of a
+friend, he allowed himself to tell of his own life:</p>
+
+<p>"With all your sorrows I sympathize from
+my heart," he wrote. "I have learned to do
+so through my own sufferings. The same feeling
+which made you put your hand into your<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+pocket to search among the crumbs for the
+wanting coin for the beggar, leads me to
+search in my heart for some consolation for
+you. The last two years have been fraught to
+me with such sorrowful experiences that I
+would gladly exchange my condition for a
+peaceful grave. A bankrupt in health, hope
+and fortune, my constitution shattered frightfully,
+and the almost certain prospect of being
+a cripple for life before me, I can offer you as fervent
+and unselfish a sympathy as ever one heart
+offered another. I have lain awake, alone, and
+in darkness, suffering severe agony for hours,
+often thinking that the slightest aggravation
+must make my condition unbearable and finding
+my only consolation in murmuring to myself
+the words patience, courage and submission."</p>
+
+<p>That, surely, is a part of what Robert Louis
+Stevenson meant when, as one element in his
+statement of the ideal for the perfect life, he
+named "to be kind." True kindness is impossible
+without sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>So long as there is so much real sympathy
+in the world there can be no place for the
+maunderings of a pessimist. Every sight of a
+man, a woman or a child whose life is beautified
+by the outgoing of sympathy is an effective
+message of courage, of cheer, of hope.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />IV<br />
+DOING BUSINESS FOR OTHERS</div>
+
+<p>A Boston boy, Samuel Billings Capen,
+wanted to become a minister. Yet it did not
+seem possible to secure the special training
+which was essential. Instead of being discouraged,
+he determined to go into business.</p>
+
+<p>But he resolved that he would be a business
+man of God. From the first he carried his
+Christian principles with him into the carpet
+business. His faithful work as office boy was a
+part of his testimony for Christ, and when&mdash;within
+five years&mdash;he became a member of
+the firm, he was known as one of the solid
+Christian men of the city. Always his duty to
+Christ came first. In the words of his biographer,
+"There was not a moment when he
+would not have left the firm with which he was
+associated had the business demanded any
+compromise with the best things of character."</p>
+
+<p>Once he spoke to young men of these few
+things essential to vital living:</p>
+
+<p>"The first is fidelity&mdash;that kind of conscientiousness
+which performs the smallest details
+well.</p>
+
+<p>"The second condition is earnestness.
+There is no chance for the idle or indifferent.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The third condition is integrity&mdash;not that
+lower form which refuses to tell a downright
+falsehood, but that higher form of conscientiousness
+which will not swerve a hair's breadth
+from the strictest truth, no matter what the
+temptation; the courage to lose a sale rather
+than to do that which is mean or questionable.</p>
+
+<p>"The fourth condition I would name is purity
+of heart and life. I do not believe it is
+possible for any man to be true and pure and
+faithful in every respect without help from
+above. We need the personal help of a
+personal God."</p>
+
+<p>Thirteen years after beginning his service as
+apprentice, Mr. Capen's health failed. For
+many months his life was in danger. God used
+the sickness to draw the young man nearer to
+Himself. "Compelled to remain for months in
+absolute idleness, unable to talk to his friends
+except to a limited extent, he made the solemn
+resolve with his God that if his health was
+restored he would never shirk any work nor
+complain of any task that might be presented
+to him."</p>
+
+<p>For a generation he was not only a leader in
+business, but he was as conspicuous in his service
+of the State as in his services in the Church.</p>
+
+<p>Why did he succeed? He was not a genius.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+His health was poor. He was not mentally
+brilliant. In these respects he was just an average
+man. But in other respects he was above
+the average. He had the courage to give himself
+in service of his fellows. "He believed
+that conscious fellowship with God is the foundation
+of every strong life."</p>
+
+<p>A life like that influenced for good everyone
+about him. Many men were drawn by him into
+the paths of righteousness. Others were held
+back by him from ways of evil. Once he presided
+over a public meeting which corrupt politicians
+had planned to capture for their own purpose.
+But they made no attempt to carry out
+their plans. "How could we succeed with that
+man watching us?" they asked their friends.</p>
+
+<p>It is good to be a minister of the gospel. But
+for every minister the world needs hundreds of
+men who are possessed of Samuel B. Capen's
+courageous eagerness to live for God in the
+midst of business cares.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />V<br />
+PRAYING AND HELPING</div>
+
+<p>A business man entered the office of a friend
+just as the friend was hanging up the receiver
+of the telephone. There were tears in the eyes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+of the man at the desk as he turned from the
+instrument to take the hand of his visitor.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid you have had bad news," the
+visitor said, deciding that it was not a propitious
+time to talk of the matter on which he
+had come.</p>
+
+<p>"No bad news&mdash;the best of news," was the
+reply. "Now see if you don't agree with me.
+This morning my wife, who is always thinking
+of other people, remarked that it was too
+bad my pastor's wife could not have a vacation
+this summer; she shows the need of it <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'be-because'">because</ins>
+of a severe strain that had been on her.
+Yet we knew that she could not look forward
+to a vacation.</p>
+
+<p>"'Let's pray about it,' my wife suggested,
+just before we knelt at the family altar. We
+prayed then; we've been praying since. And
+the answer has come quickly. My wife was on
+the telephone just now; she told me that the
+postman had brought a letter from a California
+friend of whom we had all but lost sight. Fifteen
+years ago we lent him a sum of money
+which we never expected to see again. Yet
+the letter contained a check for the amount
+of the loan!</p>
+
+<p>"'What shall we do with the money?' my
+wife asked.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'I wonder if you are not thinking the same
+thing I am,' I said to her.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, isn't it the answer to our prayer?'
+she replied. 'I'm going to take it to our pastor's
+wife right now.'"</p>
+
+<p>The business man was thoughtful as he
+passed from his friend's office. Just a few hours
+before he had been told by an acquaintance of
+his longing, when on a long trip, to have such a
+glimpse of the life of one of the many passengers
+near him that he would be able to help
+that passenger before the end of the journey.
+The wish was a prayer. Not long after the
+making of the prayer he noted a man who was
+so restless that he could not sit still. Every
+moment or two he looked at his watch, then
+studied his time table. Evidently he was disturbed
+because the train was late.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you are not to lose a connection in
+Chicago?" the observing traveler said to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I'll miss it&mdash;and my baby is dying
+five hours from Chicago," was the response,
+given with a sob.</p>
+
+<p>The time was short, but there was opportunity
+for the interchange of a few words, then for
+a conference with the conductor, who wired asking
+that the connecting train&mdash;at another station
+and on another road&mdash;be held for ten minutes.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A week later came a note from the happy
+father. His babe was rapidly recovering.
+"And I'll never forget the words you spoke to
+me in my agony," he wrote. "God is more
+real to me since our talk as we went into Chicago.
+You put heart into me."</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />VI<br />
+GIVING THAT COUNTS</div>
+
+<p>An old fable tells of a good man to whom the
+Lord said he would give whatever he most desired.
+Besought by friends to ask great things,
+he refused. Finally he asked that he might be
+able to do a great deal of good without ever
+knowing it. And so it came about that every
+time the good man's shadow fell behind him
+or at either side, so that he could not see it, it
+had the power to cure disease, soothe pain and
+comfort sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>When he walked along, his shadow, thrown
+on the ground on either side or behind him,
+made arid paths green, caused withered plants
+to bloom, gave clear water to dried up brooks,
+fresh color to pale little children, and joy to
+unhappy mothers.</p>
+
+<p>But he simply went about his daily life, diffusing
+virtue as the star diffuses light and the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+flower perfume, without ever being aware of it.
+And the people, respecting his humility, followed
+him silently, never speaking to him
+about his miracles. Little by little, they even
+came to forget his name, and called him only
+"The Holy Shadow."</p>
+
+<p>It would be a splendid thing if all would
+learn the lesson taught in the fable&mdash;that the
+man who would do good should have the courage
+to be unconscious of the good he is doing,
+and so as unlike as possible the rich woman of
+whom some one has told, who turned a deaf
+ear to every petition for help unless there was
+a subscription paper circulated and she was
+given the chance to head the list. "But no
+poor person came into her house who said,
+'May God reward you!' She never experienced
+the pleasure of making a poor woman on the
+back stairs happy with a cup of warm coffee,
+or hungry children with a slice of bread and
+butter, or an infirm man with a penny. Perhaps
+she satisfied her conscience by saying that
+she did not believe in indiscriminate charity.
+Frequently that excuse is given conscientiously
+but how often the real meaning is, 'I do not
+believe in charity that does not make people
+talk of my generosity.'"</p>
+
+<p>In the Sermon on the Mount Jesus taught<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
+the folly of giving in such a manner. The lesson
+was enforced by two pictures&mdash;a man
+standing on the street, giving alms to the poor,
+while attention is called to his generosity by
+the sounding of a trumpet which everyone
+must hear, and a man whose giving is so much
+a matter of secrecy that he does not think of it
+a second time. There is no rolling of it over as
+a sweetmeat under his tongue, as if to say,
+"What a generous man I am!" Nor is there
+any motive in the giving but pure desire to
+glorify God. All this is properly included in
+the interpretation of "Let not thy left hand
+know what thy right hand doeth."</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />VII<br />
+EXPENSIVE ECONOMY</div>
+
+<p>A magazine editor offered a prize for the
+best account by a reader of the adjustment of
+income and expenditure made necessary by
+the vaulting prices of recent years. The prize
+was awarded to one whose revised budget
+showed the revision downward of many items,
+and the elimination of two or three other items.
+The comparison of the budgets was interesting
+and helpful; most readers would be apt to approve
+heartily all but one of the changes and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+eliminations. This was the exception: the
+earlier budget allowed five dollars per month
+for "church and charity," while the revised
+budget made no mention of the claims of
+others, no provision for the privilege of giving.</p>
+
+<p>If you had been a judge in that contest,
+would you have felt like giving the prize to a
+paper that suggested such an omission? Suppose
+you had the task of cutting your budget,
+would you feel like revising downward the provision
+for giving? What do you think of the
+statement of a famous business man who, having
+insisted in time of financial reverses on
+making gifts as usual, said to objecting friends,
+"Economy should not begin at the house of
+God." Why not let economy begin there?</p>
+
+<p>What answer would have been given to such
+a query by the poor tenement dweller in New
+York City who, though compelled to earn the
+support of her family by scrubbing floors in a
+great office building, set aside a dollar and a half
+per week for the care of four orphans in India
+who but for her gifts would have starved?</p>
+
+<p>What answer would have been made by the
+Polish Jew, long resident in America, who directed
+in his will that regular gifts be made at
+Christmas and Easter to the Christians as well
+as to the Jews of his home town in Europe?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
+That bequest was made in memory of days
+and nights of terror when, as a boy, he hid in
+the house from the fiendish persecutions of so-called
+Christians who thought Easter and
+Christmas favorable times for the intimidation
+of the Jews. What would he have said to
+the idea of economy that forgets the needs of
+others and makes no provision for satisfying
+the hungry, to help the suffering?</p>
+
+<p>What would have been the comment of Him
+who told the parable of the rich man who built
+great barns to hold the surplus product of his
+lands, thinking that there was nothing better
+in life than to eat, drink, and be merry; who
+compared the gifts of the rich man and the
+poor widow; who commended the love of the
+woman who poured out the costly ointment
+upon His head; who promises glorious recognition
+to those who give, in His name, to any
+who are in need?</p>
+
+<p>A successful manufacturer, whose eyes have
+been opened to the folly of attempting to save
+by cutting off gifts, has written a series of essays
+on "The Business Man and His Overflow,"
+his purpose being to show that happiness
+is dependent on helpfulness. "Who is the
+most successful business man?" he asks.
+"The man who has the largest bank account?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+Not necessarily.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The most successful business
+man is he who renders the greatest service
+to mankind and whose life is most useful."</p>
+
+<p>Two paths are open to us: we can give, and
+we can give more, or we can economize in giving
+until we give nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Which is the path of courage?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER SEVEN</h2>
+
+<h3><i>COURAGE THROUGH COMPANIONSHIP</i></h3>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>THE world is full of lonely people&mdash;people
+who keep to themselves, turning away
+from every approach of others, from all invitations
+to come out of retirement. They persist
+in living alone, thinking their own thoughts,
+pleasing only themselves.</div>
+
+<p>"I can have no place in my life for friendship,"
+one of these unfortunates says.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't be expected to devote myself to my
+family; it is all I can do to make a living," is
+the complaint of another.</p>
+
+<p>"I live in the present," says a third; "the
+past has no interest for me, and the future
+holds nothing but worries."</p>
+
+<p>"Live more out-of-doors, you say!" is the
+word of a fourth. "Why should I bother
+about Nature when Nature does nothing but
+thwart me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Make God my friend?" a fifth asks in surprise.
+"Talk to me in rational terms. God
+doesn't bother about me; why should I bother
+about Him?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Is it any wonder that the lives of so many
+everywhere are empty? It does not occur to
+them that by their determination to isolate
+themselves they cut themselves off from the
+surest road to courage, both received and given&mdash;the
+road of companionship with the people
+and things most worth while.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />I<br />
+COMPANIONSHIP WITH FRIENDS</div>
+
+<p>There are those who say that friendship is a
+lost art; that modern life is too busy for friendship.
+"Why don't you pause long enough to
+call on B&mdash;&mdash;?" a father asked his son; "you
+used to be such good friends." "Oh, I haven't
+time for that now," was the careless reply; "if
+I am to get ahead, I feel I must devote myself
+only to those things that can be a decided help
+to my advancement."</p>
+
+<p>The mistake made by that son is emphasized
+by the advice of a keen old man, spoken
+to a business associate: "If I were asked to
+give advice to a group of young men who
+wanted to get ahead in business, I would
+simply say, 'make friends.' As I sat before the
+fire the other night I let my mind run back,
+and it was with surprise that I learned that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
+many of the things which in my youth I credited
+to my ability as a business man came to
+me because I had made influential friends who
+did things for me because they liked me. The
+man who is right has the right kind of friends,
+and the man who is wrong has the kind of
+friends who are attracted by his wrongness.
+A man gets what he is."</p>
+
+<p>Possibly some will think that advice faulty
+in expression, for it seems at first glance to put
+friendship on a coldly calculating basis, as if it
+urged the maker of friends to say before consenting
+to try for a man's friendship, "Is
+there anything I can get out of such a friendship
+for myself?" Of course it is unthinkable
+that anyone should estimate friendship in that
+way; friendship that calculates is unworthy
+the name, and the calculator ought to be
+doomed to the loneliest kind of life. But, evidently,
+what the adviser had in mind is the
+spirit that makes friends because it is worth
+while to have friends for friendship's sake, that
+never counts on advancement through the
+efforts of others. Such a spirit is bound to be
+surprised some day by the realization that for
+his success he owed much to the friends whom
+he made without a thought of self.</p>
+
+<p>One beginner in business decided that he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
+must find his friendships in serving others.
+There were those who told him he was making
+a mistake, but he went calmly on, devoting
+hours each week to service with an associate in
+a boys' club. Nothing seemed to come of this
+but satisfaction to himself and joy to a group
+whose homes were cheerless. <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Yes'">Yet</ins>, there was
+something more&mdash;the pleasure of friendship
+with his associate. One day he was surprised
+by an invitation to call on the head of a large
+manufacturing concern. "You don't know
+me," the man said, "but I know you, for you
+have been teaching with my son down at the
+boys' club. For a long time I have been on the
+lookout for a young man who can come into
+this business with a view to taking up the work
+with my son when I must retire. From what I
+have heard your friend, my son, tell of you,
+you are the man I have sought."</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible to count on a thing like that
+as a result of friendship, and the man who is
+worthy of such a friendship never thinks of
+reckoning on anything but giving to his friend
+the best that is in him as he enjoys the comfort
+of association with him.</p>
+
+<p>Many years ago the author of <i>The Four
+Feathers</i> wrote of such a friendship between
+two men:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It was a helpful instrument, which would
+not wear out, put into their hands for a hard,
+lifelong use, but it was not and never had been
+spoken of between them. Both men were
+grateful for it, as for a rare and undeserved
+gift; yet both knew that it might entail an
+obligation of sacrifice. But the sacrifices, were
+they needful, would be made, and they would
+not be mentioned."</p>
+
+<p>It has been well said that "Love gives and
+receives, and keeps no account on either side,"
+but that is very different from deliberately using
+friendship for selfish ends.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />II<br />
+SUCCESSFUL COMRADES</div>
+
+<p>For days two men had been together, tramping,
+driving, boating, eating, sleeping, talking.
+And when the time for separation came, one said
+to the other: "Will you please give a message to
+your wife? Tell her for me, if you will, that she
+has made her husband into a real comrade."</p>
+
+<p>That man would have been at a loss to tell
+what are the elements that go to the making
+up of a good comrade. In fact, he intimated
+as much on the last day of the excursion.
+"You can no more tell the things that go to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+make up a real comrade than you can explain
+the things that make a landscape beautiful;
+you can only see and rejoice."</p>
+
+<p>Just so, it is possible to see instances of good
+comradeship and rejoice.</p>
+
+<p>In order that there may be real comradeship
+between two individuals it is not at all necessary
+that they shall belong to the same station
+in life. One of those to whom John Muir, the
+great naturalist, proved himself a true comrade
+was a guide who many times went with him
+into the fastnesses of the high Sierras of California.
+"It was great to hear him talk," the
+guide has said. "Often we sat together like
+two men who had always known each other.
+It wasn't always necessary to talk; often there
+would be no word said for half an hour. But
+we understood each other in the silence."</p>
+
+<p>Nor is it essential that people shall be much
+together before they can be real comrades.
+Theodore Roosevelt and Joel Chandler Harris
+knew one another by reputation only until the
+red letter day when Uncle Remus entered the
+door of the White House, in response to an
+urgent letter of invitation in which the President
+wrote: "Presidents may come and presidents
+may go, but Uncle Remus stays put. Georgia
+has done a great many things for the Union,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+but she has never done more than when she
+gave Joel Chandler Harris to American literature."
+When the two animal-lovers finally
+came together there was real comradeship.
+That the reporters understood this was evident
+from the wire one of them sent to his paper:
+"Midnight&mdash;Mr. Harris has not returned to
+his hotel. The White House is ablaze with
+light. It is said that Mr. Harris is telling the
+story of Br'er Rabbit and the Tar Baby." But
+the Georgian's own colloquial account of the
+memorable session with his comrade at Washington
+was more explicit:</p>
+
+<p>"There are things about the White House
+that'll astonish you ef ever you git there while
+Teddy is on hand. It's a home; it'll come over
+you like a sweet dream the minnit you git in
+the door.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It's a kind of feelin' that you
+kin have in your own house, if you've lived
+right, but it's the rarest thing in the world that
+you kin find it in anybody else's house.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
+We mostly talked of little children an' all the
+pranks they're up to from mornin' till night,
+an' how they draw old folks into all sorts of
+traps, and make 'em play tricks on themselves.
+That's the kinder talk I like, an' I could set
+up long past my bedtime an' listen to it. Jest
+at the right time, the President would chip in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
+wi' some of his adventures wi' the children.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
+I felt just like I had been on a visit to
+some old friend that I hadn't seen in years."</p>
+
+<p>When Robert Louis Stevenson and Edward
+Livingston Trudeau spent days together at
+Dr. Trudeau's Adirondack sanitarium&mdash;the
+one as patient, the other as physician&mdash;they
+proved that true comradeship is possible even
+when men's tastes are most unlike. It was
+possible because they knew how to ignore differences
+and to find common ground in the
+worth-while things. "My life interests were
+bound up in the study of facts, and in the laboratory
+I bowed duly to the majesty of fact,
+wherever it might lead," Dr. Trudeau wrote.
+"Mr. Stevenson's view was to ignore or avoid
+as much as possible unpleasant facts, and live
+in a beautiful, extraneous and ideal world of
+fancy. I got him one day into the laboratory,
+from which he escaped at the first opportunity.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
+On the other hand, I knew well I could
+not discuss intelligently with him the things
+he lived among and the masterly work he produced,
+because I was incompetent to appreciate
+to the full the wonderful situations his
+brilliant mind evolved and the high literary
+merit of the work in which he described the
+flights of his great genius."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Yet these two men were great companions,
+for in spite of differences as to details, their
+hopes and ambitions and ideals all pointed to the
+best things in life. After the author's departure,
+he sent to the doctor a splendidly bound set of
+his works, first writing in each volume a whimsical
+bit of rhyme, composed for the occasion.</p>
+
+<p>Though all of these men were real comrades,
+there is a higher manifestation of comradeship
+than this. This was shown in the relation of
+Daniel Coit Gilman, later President of Johns
+Hopkins University, when he wrote to a fellow
+student of the deepest things in his life:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't wish merely to thank you in a general
+way for writing as you did an expression of
+sympathy, but more especially to respond to
+the sentiments on Christian acquaintance
+which you there bring out. I agree with you
+most fully and only regret that I did not know
+at an earlier time upon our journey what were
+your feelings upon a few such topics. I tell
+you, Brace, that I hate cant and all that sort
+of thing as much as you or anyone else can do.
+It is not with everyone that I would enjoy a
+talk upon religious subjects. I hardly ever
+wrote a letter on them to those I know best.
+But when anyone believes in an inner life of
+faith and joy, and is willing to talk about it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+in an earnest, everyday style and tone, I do
+enjoy it most exceedingly."</p>
+
+<p>Theodore Storrs Lee cultivated the relation
+of a comrade with his fellow students that he
+might talk to them, without cant, on the deepest
+things of life. His biographer says:
+"Many a time did he seek out men in lonely
+rooms, bewildered or weakened by the college
+struggles. Many a quiet talk did he have as he
+and his selected companion trod his favorite
+walk. No one else in college had so many intimate
+talks with so many men.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. On one
+occasion, when he was urging a friend to give
+his life to Christian service, he seemed to be
+unsuccessful&mdash;until, on leaving the man at the
+close of the walk, he made a genial, large-minded
+remark that opened the way to the
+heart of his friend." .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. "It was only natural
+that I should try to meet him half-way," the
+friend said later, in explanation of his own
+changed attitude. He had been won by real
+comradeliness. "It was this devotion to the
+men in college that led him into the holy of
+holies of many a man's heart," wrote a friend,
+"causing many of us to feel in a very real way
+the sentiment expressed by Mrs. Browning:</p>
+
+<div class='poem'>
+"The face of all the world is changed, I think<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Since first I heard the footsteps of thy soul."</span><br />
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />III<br />
+COMPANIONSHIP WITH THE PAST</div>
+
+<p>What, courage from companionship with the
+past? The pessimist says, "Impossible! The
+past was so much better than the present. See
+how the country is going to the dogs!" and
+they point to the revelations of dishonesty
+in high places. "There were no such blots on
+our records when the country was young."</p>
+
+<p>A public man gave an effective answer to
+such croakers when he said:</p>
+
+<p>"As we go on year by year reading in the
+newspapers of the dreadful things that are occurring;
+wicked rich men, wicked politicians
+and wicked men of all kinds, we are apt to feel
+that we have fallen on very evil times. But
+are we any worse than our fathers were? John
+Adams, in 1776, was Secretary of War. He
+wrote a letter which is still in existence, and
+told of the terrible corruption that prevailed in
+the country; he told how everybody was trying
+to rob the soldiers, rob the War Department,
+and he said he was really ashamed of the times
+in which he lived. When Jefferson was President
+of the United States it was thought that
+the whole country was going to be given over
+to French infidelity. When Jackson was President<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
+people thought the country ruined, because
+of his action in regard to the United
+States Bank. And we know how in Polk's time
+the Mexican War was an era of rascality and
+dishonesty that appalled the whole country."</p>
+
+<p>It is a mistake to look back a generation or
+two and say, "The good old days were better
+than these." In the address already referred
+to the speaker continued:</p>
+
+<p>"Only thirty years ago, on my first visit to
+California, I went with a friend to the mining
+district in the Sierras. One summer evening
+we sat upon the flume looking over the landscape.
+My friend was a distinguished man of
+great ability. In the distance the sun was setting,
+reflecting its light on the dome of the Capitol
+of the state, at Sacramento, twenty miles
+off. He turned to me and said suddenly: 'I
+would like to be you for one reason, that you
+are thirty years younger than I am, and they
+are going to be thirty of the greatest years the
+world has ever seen.' He is dead now, but his
+words were prophetic. He and I used to talk
+about how we could send power down into the
+mines. An engine would fill the mine with
+smoke and gases, and yet we must have power
+to run the drills, etc., using compressed air.
+How easy to-day, just to drop a wire down and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+send the power of electricity! At that time
+there was but a single railroad running across
+the continent, which took a single sleeping car
+each day. Look at the difference now, with
+six great trunk lines sending out more than
+a dozen trains, and more than a hundred
+sleeping cars each day."</p>
+
+<p>Students of American history know something
+of the fears of early adherents of the
+United States Government lest the republic
+prove a failure, and of the threats of doubters
+and disaffected citizens to do their best to replace
+the republic by a monarchy. But comparatively
+few realize how great were the fears,
+and how brazenly the prophecies were spoken.</p>
+
+<p>An examination of "The Complete Anas of
+Thomas Jefferson," the collection of private
+memoranda made by the patriot when he was
+successively Secretary of State, Vice-President,
+and President, discloses the fact that some of the
+gravest of these fears were held by those high
+in authority, and that the prophecies of evil
+came from men who were leaders in the nation.</p>
+
+<p>On April 6, 1792, President Washington, in
+conversation with Jefferson, "expressed his
+fear that there would, ere long, be a separation
+of the Union, that the public mind seemed dissatisfied
+and tending to this." On October 1,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
+1792, he spoke to the Secretary of his desire to
+retire at the end of his term as President.
+"Still, however, if his aid was thought necessary
+to save the cause to which he had devoted
+his life principally, he would make the sacrifice
+of a longer continuance."</p>
+
+<p>On April 7, 1793, Tobias Lear, in conversation
+with Jefferson, spoke pessimistically of the
+affairs of the country. The debt, he was sure,
+was growing on the country in spite of claims
+to the contrary. He said that "the man who
+vaunted the present government so much on
+some occasions was the very man who at other
+times declared that it was a poor thing, and
+such a one as could not stand, and he was sensible
+they only esteemed it as a stepping-stone
+to something else."</p>
+
+<p>On December 1, 1793, an influential Senator
+(name given) said to several of his fellow
+Senators that things would never go right
+until there was a President for life, and a
+hereditary Senate.</p>
+
+<p>On December 27, 1797, Jefferson said that
+Tenche Coxe told him that a little before Alexander
+Hamilton went out of office, he said:
+"For my part I avow myself a monarchist; I
+have no objection to a trial being made of this
+thing of a republic, but, .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. etc."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>On February 6, 1798, it was reported to
+Jefferson that a man of influence in the Government
+had said, "I have made up my mind on
+this subject; I would rather the old ship should
+go down than not." Later he qualified his
+words, making his statement hypothetical,
+by adding, "if we are to be always kept
+pumping so."</p>
+
+<p>On January 24, 1800, it was reported to
+Jefferson that, at a banquet in New York, Alexander
+Hamilton made no remark when the
+health of the President was proposed, but that
+he asked for three cheers when the health of
+George III was suggested.</p>
+
+<p>On March 27, 1800, the Anas record: "Dr.
+Rush tells me that within a few days he has
+heard a member of Congress lament our separation
+from Great Britain, and express his
+sincere wishes that we were again dependent
+on her."</p>
+
+<p>On December 13, 1803, Jefferson told of the
+coming to President Adams of a minister from
+New England who planned to solicit funds in
+New England for a college in Green County,
+Tennessee. He wished to have the President's
+endorsement of the project. But "Mr. Adams
+.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. said he saw no possibility of continuing the
+union of the States; that their dissolution must<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+take place; that he therefore saw no propriety
+in recommending to New England men to promote
+a literary institution in the South; that
+it was in fact giving strength to those who were
+to be their enemies, and, therefore, he would
+have nothing to do with it."</p>
+
+<p>One who reads bits like these from Jefferson's
+private papers appreciates more fully
+some of the grave difficulties that confronted
+the country's early leaders; he rejoices more
+than ever before that the United States
+emerged so triumphantly from troubled waters
+until, little more than a century after those
+days of dire foreboding, it was showing other
+nations the way to democracy; he takes courage
+in days of present doubt and uncertainty,
+assured that the country which has already
+weathered so many storms will continue to
+solve its grave problems, and will be more than
+ever a beacon light to the world.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />IV<br />
+COMPANIONSHIP WITH NATURE</div>
+
+<p>"Look at the World," is the advice David
+Grayson gives to those who follow him in his
+delightful essays on Great Possessions&mdash;possessions
+that cannot be measured with a yardstick<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
+or entered in the bank book. This is his
+cure for all the trials and vexations that come
+in the course of a busy life. For how can a man
+remain unsettled and morose and distressed
+when he is gazing at the broad expanse of the
+sky, studying the beauty of the trees, or listening
+to the mellow voices of the birds? How
+can the wanderer in field and forest forget that
+God is love?</p>
+
+<p>Some people think that to drink in the glories
+of nature they must go to the mountains,
+or seek some other far-away spot. Mistake!
+The place to enjoy God's world is just where
+one is, and the time is that very moment. This
+was the lesson taught so impressively by Alice
+Freeman Palmer, when she described the little
+dweller in the tenements who resolved to see
+something beautiful each day, and who, one day,
+when confined to the house, found her something
+in watching a rain-soaked sparrow drinking
+from the gutter on the tin roof. And this
+was the thought in the mind of Mr. Grayson
+when he said:</p>
+
+<p>"I love a sprig of white cedar, especially the
+spicy, sweet inside bark, or a pine needle, or
+the tender, sweet, juicy end of a spike of timothy
+grass drawn slowly from its sheath, or a
+twig of the birch that tastes like wintergreen."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Hamlin Garland, in "A Son of the Middle
+Border," has told the story of his boyhood on
+an Iowa farm. He knew how to enjoy the
+sights to which so many are blind:</p>
+
+<p>"I am reliving days when the warm sun,
+falling on radiant slopes of grass, lit the
+meadow phlox and tall tiger lilies to flaming
+torches of color. I think of blackberry thickets
+and odorous grapevines, and cherry-trees and
+the delicious nuts which grew in profusion
+throughout the forest to the north. The forest,
+which seemed endless and was of enchanted
+solemnity, served as our wilderness. We explored
+it at every opportunity. We loved every
+day for the color it brought, each season
+for the wealth of its experiences, and we welcomed
+the thought of spending all our years in
+this beautiful home where the wood and the
+prairie of our song did actually meet and mingle.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
+I studied the clouds. I gnawed the
+beautiful red skin from the seed vessels which
+hung upon the wild rose bushes, and I counted
+the prairie chickens as they began to come together
+in winter flocks, running through the
+stubble in search of food. I stopped now and
+again to examine the lizards unhoused by the
+shares, .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and I measured the little granaries
+of wheat which the mice and gophers had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+deposited deep under the ground, storehouses
+which the plow had violated. My eyes dwelt
+enviously on the sailing hawk and on the
+passing of ducks.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Often of a warm day I
+heard the sovereign cry of the sand-hill crane
+falling from the azure throne, so high, so far,
+his form could not be seen, so close to the sun
+that my eyes could not detect his solitary,
+majestic, circling sweep.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. His brazen, reverberating
+call will forever remain associated in
+my mind with mellow, pulsating earth, spring
+grass and cloudless glorious May-time skies."</p>
+
+<p>Henry Fawcett lived at about the same period
+in a rural district in England. He, too, delighted
+to ramble in the fields. One day, when
+he was out hunting with his father, an accidental
+gunshot deprived him of his eyesight.
+But the boy would not think of shutting himself
+away from the joys of nature which meant
+so much to him. "I very soon came to the resolution
+to live, as far as possible, just as I had
+lived before.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. No one can more enjoy catching
+a salmon in the Tweed of the Spey, or
+throwing a fly in some quiet trout stream in
+Wiltshire or Hampshire."</p>
+
+<p>In the story of the life of John J. Audubon
+an incident is told that shows how the greatest
+joy can be found in what seems like one of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+most ordinary things in the life of the forest&mdash;the
+nesting of the birds:</p>
+
+<p>"He became interested in a bird, not as large
+as the wren, of such peculiar grey plumage that
+it harmonized with the bark of the trees, and
+could scarcely be seen. One night he came
+home greatly excited, saying he had found a
+pair that was evidently preparing to make a
+nest. The next morning he went into the
+woods, taking with him a telescopic microscope.
+The scientific instrument he erected under the
+tree that gave shelter to the literally invisible
+inhabitants he was searching for, and, making a
+pillow of some moss, he lay upon his back, and
+looking through the telescope, day after day,
+noted the progress of the little birds, and, after
+three weeks of such patient labor, felt that he
+had been amply rewarded for the toil and the
+sacrifice by the results he had obtained."</p>
+
+<p>When a boy David Livingstone laid the
+foundation for the love of the open that helped
+to make his life in Africa a never-ending delight.
+"Before he was ten he had wandered
+all over the Clyde banks about Blantyre and
+had begun to collect and wonder at shells and
+flowers," one of his biographers says.</p>
+
+<p>Not far away, also in Scotland, Henry Drummond
+spent his boyhood. He, too, knew the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
+pleasure of wandering afield. He liked to go
+to the rock on which stands grim Stirling Castle,
+and look away to the windings of the crooked
+Forth, the green Ochil Hills, and, farther away,
+Ben Lomond, Ben Venue, and Ben Ledi, the
+guardians of the beautiful Highland lochs. He
+was never weary of feasting his eyes on them.
+In later years he would go back to the scenes
+of his boyhood, climb to the Castle, and,
+looking out on the beautiful prospect, would
+say "Man, there's no place like this; no place
+like Scotland."</p>
+
+<p>Bayard Taylor first made a name for himself
+by his ability to see the things that many
+people pass by, and to describe them sympathetically.
+But he, also, in boyhood days
+learned the lesson that paved the way for later
+achievements. He was not six years old when
+he used to wander to a fascinating swamp near
+his Pennsylvania home. If the child was
+missed from the house, the first thing that suggested
+itself was to climb upon a mound which
+overlooked the swamp. Once, from the roof of
+the house, he discovered unknown forests and
+fresh fields which he made up his mind to explore.
+Later, in company with a Quaker
+schoolmaster, he took long walks, and thus
+learned many things about the trees and plants.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+When he was twelve he began to write out the
+thoughts that came to him in this intimate
+study of nature.</p>
+
+<p>In far-away Norway Ole Bull had a like experience.
+At an early age he began to be on
+familiar terms with the silent things about
+him. The quality of his later work was influenced
+by the grandeur of the scenery in which
+he lived. To him trees, rocks, waterfalls,
+mountains, all spoke a language which demanded
+expression through the strings of his
+violin; he turned everything into music. His
+biographer says:</p>
+
+<p>"When, in early childhood, playing alone in
+the meadow, he saw a delicate bluebell moving
+in the breeze, he fancied he heard the bell ring,
+and the grass accompanying it with most exceptionally
+fine voices."</p>
+
+<p>John Muir, who later wrote of the great Sequoias
+of California and the glaciers of Alaska,
+when a boy of ten found delight in scenes of
+which he wrote as follows:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that glorious Wisconsin wilderness!
+Everything new and pure in the very prime of
+spring, when nature's pulses were beating highest
+and mysteriously keeping tune with our
+own! Young hearts, young leaves, flowers,
+animals, the winds and the streams and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+the sparkling lake, all wildly, gladly rejoicing
+together."</p>
+
+<p>There is something missing in the life of one
+who cannot enter into the feelings of a boy like
+Muir or Taylor or Drummond. And when
+such a boy grows up, the gap in the life will be
+more conspicuous than ever.</p>
+
+<p>Think of the poverty of the stranger to
+whom a traveler, feeling that he must give expression
+to his keen delight in the autumn
+foliage, said, "What wonderful coloring!"
+"Where?" came the reply. "Oh, the trees!
+Well, I'm not interested in trees. Talk to me
+about coal. I know coal."</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />V<br />
+COMPANIONSHIP WITH GOD</div>
+
+<p>Some people insist that it is impractical
+moonshine to speak of making a companion of
+God, that folks who talk about such things are
+dreamers, far removed from touch with the
+cold reality of daily life.</p>
+
+<p>Then how about the nephew of whom Dr.
+Alexander MacColl told at Northfield? He
+was surely a practical man. For four years he
+had been in the thick of the fighting in France.
+Yet at the close of one of his letters to his uncle<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+he said: "I hope when the war is over that I
+may be able to spend a month somewhere
+among the hills. I often think that if more
+people in the world had lived among such hills
+as we have in Scotland there would have been
+no world war."</p>
+
+<p>"When I came yesterday afternoon, and
+saw again the glory of these hills," was Dr.
+MacColl's comment, "I found myself sharing
+very deeply in that feeling of my good nephew,
+and wishing that more people in the world
+had known what it is to commune with God
+in the silences."</p>
+
+<p>That fine young Scotchman would have
+known how to take a college student who,
+while having a country walk with a friend, was
+explaining the reason for his belief in God and
+his trust in Him. As he concluded his message
+he pointed to a large tree which they were
+passing, saying as he did so, "God is as real
+to me as that tree."</p>
+
+<p>He had a right to say such a thing, for he not
+only believed, but he was conscious that God
+was with him, his Companion wherever he
+went. This being the case, prayer became for
+him the simplest and most natural thing in the
+world. God was by his side; then why should
+not he talk to God, by ejaculation as well as by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+more formal utterance? Yet his talks with
+God never became formal. They were always
+intimate and confidential&mdash;like the approaches
+of Principal John Cairns, the famous Scotch
+minister. His biographer tells of a time when
+he was at the manse of a country minister in
+whose church he was to preach next day. The
+minister's wife withdrew to get a cup of tea for
+the old man, leaving her little boy there. By
+and by she heard a strange, unaccustomed
+sound, as it seemed to her under such conditions.
+And as she listened and looked, she saw
+that the old man was kneeling with the boy.
+It had seemed to him the most natural thing in
+the world to speak to his Great Friend about
+his little friend.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Arthur Smith was like that with God,
+and his son Henry took after him. One January
+day in 1905 the father reached New York
+from China and sought his son. They went to
+a hotel room to bridge the time of absence by
+"a tremendous lot of back conversation," as
+the son wrote to the mother. But before they
+had any chance to talk of other matters the
+father said, "Come, boy, let's have a prayer."
+"Wasn't that just like him?" Henry asked
+his mother.</p>
+
+<p>A minister who was spending his vacation in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+the northern woods was called in to see a dying
+lumberman. Before leaving the visitor prayed
+with the sick man, and suggested that he pray
+for himself. The objection was made that it
+was useless to pray&mdash;God understood a man's
+trials, and He knew what was wanted before a
+request was made. The minister asked him if
+he didn't know what his children needed before
+they asked him, if he didn't know they were
+disappointed or troubled; yet didn't he wish to
+have them talk over these things with him?</p>
+
+<p>The man thought a moment. Then he said,
+"Do you think that would be prayer&mdash;just for
+me to lie here and tell God what He knows
+already&mdash;how it hurts, and all my disappointment,
+and my anxiety for the future of my
+children and my wife&mdash;and everything&mdash;just
+to tell Him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think it would," said the minister. "I
+think it would be prayer of a very real kind."</p>
+
+<p>One who had learned that prayer is not a
+mere formal exercise, to be dreaded and postponed,
+has said:</p>
+
+<p>"Pray often&mdash;in bits, with a persistency of
+habit that betrays a childlike eagerness and absorption.
+Rise up to question God as children
+do their earthly parents&mdash;at morning, noon
+and night and between times. Ask Him about<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
+everything. Be with Him more than with all
+other persons. Acquire the home habit with
+Him. Be a child in His hands. Do not fear
+lest He be too busy to listen, or too grown up
+to care or to understand. Just talk to Him,
+in broken sentences, half-formed with crude
+wishes; in foolish chatter, if need be. Make the
+Heavenly Father the center of your life, the
+source and judge of all your satisfactions. Be
+sure to let Him put you to bed, waken you in
+the morning, wait on you at table, order your
+day's doings, protect you from harm, soothe
+your disquiet, supply all your daily needs."</p>
+
+<p>Such a prayer is good, not only when one is
+sick, but when one is well and busy with the
+affairs of daily life. A clergyman has told of a
+visit to London during which he called on a
+merchant whom he had met in America. At
+the business house he was told that he could
+not see the merchant, as it was steamer day,
+and orders had been given not to disturb him.
+But when the card was taken up, the merchant
+appeared, his face beaming with pleasure.
+After a moment's greeting the visitor offered
+to go away, but the merchant took him into
+his office, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad you have called. I would
+not have had you fail. I am very busy, but I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+always have a moment for my Lord. I have a
+little place for private prayer. You must come
+in with me, and we shall have a season of
+prayer together."</p>
+
+<p>Busy, but not too busy for prayer, longing
+to see his friend, but eager to spend the ten
+minutes of the call in prayer with that other
+Friend who made the brief visit worth while!</p>
+
+<p>In telling this incident, one writer on the
+subject of prayer has said:</p>
+
+<p>"Several, perhaps many merchants in one of
+our large cities have fitted up for themselves
+dark, narrow, boxlike closets, whither, each
+by himself, they are wont to retire for a few
+minutes at times, during the pressure of the
+day's business, for the refreshment of soul,
+which they find they really need in communion
+with God. One of these men is reported to
+have said: 'On some days, if I had not that
+resort, I believe I should go mad, so great is
+the pressure.'"</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Purves once told an incident of the distinguished
+scientist, Professor Joseph Henry,
+as given him by one of Dr. Henry's students.
+"I well remember the wonderful care with
+which he arranged all his principal experiments.
+Then often, when the testing moment
+came, that holy as well as great philosopher<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
+would raise his hand in adoring reverence and
+call upon me to uncover my head and worship
+in silence, 'because,' he said, 'God is here. I
+am about to ask God a question.'"</p>
+
+<p>To Mary Slessor of Calabar, whom the Africans
+learned to love devotedly, prayer was as
+simple and easy as talking to a friend in the
+room. "Her religion was a religion of the
+heart," her biographer says. "Her communion
+with her Father was of the most natural,
+most childlike character. No rule or habit
+guided her. She just spoke to Him as a child to
+its father when she needed help and strength,
+or when her heart was filled with joy and gratitude,
+at any time, in any place. He was so real
+to her, so near, that her words were almost of
+the nature of conversation. There was no formality,
+no self-consciousness, no stereotyped
+diction, only the simplest language from a
+quiet and humble heart. It is told of her that
+once, when she was in Scotland, after a tiresome
+journey, she sat down at the tea table
+alone, and, lifting up her eyes, said, 'Thank
+you, Father&mdash;ye ken I'm tired,' in the most
+ordinary way as if she had been addressing her
+friend. On another occasion in the country,
+she lost her spectacles while coming from a
+meeting in the dark. She could not do without<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+them, and she prayed simply and directly,
+'O Father, give me back my spectacles!' A
+lady asked her how she obtained such intimacy
+with God. 'Ah, woman,' she said, 'when I am
+out there in the bush, I have often no other
+one to speak to but my Father, and I just
+talk to Him.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.'"</p>
+
+<p>"I just talk to Him!" There is the secret of
+getting and keeping close to the Father, the
+most worth-while Companion we can possibly
+have with us on country walk, on vacation excursion,
+amid business perplexities, in the desert
+or in the thronged city street, when the
+days are crowded with burdens, or when the
+time of rest after work has come.</p>
+
+<p>Try Him and see if it is not so.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />VI<br />
+A CHAPTER OF&mdash;ACCIDENTS?</div>
+
+<p>A man had planned a three-day trip with
+care. On paper everything looked promising
+for a combination of business and pleasure that
+would make these days stand out in the record
+of the year.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning he would go to Washington.
+There he would have opportunity to see in one
+of the Departments a man whose help in an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+emergency would prove invaluable. At four
+in the afternoon he would leave for Cincinnati.
+By taking the train he would miss a bit of
+scenery at Cumberland, which he had hoped to
+see. This could not be helped, however, for by
+the train he would be set down in Cincinnati in
+good season for the important one-day session
+of a committee, the primary object of the trip.</p>
+
+<p>To be sure, he would have to miss another
+important committee meeting at home, unless
+he should forego the Washington stop. But
+would it not be worth while to miss one of the
+meetings when he did not see how he could
+well arrange for both?</p>
+
+<p>The ticket was bought and reservation was
+made. Then interruption number one came.
+Most unexpectedly there was a call from a
+neighbor to render such a service as can be
+given but once in a lifetime. Yet that difficult
+service must be rendered at the moment when,
+according to program, he would be taking the
+train for Washington.</p>
+
+<p>Of course there could be no question as to
+his course. Instead of going to Washington
+and seeing the man with whom conference
+would mean so much, he must take train by a
+route more direct. This would enable him to
+reach Cincinnati in season for the committee<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+meeting; and it would enable him also to
+attend the committee meeting at home which
+he had decided to put aside for the sake of the
+Washington opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>After serving his neighbor and attending the
+home meeting&mdash;this turned out to be so important
+that to miss it would have been little
+short of a calamity&mdash;the direct train for Cincinnati
+was taken, though not without a sigh
+for the lost opportunity in Washington.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the sigh was forgotten when on that
+train he became acquainted with three fellow-passengers
+who gave him some new and needed
+glimpses of life.</p>
+
+<p>A study of time tables showed him that he
+could return by way of Washington, and could
+have two hours for the interview there on
+which he had counted so much, before the hour
+came for completing the homeward journey.</p>
+
+<p>After a successful committee meeting in Cincinnati,
+the importance of which proved to be
+even greater than had been anticipated, the
+train for Washington was taken at the Cincinnati
+terminal. At the moment this train
+was due to leave, there drew in on an adjoining
+track cars from which weary, anxious-looking
+passengers alighted. "What train is that?"
+was the question that came to his lips.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Number two, boss," the porter replied.
+"Left Washington at four yesterday afternoon.
+She's ten hours late, 'count of that big wreck
+down in the mountains."</p>
+
+<p>And that was the train he had planned to
+take after finishing his business in Washington!
+If he had taken it, what of his touch with the
+Cincinnati meeting?</p>
+
+<p>In thankful spirit, and with the resolve renewed
+for the ten thousandth time that he
+would cease to question God's wisdom in
+thwarting his little plans, he went to his berth.
+First, however, he included in his evening
+prayer a petition that the train might not be
+late in reaching Washington, since the time
+there would be short enough, at best.</p>
+
+<p>Three hours later he roused with the start
+that is apt to come with the intense silence
+that marks a long night wait of a train between
+stations. The delay was so prolonged
+that soon the time table showed the loss of
+three hours.</p>
+
+<p>There was one consolation, however: he
+would be able to pass during hours of daylight
+through the incomparable mountains of
+West Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>The unexpected blessing was forgotten when
+the train drew into the Washington station so<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
+near the close of the afternoon that the traveler
+thought he might as well go home at once.
+Later on, he might be able to make a special
+trip to the Capital. "And I might have finished
+my program without all that expense and
+trouble," he thought.</p>
+
+<p>But while he was there he decided he would
+call on the telephone the man in the department
+whom he wished to see. He told the
+man of his late train and his disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps it is just as well," was the word
+from the other end of the wire. "I have been
+afraid that the time set aside for our work this
+afternoon was altogether too short. What do
+you say to coming to me the first thing in the
+morning? Then we can devote to our program
+all the time that proves necessary."</p>
+
+<p>So he remained overnight. The evening
+gave him the chance he had sought for a year
+to spend an evening consulting authorities at
+the Congressional Library. Next morning the
+real business of the stopover was attended to.
+Then he learned why it would have been impossible
+to receive the afternoon before the
+attention he received during the morning
+hours. He knew, too, that it would have been
+out of the question to seek a second interview
+on the same business; therefore he would have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+had to rest content with the results of the
+first conference.</p>
+
+<p>The time came to take the train for the final
+stage of the journey. On that train his seat-mate,
+a man he had never seen before, perhaps
+never would see again, gave him a number of
+bits of vital information on the very business
+that had led him to Washington!</p>
+
+<p>Is it worth while to ask God to look out for
+the everyday needs of His people?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER EIGHT</h2>
+
+<h3><i>GOD THE SOURCE OF COURAGE</i></h3>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>"BE strong and of a good courage!" More
+than three thousand years ago the inspiring
+words were spoken by a great military
+leader to men about to undertake a tremendous
+task. Some of them were dismayed. The
+difficulties in the path appeared insurmountable.
+Their minds were filled with worries and
+fears and anxieties, until the present was heavy
+with doubt and the future loomed before them
+dread, angry, portentous. Their hearts were
+like water, until Joshua, the leader, with great
+confidence gave his message:</div>
+
+<div class='poem'>
+"Be strong and of a good courage&mdash;<br />
+"Only be strong and very courageous&mdash;<br />
+"Have not I commanded thee?<br />
+"Be strong and of a good courage.<br />
+"For Jehovah thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest."<br />
+</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />I<br />
+THAT'S FOR ME!</div>
+
+<p>Two men were going around the marvelous
+horseshoe curve on the Tyrone and Clearfield
+Division of the Pennsylvania Railroad when
+one called the attention of his companion to
+the most picturesque part of the way.</p>
+
+<p>"I was looking at that precipice when I had
+my first understanding of the fact that the
+Bible is a personal message; that I had the
+right to appropriate its words to my own life.</p>
+
+<p>"It was the summer following the end of my
+final year in college. A few months earlier I
+had reluctantly yielded to the urging, first of
+my physician, then of a nerve specialist, by
+turning my back on college at the vital portion
+of the year. They told me that if I persisted
+in remaining they would not answer for the
+consequences; they said I had applied myself
+unwisely to my books until my brain was in
+revolt. 'It is a grave question if you will ever
+be able to take the professional course to which
+you have been looking forward,' the specialist
+said. 'One thing is certain, however: if you do
+not do as you are told you will not do any
+real brain work the rest of your days.'</p>
+
+<p>"That scared me, for my heart was wrapped<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
+up in my plans for the future. I felt that life
+would not be worth while without some sort of
+active brain work. So I gave myself to a real
+bit of vacation. For months I cut myself loose
+from all books except the little copy of the
+Testament and Psalms which I carried with me
+more for form's sake than for any other reason,
+I fear. Daily as I tramped here and there in
+the wilds I read a verse or two, more because
+I thought I ought to do this than because I had
+any idea of receiving help.</p>
+
+<p>"Toward the close of the summer I submitted
+myself to a specialist who shook his
+head, at the same time declaring that it was
+doubtful if even yet I could go on with my
+plan. He wouldn't say it was impossible for
+me to do brain work, but he urged that the
+probabilities were against me. A second specialist
+told me the same thing.</p>
+
+<p>"So I faced the future as all summer long I
+had feared to face it. Finally my mind was
+made up to turn my back on professional studies.
+When the decision was made a suggestion
+came that I go into the mountains of Pennsylvania
+to investigate opportunity for a sort of
+work that I might do.</p>
+
+<p>"The journey was begun. As we left Tyrone
+to climb the mountains my spirits sank<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
+lower and lower. I rebelled against the idea of
+taking the offered opening. How I longed to
+enter professional school in two weeks! But
+I dared not do it. To be sure, the physicians
+said that they saw no reason why I should not,
+though they feared the result. Why not try
+it? I had used all available means for restoration
+of the brain to the old-time keenness. Yet
+it would be awful to try and fail. No, I did
+not dare.</p>
+
+<p>"So I was in the depths when my hand
+touched the pocket Testament and Psalms.
+Mechanically the book was opened, probably
+because of the unconscious realization that the
+daily portion had not yet been read. But listlessness
+was gone in an instant when my eyes
+fell on the words of Psalm 37:5:</p>
+
+<p>"'Commit thy way unto the Lord; trust also
+in Him, and He will bring it to pass.'</p>
+
+<p>"At first the words dazed me. Then I said:
+'That's for me, and I'll do it! I've spent the
+summer as the doctors said I must. Surely I
+am warranted in committing myself unto the
+Lord in just the way the Psalm says. Of
+course I can't be sure that the result of going
+back to school will be precisely what I hope;
+but I can trust, and do my best. Then if the
+attempt results in failure, I shall have the satisfaction<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+of knowing that I am following Him
+to whom I have committed my way.</p>
+
+<p>"Some of my friends thought it was folly to
+begin my professional course. Can you imagine
+my joy when, from the day school opened,
+I had no recurrence of my trouble? Of course
+I was very careful until I could feel sure of
+my health."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you explain your ability to go on
+with your studies?" his companion asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not trying to explain it," was the reply.
+"But without question the assurance
+that came to me with that text from the Psalm,
+the assurance that God is my God and that I
+have a right to count on Him, made me strong
+to face things to which I had been unequal
+only a few months before.</p>
+
+<p>"And is it strange that I have often wondered
+if there would have been any breakdown
+in college, if I had only known a little
+sooner of the strength that waits for those
+who, while putting forth their own utmost
+endeavor, at the same time count on God's
+unfailing strength?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />II<br />
+BANKING ON GOD'S PROMISES</div>
+
+<p>Isn't it strange that so many Christians
+while believing, theoretically, in the reality
+and trustworthiness of God's promises, do not
+have the same sort of practical belief in Him
+which they show in the promise of their bank
+to pay them, on demand, the sum written
+down in their book of deposit?</p>
+
+<p>And banks have been known to fail in keeping
+their very limited promises, while God has
+never failed in keeping His unlimited assurances
+of blessing.</p>
+
+<p>For so many the strange delusion that God's
+promises are not to be counted on in the same
+literal sense as the promises of our associates
+persists through life, but there are fortunate
+Christians who have their eyes opened to the
+truth. And what a difference the knowledge
+makes to them!</p>
+
+<p>F. B. Meyer told in one of his public addresses
+of the transformation wrought for him
+when his eyes were opened to the truth. As a
+boy of thirteen he had been a student at
+Brighton College. He was timid and sensitive,
+and the older students soon learned that they
+could make his life a burden to him. With a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+sigh of relief he went home at the end of the
+first week of school. On Sunday, however, the
+thought that he must return came to him with
+oppressing force. How could he stand up
+against the older students? He was idly turning
+the pages of his Bible when he came to the
+121st Psalm. "How voraciously I devoured
+it!" he said. "How I read it again and again,
+and wrapt it round me! How I took it as my
+shield! And the next day I walked into the
+great expanse in front of the college so serene
+and strong. It was my first act of appropriating
+the promises of God."</p>
+
+<p>Three years later the student was agonizing
+because he wanted to be a minister, yet feared
+to plan for the work because his voice was
+weak, and he feared that he would not have
+the courage to speak. He had been asking God
+to show him His will, and to help him in his
+difficulty. Then he found Jeremiah 1:7, and
+read it for the first time. "With indescribable
+feelings I read it again and again, and even now
+never come on it without a thrill of emotion,"
+he said of his experience. "It was the answer
+to all my perplexing questionings. Yes, I was
+the child; I was to go to those to whom He
+sent me, and speak what He bade me, and He
+would be with me and teach my lips."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Another man, who had learned to accept
+literally God's promise, "Ask, and it shall
+be given unto you," wrote gratefully of
+his experience:</p>
+
+<p>"My life is one long, daily, hourly record of
+answered prayer. For physical health, for
+mental overstrain, for guidance given marvelously,
+for errors and dangers averted, for enmity
+to the Gospel subdued, for food provided
+at the exact hour needed, for everything that
+goes to make up life and my poor service, I can
+testify with a full and often wonder-stricken
+awe that I believe God answers prayer. I
+know God answers prayer. Cavillings, logical
+or physical, are of no avail to me. It is the
+very atmosphere in which I live and breathe
+and have my being, and it makes life glad and
+free and a million times worth living."</p>
+
+<p>A worker among his fellows in India stated
+the ground of his belief in God's promise
+to supply the needs of his people. The
+sentence was written while he was at home
+on furlough:</p>
+
+<p>"Whatsoever you ask, believe that you have
+received it, and you shall have it. The belief
+is not the denial of a fact, but rather the assurance
+that the petition is in accordance with
+God's will, and that He is as disposed to give<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
+as we to receive; our reception of the gift depends
+on our holding on to His will. Now the
+practical question is, What is God's will? Am
+I conforming to it? Through lack of faith am
+I failing to receive and appropriate for myself
+and Satara what I and Satara need? Is it
+God's will that I should return and that
+there should be better paid work? More
+of it? More school-houses? New houses
+for workers?"</p>
+
+<p>A few days later he added to these notes the
+word "Yes." His faith enabled him to claim
+God's promise.</p>
+
+<p>A Christian young man in Japan was accustomed
+to stand at the entrance to the park in
+Tokyo, offering Bibles and preaching the Gospel.
+Years passed, and he saw no results of
+his work. Yet he believed in Him who had
+promised that His name should be exalted
+among the heathen. At length a Testament
+was bought by a young man to whom the
+words of John 3:16 brought life and joy. He
+went back to the old man from whose hand he
+had received the book, and told him that he
+had become a Christian. The man was overcome
+with joy.</p>
+
+<p>"Ten years," he said, "I have been selling
+New Testaments here at the park gates, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+you are the first who has ever come to tell me
+you were helped."</p>
+
+<p>But throughout those ten years the faithful
+worker was sustained by his belief in the faithfulness
+of Him who had promised to bless him
+in his work. He knew that God would not
+fail him.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />III<br />
+PRACTICAL PRECEPTS FROM PROVERBS</div>
+
+<p>There is nothing like the Bible to put heart
+into a man. This is not strange, for the Book
+was written for this purpose by men of God's
+choosing whose business it was to strengthen
+their fellows.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most vivid parts of the Bible is
+the book of Proverbs.</p>
+
+<p>"Would that our young men were saturated
+with its thought," Albert J. Beveridge said of
+it, while he was a member of the United States
+Senate. "It is rich in practical wisdom for the
+minute affairs of practical life. It abounds in
+apt and pointed suggestions and pungent
+warnings concerning our companionship, our
+personal habits, our employments, our management
+of finance, our speech, the government
+of tongue and temper, and many other
+such things, which daily perplex the earnest<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+soul, and daily occasion harm to the thoughtless
+and misguided."</p>
+
+<p>Years earlier, another eminent American,
+Washington Irving, used what is the keynote
+of the book in an earnest talk with George
+Bancroft, later the historian of his country,
+then a student in Europe. The two were
+taking a walking excursion, when the older
+man said something the student remembered
+all his life. It was natural, then, that Bancroft's
+biographer should give this in his
+subject's own words, in "Life and Letters of
+George Bancroft:"</p>
+
+<p>"At my time of life, he tells me, I ought to
+lay aside all care, and only be bent on laying in
+a stock of knowledge for future application.
+If I have not pecuniary resources enough to
+get at what I would wish for, as calculated to
+be useful to my mind, I must still not give up
+the pursuit. Still follow it; scramble to it;
+get at it as you can, but be sure to get at it. If
+you need books, buy them; if you are in want
+of instruction in anything take it. The time
+will soon come when it will be too late for all
+these things."</p>
+
+<p>More than a century ago an immigrant from
+Scotland landed in New York. In the story of
+his life he later told how the book of Proverbs<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+became his rock. The first night he slept in an
+old frame building with a shingle roof. During
+the night he was aroused by a storm of rain accompanied
+by thunder and lightning such as
+he had never experienced in Scotland. Homesick,
+terrified, unable to sleep, he rose and took
+from his chest the Bible his father had carefully
+packed with his clothes. He wrote later
+that as the book was opened, "My eyes fell on
+the words, 'My Son.' I was thinking of my
+father. I read on with delight. Having finished
+the last verse I found I had been reading
+the third chapter of the Proverbs of Solomon.
+Get a Bible and read the chapter. Then suppose
+yourself in my situation&mdash;sore in body,
+sick at heart, and commencing life among a
+world of strangers, and see if words more suitable
+could be put together to fit my case. I
+looked upon it as a chart from heaven, directing
+my course among the rocks, shoals and storms
+of life.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I went forth with a light heart to
+work my way through the world, resolved to
+keep this chapter as a pilot by my side."</p>
+
+<p>The importance for to-day of the message
+in Proverbs 30:8, "Remove far from me vanity
+and lies," is illustrated by several incidents told
+by Lucy Elliot Keeler, in "If I Were a Boy:"</p>
+
+<p>"The son of a distinguished American recently<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
+entered business in New York, beginning,
+at his father's request, at the foot of the
+ladder, and receiving the princely salary of $20
+a month. At a time when his father's name
+was in everybody's mouth the editor of a yellow
+journal sent for the son and invited him
+to join the staff. 'You need not write any
+articles,' he said, with a smile, 'nor do any
+reporting. Just sign your name to an article
+which I will furnish you each day, and I will
+pay you $200 a month.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.' The young man's
+reply was too emphatic to be accurately
+reported here, but it was to the effect that he
+would rather starve than pick untold dollars
+out of the gutter.</p>
+
+<p>"A few years ago an American commissioner
+occupying a house in the West Indies hired a
+man to wash the windows and another to
+scrub the floors. The bills submitted were for
+$12 and $7, respectively. 'What does this
+mean?' was the astonished query. '$12 for a
+day's work? Man, you are crazy!' 'Oh,'
+came the soft reply, 'of course, I only expect a
+dollar and a half for myself, but that was the
+way we always made out bills for the Spanish
+officers.' 'Take back your bills,' was the
+American's emphatic reply, 'and make them
+out honestly.'"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The wisdom of the warning in Proverbs 27:2,
+"Let another man praise thee, and not thine
+own mouth," has seldom been more strikingly
+illustrated than at a large convention when
+several thousand people listened attentively as
+a speaker of reputation was introduced to them.
+He talked fluently for several minutes, then
+began to ramble. He made several attempts
+to regain his lost hold on his hearers, then took
+his seat.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't imagine what was wrong to-day,"
+he said to his neighbor on the platform. "I
+had all ready what I felt sure would be a telling
+address, but somehow I couldn't say what I
+wanted." A sympathetic answer was given
+by the man to whom he had spoken, but if he
+had said all that was in his heart this would
+have been his message: "I know you had a
+telling argument to present, for I read your
+manuscript. But you spent the first three
+minutes in talking about yourself. It was
+there you lost the attention of the people; they
+did not come to hear about you, but to learn of
+your Master. And when you had put yourself
+in the foreground, it was impossible for you to
+present Him with power."</p>
+
+<p>The speaker's mistake is repeated every day,
+not merely by men on the platform, but by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
+everyday people in the home, in the school,
+and at work. It is fatal to usefulness to put
+ourselves in the foreground; but those who
+forget self and remember others are welcome
+wherever they go.</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />IV<br />
+GETTING CLOSE TO THE BIBLE</div>
+
+<p>One of the blessings that came to the world
+out of the anguish of the Great War was a new
+appreciation of God's Word on the part of
+many who had never paid much attention to
+the inspired Book, and the formation of the
+habit of Bible reading by tens of thousands of
+those who were once heedless of God's Word.</p>
+
+<p>Absence from home in hours of danger, privation
+and suffering, opened the way for testing
+Him who reveals his power to give infinite
+blessing by saying tenderly, "As one whom
+his mother comforteth, so will I comfort you."
+The sense of absolute powerlessness in the face
+of barbarism led to dependence upon God who
+holds the worlds in His hands. Realization of
+the uncertainty of life and familiarity with
+death made easy and natural the approach to
+the Lord of life and death.</p>
+
+<p>Probably there were soldiers who laughed at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
+the words of Field Marshal Lord Roberts,
+spoken when the first British troops were
+crossing the Channel:</p>
+
+<p>"You will find in this little Book (the Bible)
+guidance when you are in health, comfort when
+you are in sickness, and strength when you are
+in adversity," but the day came when one of
+the soldiers themselves, Arthur Guy Empey,
+wrote:</p>
+
+<p>"How about the poor boy lying wounded,
+perhaps dying, in a shell hole, his mother far
+away? Perhaps to him even God seems to
+have forgotten; he feels for his first-aid packet,
+binds up his wounds, and then waits&mdash;years,
+it seems to him&mdash;for the stretcher-bearers.
+Then he gets out his Testament; the feel of it
+gives him comfort and hope. He reads. That
+boy gets religion, even though when he enlisted
+he was an atheist."</p>
+
+<p>A Young Men's Christian Association secretary
+told of an incident when the soldiers were
+just leaving for the trenches. "He saw a
+young lad nervously making his way up to the
+counter. He knew the boy wanted something,
+and was afraid to ask or was timid about it.
+He said, 'Want something, lad?' 'Yes, sir, I
+have got a Bible and I don't know much about
+it. I'd like you to mark some passages in it.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+I am going out to the trenches to-night.'
+'Sure!' said the secretary. 'Mark some good
+ones, now,' said the lad.</p>
+
+<p>"While he was marking the first lad's book
+half a dozen other boys came up and said,
+'Mark mine, too, sir!' And for half an hour
+this secretary was busy marking verses in the
+Bibles of those boys. An interested observer
+asked him what he marked, and he said,
+'Matthew 10:23; 11:28; 6:19, 20; John 3:16;
+Romans 8:35-39.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Fighting" Pat O'Brian, of the Royal Fighting
+Corps, whose marvelous escape from his
+German captors thrilled multitudes, said:</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't been given to talking much about
+religion, but when, after two months of flight
+through an enemy country as an escaped prisoner,
+going without food except such as I could
+pick up in the fields and eat raw, and time and
+again coming within a hair's breadth of being
+caught, I finally got through the lines on to the
+neutral soil of Holland, I was mighty glad to
+get down on my knees and thank God that He
+had got me through. A lot of men who have
+never thought much about religion are thinking
+about it now. I believe they will read
+those little khaki Testaments, and I am sure
+they will get help from them."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>That "those little khaki Testaments" were
+going into the hands of the soldiers pleased
+General Pershing, who said, "Its teachings
+will fortify us for our great task." And Secretary
+of the Navy Daniels rejoiced that the
+books were going to the sailors, for he said,
+"The Bible is the one book from which men
+can find help and inspiration and encouragement
+for whatever conditions may arise."</p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />V<br />
+THE BIBLE AND ONE MAN</div>
+
+<p>In June, 1862, John E. Clough was graduated
+from an Iowa college. He had been eager
+to make a name for himself. Many promising
+avenues of secular work had opened to him,
+and he had tried to take one or another of
+them. But always he knew that it was not
+right for him to plan for anything but the ministry.
+The impression was deepened when the
+president of the college took for the text of his
+baccalaureate sermon, "For none of us liveth
+to himself, and no man dieth to himself." So
+the young graduate left the college feeling that
+he was no longer free to go out and use his education
+for the career he had dreamed of.</p>
+
+<p>But he did decide to teach for a year. With<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
+Mrs. Clough, he made an engagement to teach
+a public school one year. But he did not dare
+stay for a second year, because the people were
+so good to the new teacher, and there was so
+much evidence of this popularity, that the
+Bible words kept ringing in his ears, "Woe
+unto you when all men shall speak well of
+you." He knew he was not in the right place.
+In later life, when opposition came to him
+because he was doing faithful Christian work,
+he was strengthened by the memory of this
+text that had once been anything but a comfort
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>At last came the beginning of the work in
+India that made the name of John E. Clough
+famous. His success was due, in large measure,
+to the fact that he emphasized God's
+Word. One of his first acts was to prepare a
+tract in Scripture language, telling the things
+necessary for salvation, and this proved useful
+throughout his services.</p>
+
+<p>Everywhere he went he quoted Scripture to
+the people. He felt that whatever else he
+might say to them, this <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'woud'">would</ins> be most effective.
+One text was used more than any other,
+in private conversation and in sermons, the
+invitation of Jesus, "Come unto me, all ye that
+labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
+rest." This, he said, was always new, and the
+people received his explanations gladly. Once,
+during a time of grievous famine, when about
+them millions of the natives died of want and
+disease, these words proved especially effective.</p>
+
+<p>As a measure of famine relief the missionary
+took the contract for a section of the great
+Buckingham Canal. Under his leadership the
+natives were set to work on this. Native evangelists
+as well as white missionaries toiled day
+after day, and this gave a splendid chance for
+preaching the gospel. "The name of Jesus was
+spoken all day long from one end of our line to
+the other," Mr. Clough wrote in his autobiography.
+"The preachers carried a New Testament
+in their pockets. It comforted the
+people to see the holy book of the Christians
+amid all their distress. They said, when they
+sat down for a short rest, 'Read us again out
+of your holy book about the weary and heavy
+laden.' That verse, 'Come unto me all ye
+that labor,' was often all I had to give the
+people by way of comfort. The preachers
+were saying it all day long. It carried us
+through the famine. We all needed it, for
+even the strongest among us sometimes felt
+our courage sinking."</p>
+
+<p>All through Dr. Clough's missionary career<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
+there was one verse in particular that carried
+him far. When he was out on tour among
+the people, often many miles distant from
+home, Mrs. Clough was accustomed to send
+after him a messenger who would take to him,
+for his encouragement, the message she felt he
+needed. Knowing his fondness for the text,
+"Be still, and know that I am God; I will be
+exalted among the heathen," she sent the
+words to him on more than one occasion. In
+the story of his life he told of a day when
+the text came to him with special force:</p>
+
+<p>"I was tempted to shake the dust off my
+feet and go. My helpers and I had camped in
+a new place, and had been trying hard to get
+the people to come and listen to the gospel, but
+they would not. I concluded that it was a
+hard place, and told my staff of workers that
+we were justified in leaving it alone and moving
+on elsewhere. Toward noon I went into
+my tent, closed down the sides, let the little
+tent flap swing over my head, and rested, preparatory
+to starting off for the next place.
+Just then a basket of supplies was brought to
+my feet by a coolie, who had walked seventy
+miles with the basket on his head. In the
+accompanying letter Mrs. Clough quoted my
+favorite verse to me. While reading this, some<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
+of the preachers put their heads into the tent
+and said, 'Sir, there is a big crowd out here;
+the grove is full; all are waiting for you.
+Please come out.'"</p>
+
+<p>Once the two verses that were the keynote
+of the missionary's life were especially prominent.
+For a long time he had been discouraged
+because results seemed slow and difficulties
+were great. But the day came when he
+stood before thousands and preached to them
+the Word, strong in the assurance of the presence
+of Him who said, "Be still, and know that
+I am God: I will be exalted among the heathen."
+The text that day, as so often before,
+was "Come unto me, all ye that labor and are
+heavy laden." For an hour the people listened
+to his words. Then they began to plead for
+baptism, and would not be denied. At length,
+after rigid examination, baptism was administered
+to 3,536 within three days. And he had
+not baptized one soul in fifteen months before
+this time!</p>
+
+<p>God's Word gave courage to Clough; it enabled
+him to give courage to others; and it
+will give courage to you.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class='center'><br />VI<br />
+OUT OF THE DEPTHS</div>
+
+<p>During the year 1538 an Italian spent long
+weeks in a noisome underground prison cell,
+where he was kept on account of religious differences.
+For a precious hour and a half of each
+day, when the light struggled in through a tiny
+window, he read the Bible, especially the
+Psalms. Among the Psalms that meant most to
+him was the one hundred and thirtieth, whose
+beginning "Out of the depths have I cried unto
+thee, O Lord," expressed the longings of his
+heart for companionship and comfort.</p>
+
+<p>Exactly two hundred years later, on May
+24, 1738, John Wesley, then in the midst of the
+greatest anxiety and longing for God, heard
+the choir at St. Paul's Cathedral sing, "Out of
+the depths have I cried unto thee, O Lord."
+The words brought joy to him. From the
+depths in which he found himself that afternoon
+he cried unto God, and that evening
+there came to him the knowledge of God's
+presence that gave him strength to begin
+the wonderful work that built up the great
+Methodist Church.</p>
+
+<p>These same words meant much to Josiah
+Royce, the American teacher of philosophy,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+who died in 1916. In one of his later books,
+he wrote:</p>
+
+<p>"We come to such deep places that we can
+only cry. We are astonished that we can cry.
+And then we become aware that our cry is
+heard. And he who hears is God. And so
+God is often defined for the plain man as 'He
+who hears man's cry from the depths.'"</p>
+
+<p>One who knew Professor Royce well wondered
+if he did not enter the depths from which he
+cried to God and received such satisfying response,
+after the death of his only son. In the
+same way those who delight in the message of
+Psalm 130 wonder what could have been the
+experience of depression that opened the way
+for his reception of God's blessing.</p>
+
+<p>We can only speculate about these things.
+But there is one thing of which we can be absolutely
+sure: there is no depth so low that the
+cry of one of God's children will not reach
+from it to the heart of the Father; no sorrow so
+crushing, no anxiety so overwhelming, no pain
+so intense, no difficulty seemingly so unsolvable,
+no sin so awful, that eager, earnest prayer will
+not bring God to the relief of the sufferer.</p>
+
+<p>"If out of the depths we cry, we shall cry
+ourselves out of the depths," one has said who
+has written of the words that Professor Royce<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
+found so helpful. Then he asks: "What can a
+man do who finds himself at the foot of a beetling
+cliff, the sea in front, the wall of rock at
+his back, without foothold for a mouse, between
+the tide at the bottom and the grass at
+the top? He can do but one thing, he can
+shout, and, perhaps, may be heard, and a rope
+may come dangling down that he can spring at
+and catch. For sinful men in the miry pit the
+rope is already let down, and their grasping it
+is the same as the psalmist's cry. God has let
+down His forgiving love in Christ, and we need
+but the faith which accepts it while it asks,
+and then we are swung up into the light, and
+our feet set on a rock."</p>
+
+<p>Each one has depths peculiarly his own, and
+longs to be out of them. Then why not call to
+Him who hears men's cry from the depths,
+with the quiet confidence of quaint old Herbert,
+who wrote:</p>
+
+<div class='poem'>
+Of what an easie quick accesse,<br />
+My blessed Lord, art Thou! how suddenly<br />
+May our requests thine ears invade!<br />
+If I but lift mine eyes my suit is made;<br />
+Thou canst no more not heare than Thou canst die.<br />
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class='tnote'><h3>Transcriber's Note:</h3>
+<p>Obvious punctuation errors were corrected.</p>
+
+<p>The remaining corrections made are indicated by dotted lines under the
+corrections. Scroll the mouse over the word and the original text will
+<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'apprear'">appear</ins>.</p></div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOOK OF COURAGE***</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Book of Courage, by John Thomson Faris
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Book of Courage
+
+
+Author: John Thomson Faris
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 19, 2010 [eBook #32438]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOOK OF COURAGE***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Emmy, Juliet Sutherland, and the Project Gutenberg
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF COURAGE
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_THE SUNRISE INSPIRATIONAL BOOKS_
+
+
+ THE FIRST VOLUME
+
+ THE BOOK OF COURAGE
+
+ By JOHN T. FARIS
+
+ Volumes on other subjects in preparation for this series
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+_OTHER BOOKS_
+
+ By JOHN T. FARIS
+
+ SEEING PENNSYLVANIA
+
+ Frontispiece in color, 113 illustrations and 2 maps
+
+ THE ROMANCE OF OLD
+ PHILADELPHIA
+
+ Frontispiece in color and 101 illustrations
+
+ OLD ROADS OUT OF
+ PHILADELPHIA
+
+ 117 illustrations and a map
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ By JOHN T. FARIS
+ and THEODOOR DEBOOY
+
+ THE VIRGIN ISLANDS
+ OUR NEW POSSESSIONS AND THE
+ BRITISH ISLANDS
+
+ 97 illustrations and five maps
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE BOOK OF COURAGE
+
+by
+
+JOHN T. FARIS
+
+Author of
+"The Victory Life," "Making Good," "Old Roads Out of
+Philadelphia," "Seeing Pennsylvania," Etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Philadelphia & London
+J. B. Lippincott Company
+1920
+
+Copyright, 1920, by J. B. Lippincott Company
+
+Printed by J. B. Lippincott Company
+At the Washington Square Press
+Philadelphia, U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+_FOREWORD_
+
+
+A TEACHER has told of the greatest moment of discouragement that ever
+came to her. At cost of great labor she had fitted up a room for the use
+of children, placing pictures on the walls, plants in the windows,
+goldfish on the table, and a canary in a cage. But the night before the
+day when she planned to welcome the children to the room there was a
+cold snap, and the janitor let the fire go out. In the morning she
+looked on broken radiators, frozen goldfish, drooping plants, and what
+she feared was a dead bird. In her despair she was about to decide that
+she would never make another effort to have things pleasant for the
+children, when the bit of fluff in the bird-cage, roused from stupor by
+the noise made by the discouraged woman, lifted its voice in song.
+
+That song told her that she had reached once again the point that comes
+to everyone, times without number, the point that separates the life of
+conquest from the life of defeat, the life of cowardice from the life of
+courage. She was at the crossroads, and she took the turning to the
+right. The bird's song marked for her the end of discouragement.
+
+"I can sing, as well as the bird," she said to herself. And at once she
+began to make plans for her charges.
+
+Everywhere there are people who feel that the odds are against them,
+that difficulties in the way are unsurmountable, that it is useless to
+make further effort to conquer. The author of "The Book of Courage"
+knows by experience how they feel, and he longs to send to them a
+message of cheer and death-to-the-blues, a call to go on to the better
+things that wait for those who face life in the spirit of the gallant
+General Petain, whose watchword, "They shall not pass!" put courage into
+his men and hope into the hearts of millions all over the world.
+
+"Courage!" is the call to these. "Courage" is likewise the word to those
+who are already struggling in the conquering spirit of Sir Walter Scott
+who, when both domestic calamity and financial misfortune came, said to
+a comforter, "The blowing off of my hat on a stormy day has given me
+more weariness," who called adversity "a tonic and a bracer."
+
+The world needs courage--the high courage that shows itself in a life of
+daily struggle and conquest, that smiles at obstacles and laughs at
+difficulties.
+
+How is the needed courage to be secured? What are the springs of
+courage? What are some of the results of courage? These are questions
+"The Book of Courage" seeks to answer by telling of men and women who
+have become courageous.
+
+Glorious provision has been made by the Inspirer of men for giving
+courage to all, no matter what their difficulties or their hardships.
+Among His provisions are home and friends, work and service, will and
+conscience, the world with all its beauty, and Himself as Companion and
+Friend.
+
+Thus we are left absolutely without excuse when we are tempted to let
+down the bars to worry and gloom and discouragement.
+
+Keep up the bars! Don't let the enemies of peace and progress pass! And
+always,
+
+ "Like the star,
+ That shines afar,
+ Without haste,
+ And without rest,
+ Let each man wheel, with steady sway
+ Round the tasks that rule the day,
+ And do his best."
+ J. T. F.
+
+PHILADELPHIA, 1920
+
+
+
+
+_CONTENTS_
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ 1. THE COURAGE OF SELF-CONQUEST 13
+ I. RESTRAINING SELF 15
+ II. EFFACING SELF 18
+ III. FORGIVING INJURIES 22
+ IV. FORGETTING WRONGS 25
+ V. GETTING RID OF EVIL 29
+ VI. LOOKING BEYOND MONEY 32
+
+
+ 2. THE COURAGE THAT FACES OBSTACLES 41
+ I. LEARNING 42
+ II. DEPENDING ON SELF 47
+ III. UNCOMPLAINING 51
+ IV. PERSISTING 56
+ V. TOILING 63
+ VI. CONQUERING INFIRMITY 67
+
+
+ 3. THE COURAGE OF INDUSTRY 78
+ I. BEGINNING 79
+ II. PURPOSE FORMING 82
+ III. USING TIME WISELY 89
+ IV. WORKING HARDER 94
+ V. ABUSING THE WILL TO WORK 99
+
+
+ 4. THE COURAGE OF FACING CONSEQUENCES 104
+ I. VENTURING 105
+ II. FORMING CHARACTER 107
+ III. TRUTH TELLING 111
+ IV. DUTY DOING 117
+ V. FINDING HIS LIFE 119
+
+
+ 5. COURAGE FOR THE SAKE OF OTHERS 122
+ I. IMPARTING COURAGE 123
+ II. CONQUERING HAPPINESS 126
+ III. MAKING LITTLE THINGS COUNT 129
+ IV. DID HE GO TOO FAR? 132
+
+
+ 6. GOLDEN RULE COURAGE 138
+ I. LOOKING OUT FOR OTHERS 140
+ II. SUCCEEDING BY COURAGEOUS SERVICE 143
+ III. SERVICE BY SYMPATHY 146
+ IV. DOING BUSINESS FOR OTHERS 150
+ V. PRAYING AND HELPING 152
+ VI. GIVING THAT COUNTS 155
+ VII. EXPENSIVE ECONOMY 157
+
+
+ 7. COURAGE THROUGH COMPANIONSHIP 161
+ I. COMPANIONSHIP WITH FRIENDS 162
+ II. SUCCESSFUL COMRADES 165
+ III. COMPANIONSHIP WITH THE PAST 171
+ IV. COMPANIONSHIP WITH NATURE 176
+ V. COMPANIONSHIP WITH GOD 183
+ VI. A CHAPTER OF--ACCIDENTS? 190
+
+
+ 8. GOD THE SOURCE OF COURAGE 196
+ I. THAT'S FOR ME! 197
+ II. BANING ON GOD'S PROMISES 201
+ III. PRACTICAL PRECEPTS FROM PROVERBS 205
+ IV. GETTING CLOSE TO THE BIBLE 210
+ V. THE BIBLE AND ONE MAN 213
+ VI. OUT OF THE DEPTHS 218
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF COURAGE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER ONE
+
+_THE COURAGE OF SELF-CONQUEST_
+
+
+THE highest courage is impossible without self-conquest. And
+self-conquest is never easy. A man may be a marvel of physical courage,
+and be a coward in matters of self-government. Failure here threatens
+dire disaster to his entire career.
+
+Alexander the Great conquered most of the world he knew, but he
+permitted his lower nature to conquer his better self, and he died a
+disappointed, defeated man.
+
+Before the days of Alexander there was a man named Nehemiah from whom
+the world-conqueror might have learned a few secrets. He was a poor
+exile in the service of a foreign ruler. That ruler sent him down to
+Jerusalem, the capital city of his own home land, with instructions to
+govern the people there. Now, in those days, it was a common thing for
+governors of cities to plunder the people unfortunate enough to be in
+their charge. Thus Nehemiah would have had ample precedent to fill his
+own coffers by injustice, profiteering and worse: he had the power.
+Possibly he was tempted to do something of the sort. But he had the
+courage to shut up tight all baser passions, and then to sit firmly on
+the lid. In the brief record of his service he referred to some of the
+self-seeking governors, and told of their rascally deeds. Then he added
+the significant words, "_So did not I._"
+
+That was certainly courage--the courage of self-conquest.
+
+As a young man Ulysses S. Grant was a brave soldier, but he nearly
+wrecked his life because of weak yielding to his appetite. His real
+career began only with self-conquest. When he found the courage to fight
+himself--and not until then--he became ready for the marvelous life of
+high courage that never faltered when he was misunderstood by associates
+and maligned by enemies, that pressed steadily onward, in the face of
+biting disease, until work was done, until honor was satisfied.
+
+
+I
+
+RESTRAINING SELF
+
+A little girl four years old came trembling to her mother and asked for
+pencil and paper. Then, teeth set and eyes flashing, she pounced on the
+paper and began to make all sorts of vicious marks. Asked what she was
+doing, she said she was writing a letter to a sister who had offended
+her by an act that had been misunderstood. "She is not a nice girl," the
+little critic said, "and I'm telling her so. I don't like her any more,
+and I'm saying that." As she wrote her hand trembled; she was carried
+away by her unpleasant emotion. After a few moments, unable to go on
+with her self-appointed task, she flung herself, sobbing, into her
+mother's arms and for half an hour she could not control herself.
+
+The sight was pitiful. But far more pitiful is the spectacle of one old
+enough to know better who yields to vexation and hatred, thereby not
+only making himself disagreeable, but robbing himself of power to
+perform the duties of the hour. For there is nothing so exhausting as
+uncontrolled emotion. There is so much for each one of us to do, and
+every ounce of strength is needed by those who would play their part in
+the world. Then what spendthrift folly it is to waste needed power on
+emotion that is disquieting, disagreeable and disgraceful!
+
+That lesson was never impressed more forcibly than by a French officer
+of whom a visitor from America asked, "Did I understand that you had
+lost three sons?" "Yes, sir, and two brothers," was the proud reply.
+"How you must hate the Boche," remarked a bystander. "No, no," was the
+instant reply, "not hate; just pity, sir; pity, but not hate. Hate, you
+know, is an excessive emotion, sir; and no one can do effective work if
+he spends his vitality in an excess of emotion. No," he concluded, "we
+cannot hate; we cannot work if we burn up ourselves inside. Pity, sir;
+pity. 'They know not what they do.' That's the idea. And they don't."
+
+The same lesson of self-restraint was taught by Marshal Foch in his
+words to the soldiers of France. He urged them to keep their eyes and
+ears ready and their mouths "in the safety notch"; and he told them they
+must obey orders first and kick afterwards if they had been wronged. He
+said, "Bear in mind that the enemy is your enemy and the enemy of
+humanity until he is killed or captured; then he is your dear brother
+or fellow soldier beaten or ashamed, whom you should no further
+humiliate." He told them that it was necessary to keep their heads clear
+and cool, to be of good cheer, to suffer in silence, to dread defeat,
+but not wounds, to fear dishonor, but not death, and to die game.
+Because so many of the soldiers under him heeded this wise admonition,
+they did not waste their precious strength on useless and harmful
+emotions, but they were ever ready to go to their task, with the motto
+of their division, "It shall be done."
+
+What a blessing it will be to the world that millions of young men were
+trained in France to repress hurtful emotion, to exercise
+self-restraint--which may be defined as the act or process of holding
+back or hindering oneself from harmful thoughts or actions. And what a
+wonderful thing it will be if the lesson is passed on to us, so that we
+shall not be like the torrent that wastes its power by rushing and
+brawling over the stones, all to no purpose, but like the harnessed
+stream whose energy is made to turn the wheels of factory and mill. For
+only guarded and guided strength is useful and safe.
+
+
+II
+
+EFFACING SELF
+
+"Every man that falls must understand beforehand that he is a dead man
+and nothing can save him. It is useless for him to cry out, and it may,
+by giving the alarm, cause the enterprise to fail."
+
+This was the message to his men of the officer to whom Napoleon
+committed the capture of Mt. Cenis.
+
+The historian tells us that at one point in the ascent of a precipitous
+track, three men fell. "Their bodies were heard bounding from crag to
+crag, but not a cry was heard, not a moan. The body of one hero was
+recovered later. There was a smile on his lips."
+
+How that record of the silence succeeded by a smile grips the heart, for
+it was not the false courage that plays to the grandstand, but the
+deeper, truer courage that sinks self for the good of others, and does
+this not merely because it is a part of the game, but with the gladness
+that transfigures life.
+
+Such courage does not wait for some great occasion for exhibiting
+itself; it is revealed in the midst of the humdrum routine of daily
+life--a routine that is especially trying to those who have been
+looking forward to some great, perhaps dramatic service.
+
+A young man of seventeen entered the navy, with his parents' consent, as
+an apprentice. When he left home he had dreams of entering at once on a
+life of thrilling adventure where there would be numberless
+opportunities for the display of high courage. At the end of a month a
+friend asked him how he liked life at the navy yard. "Fine!" was the
+reply. "What are you doing?" was the next query. "They haven't given me
+anything but window washing to do yet," he replied, with a smile that
+was an index of character.
+
+A newspaper writer has told of a college student nineteen years old who
+enlisted in the navy. He was sent to one of our naval stations and told
+to guard a pile of coal. As the summer passed he still guarded that coal
+pile. He wrote home about it:
+
+"You know, dad, when we were little shavers, you always rubbed it into
+us that anything that was worth doing at all was worth doing as well as
+it could be done. I've been standing over that coal pile nearly three
+months now, and it looks just exactly as small as it did when I first
+landed on the job."
+
+"He was relieved from the coal pile at last and promoted," said the
+writer who told of him. "At the same time the government gave him a last
+chance to return to his college work. He thought it over carefully. He
+realized that America was going to need trained men as never before, but
+still, he decided, the best service that he individually could give was
+the one that he had chosen. He had a few days of leave before going on
+to his next assignment, and he hurried back to his home. He found that
+his summer task was a matter of town history, and he had to face a good
+deal of affectionate raillery about his coal pile. Of course he did not
+mind that. But his answer revealed his spirit:
+
+"'You may laugh, but that coal pile was all right. I'll admit it got on
+my nerves for a bit, but I figured it out that while I was taking care
+of that coal pile I was releasing some other fellow who knew things I
+didn't know, and who could do things I couldn't do. I'm ready to stand
+by a coal pile till the war ends, if that's where I can help the most.'"
+
+"That is the spirit that will conquer because it is the spirit that
+never can be conquered," was the comment made on the incident. "There is
+no self in it--only consecration to duty; no seeking for large
+things--only for an opportunity to serve whenever the call comes. That
+is the spirit that is growing in America to-day--and only through such
+spirit can we accomplish our great task in the life of the world."
+
+The man who really desires to serve his fellows does not think of
+declaring that he will not do humble tasks, but he demands that the work
+he is asked to do shall be needed.
+
+A young man who was seeking his life work made known his willingness to
+be a shoe-black, if he could be convinced that this was the work God
+wanted him to do. An immigrant in New York City read in the morning,
+"Lord, my heart is not haughty nor mine eyes lofty." Then he went out to
+sweep a store, and he swept it well. It is worthy of note that the young
+man who was willing to be a shoe-black became one of the foremost men of
+his generation, and that the immigrant became the pastor of a leading
+city church. But a far more important fact is that the quality of the
+service given counted more in their minds than the character of the
+employment.
+
+The service of the man who would be worth while in the world must
+partake of the spirit of the successful figure on the baseball diamond
+or the football gridiron: readiness to do everything, or anything--or
+to do nothing, if he is so directed--in the interests of the team. It
+must take a leaf from the book of General Pershing and his fellow
+officers who, in a time of stress for the Allies, were willing and eager
+to brigade their troops with the soldiers of France and England, thus
+losing the identity of their forces in the interest of the great cause
+for which they stood. It must learn the lesson taught by the life of Him
+who emptied Himself for the sake of the world--and did it with a smile.
+
+
+III
+
+FORGIVING INJURIES
+
+A gifted writer has told the story of a workman in a Bessemer steel
+furnace who was jealous of the foreman whom he thought had injured him.
+The foreman was making a good record, and the workman did not want to
+see him succeed. So he plotted his undoing--he loosened the bolts of the
+cable that controlled an important part of the machinery, and so caused
+an accident that not only interfered seriously with the day's turn, but
+put a section of the plant out of commission for the time being. As a
+result the superintendent was discharged. When he left he vowed
+vengeance on the man whom he suspected of causing his discharge: "I'll
+get you for this some day," he declared. Perhaps he would have been even
+more emphatic if he had known the extent of his enemy's culpability.
+
+Years passed. The workman who had loosened the bolts became
+superintendent of the mill. He, too, tried to break a production record,
+and was in a fair way to succeed until some mysterious difficulty
+developed that interfered seriously with results. And just when the new
+superintendent was losing sleep over his problem, the old superintendent
+came to town.
+
+"He's come for his revenge!" was the thought of the new superintendent.
+
+But the superintendent did not wait for a visit from the man he feared;
+he sought him at once. "He must know the extent of my meanness," he
+decided. So he told his story. To his surprise the former foreman seemed
+more interested in the account of the progress of the mill than in the
+sorry tale of past misdeeds. Learning of the mysterious difficulty that
+threatened failure in the attempt to break the production record, the
+injured man showed real concern. "I can't imagine where the difficulty
+is, but I'd like to take a look around for it," he said. Arm in arm,
+then, the two men, once bitter enemies, moved toward the mill. The
+search was successful, the difficulty was corrected, and the record was
+broken.
+
+Fine story, isn't it? What a pity it is only a story, that such things
+don't ever happen in real life!
+
+Don't they? How about Henry Nasmyth, the English inventor of the steam
+piledriver, whose ideas were stolen by French machinists? His first
+knowledge of the piracy was when he saw a crude imitation of his
+piledriver in a factory in France. Instead of seeking damages and
+threatening vengeance, he pointed out mistakes made in construction and
+helped his imitators perfect the appliance they had stolen from him.
+
+Yes, such things do happen in daily life. They are happening every day.
+As we read of them or hear of them or meet people who are actors in such
+a drama, we are conscious of admiration for the deed, a quickening of
+the pulse, and the thankful thought that the world is not such a bad
+place after all.
+
+But are we to stop with quickened heartbeats and gratitude for the
+greatness of heart shown by others? How about the bitterness we have
+been treasuring against some one who has injured us--or some one we
+think has injured us (it is astonishing how many of the slights and
+indignities for which vengeance has been vowed are only imaginary, after
+all!) How long do we intend to persist in treasuring the grudge that has
+perhaps already caused sorrow that cannot be measured? Let's be
+courageous enough to own ourselves in the wrong, when we are in the
+wrong, and to forgive the evil that has been kept alive by our
+persistent efforts to remember it. Let the quickened pulse-beat be ours
+not merely because we are hearing about forgiveness, but because we
+ourselves are rejoicing in friendship restored.
+
+
+IV
+
+FORGETTING WRONGS
+
+There are people whose minds are like a lumber-room, littered with all
+sorts of odds and ends. In such a room it is impossible to count on
+laying hands promptly on a desired article, and in such a mind confusion
+takes the place of order. The mind had better be empty. An empty mind
+presents a fine opening for the proper kind of filling, but a confused
+mind is hopeless. How is it possible to make the memory a helpful
+servant unless nothing is allowed to find lodgment there that is not
+worth while?
+
+An old proverb says, "No one can keep the birds from flying about his
+head, but one can keep them from nesting in his hair." That proverb
+points the way to saving the mind from becoming a lodging place for
+lumbering thoughts and ideas; everything that is certain to hinder
+instead of help one to be worth-while to the world must be told that
+there is "positively no admittance."
+
+Among the things one must not afford permission to pass the bars is the
+thought that some associate may have said or done something that seemed
+like a slight or an injury. No man can afford to injure another, but any
+man can better afford to be injured than to allow his thoughts to dwell
+on the injury, to brood over it, until he is in a degree unfitted for
+his work. Far better is it to be like a father who said to his son when
+the latter, years after the commission of the deed, was speaking of his
+sorrow that he had grieved his father so: "Son, you must be dreaming; I
+don't recall the incident."
+
+Then one must know when to forget evil things heard of another.
+Sometimes it is necessary to remember such facts, but so often the
+insinuations made concerning other people are not worth consideration,
+because they are not true. Even where there is ground for them, they are
+not proper subjects for thought and remembrance.
+
+It is best to forget past achievements, unless they are made
+stepping-stones to greater achievements, spurs to work that could never
+be done without them. Yet how often the temptation comes to gloat in
+thought over these things, and over the good things said of one because
+of them, while opportunities for greater things are passed by. Thus a
+school-boy thought with delight of a word of commendation from his
+teacher when he ought to have been giving attention to the recitation of
+the pupil next to him; the result was a reprimand that stung. A soldier
+in the trenches has no time to gaze in admiration at the medal he has
+won by valor when at any moment there may sound the call to deeds of
+still greater valor. No more should a civilian imperil future success by
+failure to forget "the things which are behind."
+
+The individual who refuses to forget a kindness he has done to someone
+else is another cumberer of the ground. A safe rule is, never forget a
+kindness received from another, but forget at once a kindness done to
+another. It is not difficult to sympathize with the youth who, after
+being reminded for the twentieth time by his brother of a trip to New
+Orleans for which the brother had paid out of his savings, said, "Yes,
+and I wish I had never taken a cent of the money!"
+
+A thing to be forgotten always is the off-color story with which some
+people persist in polluting the atmosphere. Unfortunately there are
+always to be found folks like the young man of whom Donald Hankey said
+"He talks about things that I won't even think." When such talk is
+heard, don't think of it. If you do, you are apt to think of it again
+and again, until, perhaps, you will be telling it to some one else. And
+no one wants to be remembered as was the business man, proposed for the
+presidency of a great concern, of whom one said, "No, don't let's have
+him; he has earned a reputation for telling questionable stories."
+
+If a good memory is to be a good servant, it must be trained to remember
+only the things that are helpful. And that takes courage!
+
+
+V
+
+GETTING RID OF EVIL
+
+One of the trying disappointments of daily life comes with the discovery
+that something on which we have been depending is no longer worthy of
+confidence, because a foreign substance, some adulterant, has been mixed
+with it, without our knowledge. This seemed to be the case perhaps more
+than ever before during the recent days of war when a severe strain was
+put on the products of nearly every kind.
+
+In many parts of the country those who were compelled to replenish their
+coal supply during the worst weather of a severe winter complained
+because the anthracite then secured gave out little heat; it contained
+such a large proportion of culm or other waste product which, in
+ordinary times, is carefully removed before shipment, that it could not
+do its work properly.
+
+Disappointed in their anthracite, some turned to bituminous coal, only
+to find that at least fifty per cent, of a shipment received during the
+days of stress was made up of rock and clay.
+
+Experience with the coal should have prepared one of the purchasers for
+his disappointment in a restaurant where he had been accustomed to be
+served with a splendid oyster stew. But he was surprised and displeased
+when he found that at least one-third of the milk which should have gone
+into the stew had been displaced by water.
+
+At home that evening the same man was told more of the activity of
+dealers who permit impurities to interfere with the comfort of those who
+like pure products; the grocer had that day sent a package of soup beans
+which contained at least ten per cent. of gravel.
+
+It is easy to appreciate the disappointment and embarrassment that come
+from the failure of the coal dealer, the restaurant keeper or the grocer
+to supply us with pure food and fuel. Then isn't it strange that we are
+apt to pay so little attention to the adulterants in character that are
+the cause of so much of the world's sorrow? That is to say, it seems odd
+that we pay so little attention to the things in our own lives that
+interfere; we are not apt to find it a difficult matter to rail at
+others because they permit evil to mix with good in their lives. Our
+vision is so much better when we are looking at motes in others than
+when we are looking straight past the beams in our own make-up.
+
+There is daily need for each one of us to ask God for grace to go on a
+hunt for the evil that adulterates his own life, making it a
+disappointment to others and a cause of sorrow to God. Those who are
+bold enough to scrutinize themselves without flinching will be apt to
+find not merely things that are unquestionably evil, but they will be
+dismayed to see that even much of the good in which they have been
+taking comfort is adulterated with evil--as, for instance, the deed of
+helpfulness performed for a friend with the unconscious thought, "Some
+day he may be able to do something for me," or the gift made to a needy
+cause, accompanied by the assurance that the treasurer of the fund is
+one whom we particularly wish to impress with our liberality so that
+possibly a future benefit will come from him to us.
+
+The adulterants of evil mixed with the good in our lives must be
+removed. And there is just one way to get rid of them--to submit
+ourselves to the sifting of Him who not only knows the good from the
+evil, the wheat from the chaff, but will also show the way to retain the
+wheat and throw out the chaff.
+
+Of course one does not have to yield himself to Christ's sifting. But of
+one thing we can be sure; there will be a sifting. If Christ is not
+invited to do the work, the Devil will take up the task. But his purpose
+in sifting is always to retain the evil, and drive out all the good.
+
+God asks for "pure religion and undefiled." There is no place in his
+calculations for adulterants. Be courageous, and get rid of them!
+
+
+VI
+
+LOOKING BEYOND MONEY
+
+Money is a good thing, when it is properly secured and properly used.
+But there are better things than money. Honor is better, and loving
+service, and thoughtful consideration of others.
+
+This was the lesson taught by the life of a man who was a shareholder in
+a mining company that was about to go out of business. The shareholders
+would sustain very heavy losses, so a friend who knew the secrets of the
+company determined to warn this man, whom everybody liked. The hint was
+given that it would be to his advantage to sell quickly. "Why?" asked
+Mr. N. "Well, you know, the value of the mines is greatly depreciated."
+"When I bought the shares I took the risk." "Yes, but now you should
+take the opportunity of selling while you can, so as not to lose
+anything." "And supposing I don't sell, what then?" "Then you will
+probably lose all you have." "And if I do sell, somebody else will lose
+instead of me?" "Yes, I suppose so." "Do you suppose Jesus Christ would
+sell out?" "That is hardly a fair question. I suppose he would not." "I
+am a Christian," said Mr. N., "and I wish to follow my Master, therefore
+I shall not sell." He did not, and soon after lost everything, and had
+to begin life again.
+
+This shareholder would have appreciated Professor A. H. Buchanan, who
+was for forty years professor of mathematics in Cumberland University,
+Tennessee. After his death it was told of him that at one time he was
+offered an appointment in government service to which a $3,000 salary
+attached. His income as professor in a church college was $600 a year.
+But he saw more chance to make his life count for Christian things in
+the professor's place than in public service, so he declined the $3000
+and stayed by the $600. One who spoke of these facts in the professor's
+life said, in comment:
+
+"If he had taken the $3,000, everybody would have regarded him as an
+ordinary sort of man. Now everybody who has heard of Professor
+Buchanan's exceptional devotion appreciates that he was a very
+extraordinary man. A very cheap person indeed is capable of accepting a
+bigger salary."
+
+At about the time of the death of this professor of mathematics a daily
+paper mentioned a civil engineer who was transforming the appearance of
+a western city, and said of him: "Two or three times he has had chances
+to get three or four times his present salary. Each time he has said:
+'No, my work is here; I haven't finished it. The money doesn't count, so
+I shall stick here and finish my work.'"
+
+After the death of a famous minister in St. Louis a story was told of
+him that he had not allowed to be known widely during his lifetime. This
+was the romantic tale, as related by a writer in The New York _Sun_:
+
+"When a young man, he found to his amazement among his father's papers a
+deed to five thousand eight hundred and eighty-three acres of land,
+located in what is known as West Virginia. This deed was a great
+surprise to all who saw or heard of it. Putting this deed in his
+pocket, young Palmore, the only heir to the property, made a trip to
+West Virginia, to look over his vast estate, which was far in the
+interior.
+
+"Starting from the city of Charleston, West Virginia, he drove in a
+buggy into the region where his plantation was located. He traced the
+boundaries of his property and found that hundreds of families had
+settled on it without any right to it, but were living as if secure in
+the possession of their separate little patches of territory. He found
+that beneath the surface of this land there was almost limitless wealth,
+but the multitudes who had built themselves humble homes on the surface
+did not know of it, and had been living thus in undisturbed possession
+for a number of years. He quietly walked about at night and looked
+through the windows at the parents and children living on his estate.
+Great lawyers were ready to inaugurate legal proceedings that would have
+made him a millionaire, and such legal proceedings would doubtless have
+been instituted if the heir in person had not visited the scene of his
+great estate. As he dreamed in the nighttime about dispossessing such a
+multitude of people of their humble homes, he began to feel that,
+instead of such a fortune being a blessing, an estate received at such
+an expense would be a burden.
+
+"After earnest prayer and sleepless hours in the midst of his vast
+acres, he was seized with the conviction that each member of this
+multitude of families living on his property needed it more than did the
+heir, and there and then he made up his mind that he would leave them in
+quiet possession of his estate."
+
+The reporter who related the story said that the man had been called a
+fool, and commented, "He was God's fool."
+
+Then he said that the incident he had related would have been
+unbelievable if it had not been so well attested. But why unbelievable?
+Is it because of the common idea that "every man has his price," that it
+is unthinkable that a sane man would let a fortune that he could claim
+honestly slip through his fingers?
+
+Perhaps it is true that every man has his price. However, if this snarl
+of the pessimist is to have universal application, the price must be
+understood to be--in many instances--not selfish gratification, but the
+opportunity for courageous service. There are men and women who can be
+won by such an opportunity who cannot be reached by any argument of mere
+private advantage. Such people silence the complaints of the croaker and
+command the confidence of those who are struggling to help their
+fellows.
+
+Louis Agassiz, the naturalist, was such a man. "I have no time to make
+money," was his remark when urged by a friend to turn aside from the
+important work of the moment to an easy, lucrative task. His reason was
+thus explained at another time: "I have made it the rule of my life to
+abandon any intellectual pursuit the moment it becomes commercially
+valuable." It was his idea that there were many who would then be
+willing to carry on work he had begun.
+
+A contrast is presented by the famous inventor who, early in life, made
+it a rule never to give himself to any activity in which there was no
+prospect of financial gain. His first question was not, "Does the public
+need this invention?" but "Is there money in it?" Having answered to his
+satisfaction, he was ready to go ahead.
+
+The world could not well have spared either of these men, for both
+rendered valuable service. But, judging from the stories of their
+careers, there was more joy in the life of the naturalist, who,
+satisfied to earn a living, thought most of serving his fellows, than in
+the life of the inventor before whose eyes the dollar continually loomed
+large. The counting-house measure of life is not the most satisfying nor
+is it the most useful.
+
+That was the notion of Jacob Riis, of whom a minister who was devoting
+his life to the interest of young working men near his church once asked
+if such effort was merely thrown away, if he was pocketing himself.
+"Pocketing yourself, are you?" Riis replied. "Stick to your pocket. It
+is a pretty good pocket to be in. Out of such a pocket, worked in the
+way you are working it, will come healing for the ills of the day that
+now possess us. I would rather be in such a pocket, working for the
+Lord, than in a $1,000,000 church, working for the applause of a
+congregation."
+
+Those who are familiar with inside history at Washington say that the
+day after Garfield's election as President, a dispatch was sent to
+Milton Wells, a Wisconsin preacher, whose vote in the convention had
+kept Garfield's name on the list of candidates to the very last, asking
+him if he would become governor of Arizona Territory. Mr. Wells
+answered: "I have a better office that I cannot leave. I am preaching
+here for $600 per year."
+
+There was once a man named Paul who might have enjoyed position and
+power, if he had wished, but he chose instead a life of courageous
+service of which he was able once to write, without boasting:
+
+"In labors more abundantly, in prisons more abundantly; in stripes above
+measure, in deaths oft. Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes
+save one. Thrice was I beaten with rods, once was I stoned, thrice I
+suffered shipwreck, a night and a day have I been in the deep; in
+journeyings often, in perils of rivers, in perils of robbers, in perils
+from my countrymen, in perils from the Gentiles, in perils in the city,
+in perils in the wilderness, in perils in the sea, in perils among false
+brethren; in labor and travail, in watchings often, in hunger and
+thirst, in fastings often, in cold and nakedness."
+
+How could Paul bear all these things? They were enough to break down a
+dozen strong men. Probably he sometimes felt that he could not bear the
+burden any longer, but always there came to him the assurance of Christ,
+"My grace is sufficient for thee." Then he could bear anything; yet not
+he, but Christ, who lived in him. Thus his glory was not in his own
+strength but in his weakness, which made place in his life for the
+strength of Christ.
+
+Until men and women learn how to gain strength in their weakness as Paul
+did, their lives will be unsatisfying, their days will be full of
+complaint. Their burdens, which seemed like mountains before learning to
+trust Christ, will be borne as easily as if they were feathers.
+
+God does not promise to make us all dollar millionaires if we look at
+Him for strength in our weakness, but He does promise to make us all
+millionaires of faith and hope and courage. Paul was; we can be, too.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER TWO
+
+_THE COURAGE THAT FACES OBSTACLES_
+
+
+"YOU may expect to spend the rest of your days tied to your chair."
+
+Theodore Roosevelt's physician made this disconcerting announcement to
+his patient a few weeks before his death.
+
+How would the courageous man receive an announcement like that? How
+would you receive it?
+
+Let the words spoken in reply by the lion-hearted Roosevelt never be
+forgotten by others who struggle with difficulties:
+
+"All right! I can work and live that way, too!"
+
+Surely the triumphant words justified the characterization made by
+Herman Hagedorn of this colossal worker:
+
+"He was frail; he made himself a mountain of courage."
+
+At a dinner given to celebrate the worthy achievement of a public man, a
+guest spoke of him to a companion at table.
+
+"No wonder he has been so well. Everything is in his favor: he is young,
+he is brilliant, he is in good health."
+
+"In good health?" was the answering comment. "Where did you get that?
+For years he has been in wretched health; many a night he was unable to
+sleep except he knelt on the floor by the bedside and stretched himself
+from his waist across the bed. But it is not strange that you did not
+know, he has said nothing of his ailments; he is so full of courage
+himself that he makes everyone around him courageous."
+
+
+I
+
+LEARNING
+
+When the famous Sioux Indian, Charles A. Eastman, was a boy, his father,
+who had learned the joys of civilized life, urged his son to secure an
+education. "I am glad that my son is brave and strong," he said to him.
+"I have come to start you on the White Man's way. I want you to grow to
+be a good man."
+
+Then he urged his son, Ohiyesa, as he was called, to put on the
+civilized clothes he had brought with him. The boy rebelled at first; he
+had been accustomed to hate white men and everything that belonged to
+them. But when he reflected that they had done him no harm, after all,
+he decided to try on the curious garments.
+
+Together father and son traveled toward the haunts of the white man. As
+they traveled Ohiyesa listened to tales of the wonderful inventions he
+would see. He was especially eager to look on a railroad train.
+
+But even after he had gone with his father, he was reluctant to enter on
+his long training, until his father suggested that he make believe he
+was starting on a long war-path, from which there could be no honorable
+return until his course was completed. Entering into the spirit of the
+proposal, the Indian lad began his schooling at Flandreau Indian Agency,
+and persisted for twelve long years. After graduating from college he
+devoted himself to his people, and in many years since has accomplished
+wonders for them, teaching them the patience he had himself learned, and
+enabling them to understand that such patience and persistence always
+brings its reward.
+
+The experience of Isaac Pitman, the inventor of shorthand, was
+different, yet, after all, it was much the same. As a boy he had little
+education. But soon after he went to work he made up his mind to supply
+the lack. The record of how he did this is one of the most remarkable
+instances of courageous patience on record.
+
+The long office hours at his place of employment, from six in the
+morning until six at night, made study difficult, but he showed
+conclusively that where there is a will there is a way, and that he had
+the will. He was accustomed to leave his bed at four, that he might
+study two hours before the beginning of the day's work. Two hours in the
+evening also were set apart for study. Sometimes it happened that work
+at the factory was light, and the young clerk was excused for the
+morning. Instead of taking the time for sport, it was his habit to take
+a book with him into the fields or under the trees.
+
+Thomas Allen Reid, in his biography of Pitman says: "One of the books
+which he made his companion in morning walks into the country was
+Lennie's Grammar. The conjugation of verbs, list of irregular verbs,
+adverbs, prepositions, and conjunctions, and the thirty-six rules of
+syntax, he committed to memory so that he could repeat them in order.
+The study of the books gave him a transparent English style."
+
+His father was a subscriber to the local library. "I went regularly to
+the library for fresh supplies of books," Isaac said, in 1863, "and thus
+read most of the English classics. I think I was quite as familiar with
+Addison, and Sir Roger, and Will Honeycomb, and all the Club, as I was
+with my own brothers and sisters ... and when reading The Spectator at
+that early age, I wished that I might be able to do something in
+letters."
+
+Before he left school he formed the habit of copying choice pieces of
+poetry and prose into a little book which he kept in his pocket. These
+bits he would commit to memory when he had leisure. A later pocket
+companion contained a neatly written copy of Valpey's Greek Grammar, as
+far as the syntax, which he committed to memory. In his morning walks in
+1832 he committed to memory the first fourteen chapters of Proverbs. He
+would not undertake a fresh chapter until he had repeated the preceding
+one without hesitation.
+
+As most of his knowledge of words was gained from books, he had
+difficulty in pronunciation. "His method of overcoming the deficiency
+was ingenious," his biographer wrote. "Again and again he read 'Paradise
+Lost.' Careful attention to the meter enabled him to correct his faulty
+pronunciation of many words. Words not found in the poem he discovered
+in the dictionary. With unusual courage he decided to read through
+Walker's Dictionary, fixing his mind on words new to him and on the
+spelling and pronunciation of familiar terms. On the pages of one of his
+pocket-books he copied all words he had been in the habit of
+mispronouncing. Although there were more than two thousand of these
+words, the plan was carried out before he was seventeen."
+
+The labor of writing out so many extracts from books led him to study
+the imperfect system of shorthand then current, and to develop the
+system that was to bear his name.
+
+So many young people feel that they "simply cannot abide" the long
+process of getting an education; they give up when they are only a part
+of the way to the goal. But for most of them the day of bitter regret
+will come when they will wish that they had been more like Eastman or
+Pitman in their determination to be patient and persistent, to allow
+nothing to stand in the way of their purpose to fit themselves in the
+best possible manner for the serious business of life.
+
+
+II
+
+DEPENDING ON SELF
+
+Young men just starting out in life nowadays, who find the path to
+success difficult, are more fortunate than some of those who struggled
+with hard times a century or more ago, because they are determined to
+make a self-respecting fight on their own merits. It was not always so;
+once nothing was thought of the effort made by an impecunious young man
+to throw himself on the generosity of one who had already achieved
+success. Then it was a habit of many authors to seek as a patron a man
+of influence and means who would help them live till their books were
+ready for the publisher, and then help to get the books before the
+public.
+
+From letters of George Crabbe, a poet of some note in his century,
+asking Edmund Burke to become his patron, something of his story may be
+known. As a boy he was apprenticed to an apothecary; later he was
+proprietor of a small shop of his own. Business, neglected for books and
+writing, did not prosper. With his sister, his housekeeper, he "fasted
+with much fortitude." Then he went to London, with a capital of nine
+pounds, and starved some more. Months were spent in trying to enlist
+two patrons. At last, threatened with a prison for debt, he decided to
+try a third patron; and this was his procedure, as he himself described
+it:
+
+"I looked as well as I could into every character that offered itself to
+my view, and resolved to apply where I found the most shining abilities,
+for I had learnt to distrust the humanity of weak people in all
+stations."
+
+So he wrote to Edmund Burke, telling him that he could no longer be
+content to live in the home of poor people, who had kept him for nearly
+a year, and had lent him money for his current expenses. Describing
+himself as "one of those outcasts on the world, who are without a
+friend, without employment and without bread," he told of his vain
+appeal to another for gold to save him from prison, added that he had
+but one week to raise the necessary funds, and made his request.
+
+"I appeal to you, sir, as a good, and, let me add, a great man. I have
+no other pretensions to your favor than that I am an unhappy one. It is
+not easy to support thoughts of confinement, and I am coward enough to
+dread such an end to my suspense ... I will call upon you, sir,
+to-morrow, and if I have not the happiness to obtain credit with you I
+must submit to my fate ... I have only to hope a speedy end to a life so
+unpromisingly begun ... I can reap some consolation in looking to the
+end of it."
+
+The appeal was successful. Edmund Burke became Crabbe's patron. The poet
+was glad to eat the crumbs that fell from the rich man's table, and
+submitted to many unpleasant slights and insinuations while he received
+the dole of charity.
+
+That suing thus for a patron did not always have the effect of
+destroying an author's self-respect is shown by a letter written by Dr.
+Samuel Johnson to Lord Chesterfield. When, after years of hard labor,
+Dr. Johnson's dictionary was known to be ready for publication, Lord
+Chesterfield wrote for "The World" two flattering articles about the
+author, evidently thinking that the work would be dedicated to him. At
+once Dr. Johnson wrote:
+
+"My Lord: When, upon some slight encouragement, I first visited your
+lordship, I ... could not forbear to wish ... that I might obtain that
+regard for which I saw the world contending; but I found my attendance
+so little encouraged, that neither pride nor modesty would suffer me to
+continue it....
+
+"Seven years, my lord, have passed since I waited in your outward room,
+or was repulsed from your door, during which time I have been pushing on
+my work through difficulties, of which it is useless to complain, and
+have brought it at last to the verge of publication, without one act of
+assistance, one word of encouragement or one smile of favor. Such
+treatment I did not expect for I never had a patron before.... The
+notice which you have been pleased to take of my labor, had it been
+early, had been kind; but it has been delayed till I am indifferent, and
+cannot enjoy it; till I am solitary, and cannot impart it; till I am
+known, and do not want it.... I have long awakened from that dream of
+hope, in which I once boasted myself with so much exultation, my lord,
+
+"Your lordship's most humble, most obedient servant,
+
+ "Sam Johnson."
+
+The lapse of a century has brought a change. Self-respecting, courageous
+young workers do not seek a patron to help them to fame. To-day they ask
+only to fight their own battles, win their own victories.
+
+
+III
+
+UNCOMPLAINING
+
+Nor do courageous workers complain when little things go wrong.
+
+"I don't know what I shall do if the mail does not come to-morrow. Think
+of being two days without a morning paper!"
+
+The complaint was heard when railway traffic had been tied up by
+washouts on the railway. The inconvenience suffered by the speaker
+seemed to him very great. Though there had been no other interruption to
+the many comforts and conveniences to which he had been accustomed, the
+single difficulty made him lose his temper and spoiled his day.
+
+When one is tempted to magnify such a small difficulty into a mountain
+it is worth while to look at things from the standpoint of a man whose
+life far from the centers of civilization makes him so independent of
+circumstances and surroundings that he can be cheerful even in the face
+of what seem like bitter privations.
+
+A company of travelers in the forests of Canada thought that the
+knowledge of the most recent news was necessary to happiness. They
+learned their mistake when they reached the camp of a man from whom
+they expected to learn news more recent than the events reported in the
+paper the day they left civilization, seven weeks before. They felt sure
+that, as he lived on the trail, he would have seen some traveler who had
+left the railroad since their own departure.
+
+When they asked him for late news from the States, he said he had some
+very recent news, and proceeded to tell of events eight months old! "Do
+you call that recent?" he was asked, in disgust.
+
+"What's the matter with that?" was the wondering reply. "It only
+happened last fall, and there ain't been nobody through here since." And
+he contentedly resumed the task at which he had been engaged when
+interrupted by the demand for "recent" news.
+
+On the same journey the travelers--whose story is told in "Trails in
+Western Canada"--showed that they were learning the lesson. Carelessness
+in handling a campfire caused a forest fire which threatened their food
+supply. They saved this, but lost their only axes. After a long search
+they found these in the embers, but the temper had been utterly ruined
+by the heat. Only a few hours before they felt that an axe was
+absolutely necessary not only to comfort but to life itself, yet when
+the ruined tools were found the travelers turned to their tasks without
+giving the disaster a second thought. They knew that there is always a
+way out of difficulty. They continued their expedition without an axe,
+and found that they managed very well.
+
+The lesson was impressed still more by the attitude of a guide who spent
+a few days with them. Like many other people on vacation they allowed
+themselves to worry about finances. But their thoughts were set on a new
+track by the guide, who, after telling of the success in trapping
+grizzly bear and beaver which had enabled him to save a little money,
+said: "Life is too short to worry about money. If I lose all I have
+to-morrow, I can get a couple of bear traps and by next spring I'll be
+on my feet again. The mountains are always here, and I know where there
+is a bunch of bear and a colony of beaver, and I can get along out here,
+and live like a prince while those poor millionaires are lying awake at
+nights, lest someone come and steal their money."
+
+Two other guides were engaged to pole the travelers' raft down the
+Fraser River. Nearly every day the cold rain fell in torrents, but the
+men were unmoved. "All day long they would stand in their wet clothes,
+their hands numb and blue from the cold as they handled their dripping
+poles; yet not a comment indicating discomfort is recalled. Physical
+annoyances, which in the city would bring an ambulance, scarcely are
+mentioned by them."
+
+One day one of the men was asked what they did when they were sick.
+"Cain't say we ever are sick," was the reply. "The worst thing that ever
+happened to us, I reckon, was when Mort here had a bad tooth; but, after
+a day or two, we got sick of it, and took it out." That was all he
+thought worth saying about it till he was pressed for an account of the
+operation. "Oh, I looked through our dunnage bag," he said, "and found
+an old railroad spike. Mort held it against the tooth and I hit the head
+with a big rock, and knocked her out the first time."
+
+His companion was unwilling to agree that this was the most trying
+experience. He told of a day when the man who had reported the tooth
+extraction, cut his foot severely with an axe. "Oh, that didn't bother
+us," the victim interrupted. "I just slapped on some spruce gum and
+never thought anything more about it." Asked how long he was laid up,
+the surprised answer was: "Laid up for that? We weren't laid up at all.
+Couldn't travel quite as fast for a day or two, but we didn't lose no
+time at that, for we traveled longer to make up."
+
+Still another guide gave an object lesson in making light of
+difficulties when his horse fell on him, bruising one of his knees so
+that it swelled to an enormous size. The injured man made no complaint,
+though his companions were full of sympathy. He knew he could reduce the
+swelling by heroic remedies.
+
+One day when traveling was unusually difficult, the guide cheered his
+employers by telling them of the fine camp he owned just ahead--"a house
+like a hotel," he said. And when the camp was reached he pointed proudly
+to "a great log with a few great pieces of bark and some cedar slivers
+stretched over the top." In this camp the night was spent, without
+blankets and in the rain. "But as no one seemed to consider this
+anything out of the ordinary, the travelers made no complaint."
+
+Perhaps a taste of the wilderness is what we need when we become
+impatient of trifles and make ourselves miserable because everything
+does not go to suit us.
+
+
+IV
+
+PERSISTING
+
+Failure camps on the trail of the man who is ready to give up because
+difficulties multiply. A representative of a large paper warehouse made
+up his mind to add to his list of customers a certain Michigan firm.
+Repeated rebuffs did not daunt him. Every sixty days he sent the firm a
+letter of invitation to buy his goods. During twenty-seven years one
+hundred and sixty-one letters were mailed without result. Then, in reply
+to the one hundred and sixty-second letter, the Michigan firm asked for
+quotations. These were given promptly, and two carloads of paper were
+sold. What if this letter writer had become discouraged before he wrote
+this final letter?
+
+"I thought you were planning to complete your education," a friend said
+to a young man whom he had not seen for some time; "yet now you are
+clerking in a store. Perhaps, though, you are earning money for next
+year's expenses."
+
+"No, I am earning money for this year's expenses," was the discouraged
+reply. "I did want an education, but I found it was too difficult to get
+what I sought, so I have decided to settle down."
+
+Of course it is easier to give up than it is to push on in the face of
+difficulty, but the youth who pushes on is fitting himself to fill a
+man's place in the world, while the young man who is easily discouraged
+is fitting himself for nothing but disappointment. The world has no
+place for a quitter.
+
+There is a tonic for young people who purpose to make the most of
+themselves in glimpses of a few college students who had the courage to
+face difficulty. One of these was an Italian boy, who was glad to beat
+carpets, wash windows, scrub kitchen floors, mow lawns, teach grammar,
+arithmetic and vocal exercises at a night school for foreigners.
+Then--as if his time was not fully occupied by these occupations--he
+made arrangements to care for a furnace and sift the ashes, in exchange
+for piano lessons. That student finished his preparatory course with
+credit, taking a prize for scholarship.
+
+A seventeen-year-old boy wanted an education, but he had nine brothers
+and sisters at home, and he knew that he could look for no financial
+assistance from his parents. So he picked cotton at sixty cents a
+hundred pounds, sawed wood, cut weeds and scrubbed floors--and thus paid
+his expenses.
+
+One student could not spare the money to pay his railroad fare to the
+school of his choice. But he had a pony. So he rode the pony the entire
+distance of five hundred miles, working for his expenses along the way.
+
+A beginner in college was too full of grit to give up when bills came on
+him more heavily than he had expected. During the school year he did
+chores, rang the bell for the change of classes, did janitor work, and
+waited on table in restaurants. In the summer he found work on farms
+near by.
+
+"No task is too difficult for the man with a purpose," declared a worker
+with young men, some of whom were ready to give up. "Two things are
+necessary if you would be successful," was another man's message to
+those whom he wished to inspire to do purposeful work. "First: know what
+you want to do. Second: do it."
+
+Those who permit obstacles to stand in the way of the performance of
+tasks they know they ought to perform if they would make the most of
+themselves, need to take to heart the message given by a mother to her
+son when he was ready to give up the unequal struggle with poverty and
+physical infirmity. "Thou wilt have much to bear, many hardships to
+suffer," she said. "But mark what I say, we must not mind the trouble.
+During the first part of the night we must prepare the bed on which to
+stretch ourselves during the latter part."
+
+Giving up after failure is always easier than trying again, but the men
+and women who count are those who will not be dismayed by failure. When
+J. Marion Sims, the famous surgeon, was beginning the practice of
+medicine, he proudly tacked an immense tin sign on the front of his
+office. Then he lost two patients, and pride and courage both failed
+him. "I just took down that long tin signboard from my door," he wrote
+in the story of his life. "There was an old well back of the house,
+covered over with boards. I went to the well, took that sign with me,
+dropped it in there, and covered the old well over again. I was no
+longer a doctor in the town." But fortunately he conquered
+discouragement, made a fresh beginning, and overcame tremendous
+obstacles. After his death a famous man said that if all his discoveries
+should be suppressed, it would be found that his own peculiar branch of
+surgery had gone backward at least twenty-five years.
+
+Indomitable perseverance is necessary for the business man as for the
+professional man; and it will just as surely bring reward to those who
+are engaged in Christian work as to those who are seeking worldly honor.
+So when the uphill climb seems too difficult, there must be no
+faltering. Remember--as Christina Rossetti said--"We shall escape the
+uphill by never turning back."
+
+In gathering material for a history of Charles V of Spain, a Spanish
+historian was painstaking in his researches. Finally he was able to tell
+the king's whereabouts on every day of his career, except for two weeks
+in 1538.
+
+Then friends assured him that he had done his best. In all probability
+nothing of importance happened during those days. But the historian
+believed in being thorough to the end. So he delayed publication. For
+fifteen years he sought news of the missing fortnight. Finally, and
+reluctantly, when he was seventy-five years old, he published the book.
+
+At length an American woman, studying in the archives of Spain, having
+learned of the lost days, resolved to find them. Among musty documents,
+in many libraries, she toiled. Then, by a woman's intuition, she was led
+to look for documents of a sort the Spanish historian had never thought
+of. And she found where the king was on some of those days. The news was
+sent to the historian, just in time for him to make additions to his
+inaugural address to be delivered on taking his seat in the Academy of
+History. In this address he rejoiced to give full credit for the
+discovery to the American.
+
+But the woman was not satisfied; there was still a gap to be filled. She
+made further trials, and failed. Again intuition led her to documentary
+sources that had hardly been touched since they were filed away nearly
+three hundred years before. She succeeded, and now that bit of history
+is complete.
+
+A well known writer for young people was also persistent in tracing a
+story to its source. When he came to America from his native Holland he
+heard for the first time the story of the Dutch hero who stopped the
+hole in the dike, a story unknown in Holland. He resolved to prove or
+disprove this. The record of his long search was published later. Not
+only did he prove the existence of the boy, but he proved that the boy's
+sister was a partner in the heroic deed. Thus the helpful story has been
+saved for future generations.
+
+These incidents make interesting reading. But do they not do more?
+Surely it is unnecessary to urge the lesson of persistence in a task
+seriously undertaken. Often there is temptation to slight some
+worth-while task, after one has worked on it painstakingly for a time.
+"Why pay so much attention to detail?" is asked. "Surely no real harm
+will be done if I give less time to some of these things that seemed so
+important at the beginning!"
+
+Fortunately there are multitudes of workers who are constitutionally
+unable to slight a task. The proofreader on a paper of large circulation
+is an example. It is a part of her work to prove statements made, to
+verify facts and figures, to see that these are altogether accurate.
+Once when there was an unusual pressure of work the editor suggested
+that she might wish to take certain things for granted, but she showed
+her conscientious thoroughness by performing the task to the end,
+according to the rules of the office, and in the face of weariness that
+was almost exhaustion.
+
+It may not be given to you to be a historian. You may not be called upon
+to prove the story of a hero. It may not be your task to read proof or
+to verify manuscripts. But each one has a definite part in the work of
+the world and there is no one to whom the example of historian and
+proofreader is without value. All need to remember the truth in the
+assurance, "There is nothing so hard but search will find it out."
+
+
+V
+
+TOILING
+
+Two young people were passing out of a building where they had just
+listened to a speaker of note.
+
+"What a wonderful talk that was!" said one who found it a heavy cross to
+make the simplest address in public. "I wish I had such a gift of
+speech."
+
+"It isn't a gift in his case; it is an acquirement," was the response.
+"If you had known that man five years ago, you would agree with me. When
+I first knew him he could not get up in a public meeting and make the
+simplest statement without floundering and stammering in a most pitiful
+manner. But he had made up his mind to be a public speaker, and he put
+himself through a severe course of discipline. To-day you see the
+result."
+
+The biography of Dr. Herrick Johnson tells of courageous conquest of
+difficulties that seemed to block the way to success: "Hamilton College
+has always given great attention to public speaking and class orations.
+The high standard was set by a remarkably gifted man, Professor
+Mandeville, who instituted a system in the study of oratory and public
+speaking which has been known ever since, with some modification, as the
+'Mandeville System.'"
+
+"In 1853, Dr. Anson J. Upson was in the Mandevillian chair, and had
+lifted up to still greater height the standard of public speaking, and
+had awakened a great, inextinguishable enthusiasm for it. Not one of the
+boys who entered that year, and who were at that prize-speaking contest,
+could fail to be seized with the public-speaking craze. It especially
+met Herrick Johnson's taste and trend and gifts, and fired his highest
+aim. Probably there was nothing he wanted so much as the prize in his
+class at the next commencement. But unfortunately his standards and
+ideals of public speaking were just then as far as possible from the
+Mandevillian standard. He had acquired what was called a ministerial
+tone, and other faults fatal to any success, unless eradicated. The best
+speakers of the upper classes were the recognized and accepted
+'drillers' of the new boys, who at once put themselves under their care
+and criticism. Every spring and fall a certain valley with a grove,
+north of the college, was the resort of the aspirants for success at
+this time. The woods would ring with their 'exercises' and strenuous
+declamation, and I presume it is the same to-day.
+
+"Herrick Johnson had a magnificent voice, well-nigh ruined by his sins
+against the right method of using it. He soon saw that it was going to
+be essential for him to go down to the foundation of his wrong methods
+and break them all up and absolutely eradicate his 'tone.' It was no
+easy thing to do, but the young man was intensely ambitious, and so he
+worked with the greatest energy. He failed of an appointment on the
+'best four' of his Freshman class. But he worked away throughout his
+Sophomore year and failed again. The upperclassmen saw his pluck, they
+recognized his grand voice, and they worked with him during his Junior
+year, until he had mastered the Mandevillian style, wholly eradicated
+his 'tone,' corrected all defects, and got his appointment for one of
+the best four speakers of the Junior year; and on the prize-speaking
+night of that commencement, he went on the platform conscious of his
+power and swept everything before him as the Junior prize speaker. It
+set the standard for that young man. Voice, manner, address, were all
+masterful and accounted easily for his great success as a public speaker
+through all his subsequent prominent and successful career in his
+profession."
+
+A part of the good of "speaking a piece" is to try again, determined to
+retrieve failure. Success is not always a good thing for a boy or a
+girl, any more than for a man or a woman. The discipline of failure is
+sometimes needed. To fail is not always a calamity, if the failure leads
+to the correction of the faults that lead to failure. Whether it be
+speaking a piece or learning a lesson or facing a trying situation in
+business, no matter how many times one has failed, he needs to take to
+heart the message of Macbeth:
+
+ We fail!
+ But screw your courage to the sticking-point,
+ And we'll not fail.
+
+Always there is a reward for those who fight against difficulties, who
+persist in their struggle even when failure follows failure. Everyday
+the glad story of the sequel to such persistent struggles is recorded.
+The records of commercial life, of school life, of home life are full of
+these.
+
+
+VI
+
+CONQUERING INFIRMITY
+
+Of all obstacles that can stand in the way of courageous conquest, one
+of the most fatal, in the opinion of many, is blindness. Yet it is not
+necessary that the loss of the eyes should be the fatal handicap it is
+almost universally considered. It is a mistake to feel that when a
+worker has anything seriously and permanently wrong with his eyes he
+cannot be expected longer to perform tasks that are normal for one who
+has the full use of all his five senses. In fact, when we hear that a
+man is going blind we are apt to dismiss with a sigh his chance for
+continuing productive labor of any sort; we feel that there is little
+left for him but sitting resignedly in a chimney corner and listening to
+others read to him or patiently fingering the raised letters provided
+for the use of the blind.
+
+In protest against this error a novelist has taken for his hero a young
+man who lost his sight. His friends pitied him, talked dolefully to him,
+promised to look after him in the days of incapacity. Of course he sank
+lower and lower in the doleful dumps. Then one came into his life who
+never seemed to notice his blindness, who talked to him as if he could
+see, who encouraged him to do things by taking it for granted that they
+would be performed. Her treatment proved effective; before long the
+blind man was learning self-reliance, and was well on the road to
+achievement.
+
+The story was true to life for, times without number, blind men and
+women have shown their ability to work as effectively as if they could
+see. More than two hundred years ago a teacher in London named Richard
+Lucas lost his eyesight. Many of his friends thought that he would, of
+course, give up all idea of being a useful man; in that day few thought
+of the possibility of one so afflicted doing anything worth much. But
+the young man thought differently. He listened to others as they read to
+him, and completed his studies. He became the author of a dozen volumes,
+and was among the leaders of his day. One of his greatest works was the
+book "An Enquiry after Happiness." He knew how to be happy, in spite of
+his affliction, so he could teach others to follow him.
+
+A little earlier there lived on the farm of a poor Irishman the boy
+Thomas Carolan. When he was five years old, he had smallpox, a disease
+that was much more virulent in those days than it is to-day because the
+treatment required was not understood. As a result the boy lost his
+sight. Soon he showed a taste for music, and he was able to take a few
+lessons, in spite of the poverty at home. As a young man he composed
+hundreds of pieces of music, and it has been said of him that he
+contributed much towards correcting and enriching the style of national
+Irish music.
+
+Another youthful victim of smallpox was Thomas Blacklock, the son of a
+bricklayer in Scotland. "He can't be an artisan now," his friends said.
+But it did not occur to them that he could be a professional man. His
+father read him poetry and essays. When he was only twelve the boy began
+to write poetry in imitation of those whose verses he had heard. After
+his father's death, when the blind boy was but nineteen, he was more
+than ever dependent on himself. By the help of a friend he was enabled
+to go to school for a time. Then he became an author, and, later, a
+famous preacher. Often, as he walked about, a favorite dog preceded him.
+On one occasion he heard the hollow sound of the dog's tread on the
+board covering a deep well, and just in time to avoid stepping on the
+board himself. The covering was so rotten that he would surely have
+fallen into the water.
+
+As a boy Francis Huber, of Geneva, Switzerland, was a great student. He
+insisted on reading by the feeble light of a lamp, or by the light of
+the moon, even when he was urged not to do so, and the result was
+blindness. A few years later he married one who rejoiced to be "his
+companion, his secretary and his observer." He became the greatest
+authority of his day on bees, although he knew nothing of the subject
+until after his misfortune. The strange thing is that all his
+conclusions were based on observation. Among other things he studied the
+function of the wax, the construction of their combs, the bees' senses
+and their ability to ventilate the hive by means of their wings. In
+recognition of his work he was given membership in a number of learned
+societies. His name must always be connected with the history of early
+bee investigation.
+
+Not long after the close of the American Revolution James Holman, a
+British naval officer, lost his eyesight while in Africa. He was then
+about twenty-five years old. Later he became one of the best known
+travelers of his day. The world was told of his travels in lectures and
+in books, and others were also inspired to travel. "What is the use of
+traveling to one who cannot see?" he was asked at one time. "Does every
+traveler see all he describes?" he replied. He said that he felt sure he
+visited, when on his travels, as many interesting places as others, and
+that, by having the things described to him on the spot, he could form
+as correct a judgment as his own sight would have enabled him to do.
+
+In 1779 Richmond, Virginia, gave birth to James Wilson, who lost his
+sight when he was four years old, because of smallpox. He was then on
+shipboard, and was taken to Belfast, Ireland, where he grew to manhood.
+When a boy he delivered newspapers to subscribers who lived as far as
+five miles from the city. When fifteen he used part of his earnings to
+buy books which he persuaded other boys to read to him. At twenty-one he
+entered an institution for the blind, for fuller instruction. Then he
+joined with a circle of mechanics in forming a reading society. One
+friend promised to read to him every evening such books as he could
+procure. The hours for reading were from nine to one every night in
+summer and from seven to eleven every night in the winter. "Often I
+have traveled three or four miles, in a severe winter night, to be at my
+post in time," he said once. "Perished with cold and drenched with rain,
+I have many a time sat down and listened for several hours together to
+the writings of Plutarch, Rollins, or Clarendon." After seven or eight
+years of this training, he was "acquainted with almost every work in the
+English language" his biographer says, perhaps a little extravagantly.
+His education he used in literary work.
+
+B. B. Bowen was a Massachusetts boy just a century ago. When a babe he
+lost his sight. In 1833 Dr. Howe--husband of Julia Ward Howe--selected
+him as one of six blind boys on whom he was to make the first
+experiments in the instruction of the blind. Later he wrote a book of
+which eighteen thousand copies were sold.
+
+Another of the men who proved the loss of sight was not a bar to
+successful work was Thomas R. Lounsbury, the Yale scholar whose studies
+in Chaucer and Shakespeare made him famous. Toward the close of his busy
+life he was engaged in a critical study of Tennyson, preparatory to
+writing an exhaustive book on the life of the great poet. He did not
+live to complete the work, but he left it in such shape that a friend
+was able to put it in the hands of the publishers.
+
+In the Introduction to the biography this friend told of the courageous
+manner in which Professor Lounsbury faced threatening blindness and
+continued his writing in spite of the danger. We are told that his eyes,
+never very good, failed him for close and prolonged work. "At best he
+could depend upon them for no more than two or three hours a day.
+Sometimes he could not depend upon them at all. That he might not
+subject them to undue strain, he acquired the habit of writing in the
+dark. Night after night, using a pencil on coarse paper, he would sketch
+a series of paragraphs for consideration in the morning. This was almost
+invariably his custom in later years. Needless to say, these rough
+drafts are difficult reading for an outsider. Though the lines could be
+kept reasonably straight, it was impossible for a man enveloped in
+darkness to dot an _i_ or to cross a _t_. Moreover, many words were
+abbreviated, and numerous sentences were left half written out. Every
+detail, however, was perfectly plain to the author himself. With these
+detached slips of paper and voluminous notes before him, he composed on
+a typewriter his various chapters, putting the paragraphs in logical
+sequence."
+
+Francis Parkman, the historian who made the Indian wars real to
+fascinated readers, was a physical wreck on the completion of "The
+Oregon Trail," when he was but twenty-five years old. He could not write
+even his own name, except with his eyes closed; he was unable to fix his
+mind on a subject, except for very brief intervals, and his nervous
+system was so exhausted that any effort was a burden. But he would not
+give up. During the weary days of darkness he thought out the story of
+the conspiracy of Pontiac and decided to write it. Physicians warned him
+that the results would be disastrous, yet he felt that nothing could do
+him more harm than an idle, purposeless life.
+
+One of his chief difficulties he solved in an ingenious manner. In a
+manuscript, published after his death, his plan was described:
+
+"He caused a wooden frame to be constructed of the size and shape of a
+sheet of letter paper. Stout wires were fixed horizontally across it,
+half an inch apart, movable back of thick pasteboard fitted behind
+them. The paper for writing was placed between the pasteboard and wires,
+guided by which and using a black-lead crayon, he could write not
+illegibly with closed eyes."
+
+This contrivance, with improvements, he used for about forty years of
+semi-blindness.
+
+The documents on which he depended for his facts were read to him,
+though sometimes for days he could not listen, and then perhaps only for
+half an hour at a time. As he listened to the reading he made notes with
+closed eyes. Then he turned over in his mind what he had heard and
+laboriously wrote a few lines. For months he penned an average of only
+three or four lines a day. Later he was able to work more rapidly and he
+completed the book in two years and a half. No publisher was found who
+was willing to bear the expense of issuing the volume, and the young man
+paid for the plates himself.
+
+Friends thought that now he would have to give up. His eyes were still
+troubling him, he became lame, his head felt as if great bands of iron
+were fastened about it, and frequently he did not sleep more than an
+hour or two a night. Then came the death of his wife, on whom he had
+depended for some years. At one time his physician warned him that he
+had not more than six months to live. But when a friend said that he had
+nothing more to live for, he made the man understand that he was not
+ready to hoist the white flag.
+
+He lived for forty-five years after it was thought that he could never
+use his eyes again, and during all this time he worked steadily and
+patiently, accomplishing what would have been a large task for a man who
+had the full use of all his powers.
+
+An Englishman was told by his physician he could never see again. For a
+time the news weighed heavily upon him. Afterward he said: "I remained
+silent for a moment, thinking seriously, and then, summoning up all the
+grit I possessed, I said, 'If God wills it, He knows best. What must be
+will be. And,' I added, putting my hand up to a tear that trickled down
+my face, 'God helping me, this is the last tear I shall ever shed for my
+blindness.'" It was. He secured the degrees of doctor of philosophy and
+master of arts. He was a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and
+the Chemical Society. He made many valuable scientific discoveries and
+inventions, saved a millionaire's life, and received the largest fee
+ever awarded any doctor--$250,000.
+
+To these men difficulties were a challenge to courage. They accepted the
+challenge and proved themselves superior to circumstances. Thus their
+lives became a challenge to the millions of their countrymen who read of
+their triumph.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THREE
+
+_THE COURAGE OF INDUSTRY_
+
+
+ANYBODY can drift, but only the man or woman of courage can breast the
+current, can fight on upstream.
+
+It is so easy to be idle or to work listlessly. Average folks drift
+heedlessly into occupations in which they have no special interest and
+for which they have as little fitness. Most people waste their evenings
+or use them to little profit: it never occurs to them that each day they
+waste precious hours. They give more thought to schemes to do less work
+than to attempts to increase output.
+
+And so they show their weakness, their unfitness for bearing
+responsibility, their cowardice when the world is calling for courage.
+
+Worth-while work demands the finest kind of courage, and with perfect
+fairness work gives back courage to those who put courage into it.
+
+
+I
+
+BEGINNING
+
+"Yes, he's a right good worker, when you once get him started," a
+country newspaper editor said to a friend who was inquiring about a boy
+who had been in the office three months. "Watch him now; you'll see what
+I mean."
+
+The boy had just brought from the express office the package of "patent
+insides," as the papers for the weekly edition of the newspaper, already
+half printed in the nearby city, were called. With a sigh he dragged
+these up the stairs and laid them on the folding table. With another
+sigh he contemplated the pile and thought how much time would be
+required to fold the eight hundred papers. After lengthy calculation he
+stopped to read a column of jokes from the top paper in the pile. At
+least five minutes passed before the first paper was folded. At the end
+of ten minutes he had succeeded in folding perhaps twenty-five papers.
+When the noon hour arrived not one third of the task was completed.
+
+While he ate his lunch he was thinking of the dread ordeal of the
+afternoon--six hundred more papers to be folded! Would he ever be done?
+He was still pitying himself as he walked slowly back to the office.
+Just before reaching the doorway into which he must turn, he spied an
+acquaintance. He made his way over to the boy who had attracted him, not
+because he had anything to say to him, but that he might delay a little
+longer the moment of beginning work at the folding table.
+
+"What are you going to do?" he asked idly of the boy, who had taken off
+his coat and was rolling up his sleeves.
+
+"The boss wants me to sort that lot of old iron," was the reply.
+
+"What, that huge pile! It will take you a week, won't it? Just think how
+much of it there is!"
+
+"No, there isn't time to think how much of it there is," was the reply.
+"And what would be the good? Not a bit of use getting discouraged at the
+very start, and that is what would happen if I didn't pitch in hard. The
+job is going to be done before night--that is, if I'm not interrupted by
+too many loafers coming in to ask fool questions."
+
+The boy from the printing office was about to resent this speech of the
+boy at the iron pile, but he thought better of it. "Perhaps there is
+something in what he says," he said to himself, as he went up the
+stairs. "Suppose I try to pitch in hard."
+
+So he surprised the foreman by beginning at the pile of six hundred
+papers as if he was to be sent to a ball game when he finished. And he
+surprised himself by finishing his task in a little more than an hour.
+
+The lesson he learned that day stood him in good stead when later he was
+taking his first difficult examination in a technical school. His
+neighbor stopped to look over the paper from beginning to end, and was
+heard to mutter, "How do they expect us to get through ten questions
+like these in an hour's time?" The boy from the printing office had no
+time for such an inquiry, but began work at once on the first question,
+without troubling himself about those that came later until he was ready
+for them.
+
+So it was when, his technical course completed, he was confronted by his
+first great railroad task, the clearing up of a wreck that looked to his
+assistants like an inextricable tangle. After one good look at it he
+pitched in for all he was worth, thus inspiring the men who had felt the
+task was impossible, and within a few hours the tracks were clear.
+
+The ability to pitch in at once on a hard job is one characteristic of
+the man who accomplishes tasks that make others sit up and take notice.
+John Shaw Billings, the famous librarian, had this ability. To a friend
+who praised him for the performance of what others thought to be a most
+difficult task, he said:
+
+"I'll let you into the secret--it is nothing really difficult if you
+only begin. Some people contemplate a task until it looks so big it
+seems impossible, but I just begin, and it gets done somehow. There
+would be no coral islands if the first bug sat down and began to wonder
+how the job was to be done."
+
+
+II
+
+PURPOSE FORMING
+
+One of the interesting points the fascinated reader of biography comes
+to look for is the first hint of the formation of the purpose that later
+characterized the life of the subject. There is infinite variety, but in
+every case there is apt to be something that takes the purposeful reader
+back to the days when his own ambition was taking shape.
+
+For instance, there is Daniel Boone. One would not be apt to select him
+as an example of one whose life was ruled by a purpose deliberately
+formed and adhered to for many years. Yet he had his vision of what he
+desired to accomplish when, at twenty-one years of age, he was marching
+from North Carolina to Pennsylvania to join Braddock's company. On the
+way he met John Finley, a hunter who had traveled through Ohio and into
+the wild regions to the south. His tale of Kentucky fired Boone's
+imagination, and the two men planned to go there just as soon as the
+trip to Fort Duquesne was at an end. It proved impossible to carry out
+the plan for many years, but Boone never lost sight of his purpose, and
+ultimately he carved out the Wilderness Road and opened the way for the
+pioneers to seek homes in the Kentucky Wilderness.
+
+Alexander Hamilton was but twelve years old when he wrote from his home
+in St. Croix, in the West Indies, to a friend in America:
+
+"I contemn the grovelling condition of a clerk, or the like, to which my
+fortune condemns me, and would willingly risk my life, though not my
+character, to exalt my station. I am confident, Ned, that my youth
+excludes me from any hope of immediate preferment, nor do I desire it,
+but I mean to prepare the way for futurity."
+
+Not for a day did he lose sight of his purpose. The opportunity he
+sought came years later. He sailed for America, and began the career
+that led to usefulness and fame.
+
+As a boy Robert Fulton was ambitious. He had two dreams. He wished to go
+to Europe to study art, and he wished to buy a farm for his widowed
+mother. For these objects he saved every dollar he could. On his
+twenty-first birthday he took his mother and sister to the home he had
+bought for them, and later in the same year he sailed for Europe.
+
+When Peter Cooper was making his way against odds in New York City he
+felt the need of an education. But he had to work by day and there was
+no night school. Night after night he studied by the light of a tallow
+candle. And while he studied, his life purpose was formed: some day he
+would make it easy for apprentice boys to secure an education after
+working hours. Many years passed before he was able to carry this
+purpose into effect. By this time the apprentice system had been
+displaced, but he felt that young people still needed the school he had
+in mind. In 1859, nearly fifty years after his own boyhood struggle, he
+founded Cooper Union, in which thousands have had the opportunity "to
+open the volume of Nature by the light of truth--so unveiling the laws
+and methods of Deity that the young may see the beauties of creation,
+enjoy its blessings and learn to love the Being from whom cometh every
+good and perfect gift."
+
+As a boy Abraham Lincoln made up his mind "to live like Washington." He
+was twenty-two years old when, in New Orleans,--where he had taken a
+flatboat loaded with produce--he saw a slave auction and spoke the
+never-to-be-forgotten words: "If ever I get a chance to hit that thing,
+I'll hit it hard." Thirty-five years later came his chance, and he did
+"hit that thing hard" with the Emancipation Proclamation.
+
+Alexander Graham Bell's life ambition was to teach deaf children how to
+articulate. Funds were short. That he might have more funds he engaged
+in experiments that led to the invention of the telephone. When the
+telephone instrument was given the attention it deserved at the
+Philadelphia Centennial of 1876, the inventor wrote triumphantly to his
+parents: "Now I shall have the money to promote the teaching of speech
+to deaf children."
+
+James Stewart, the Scotch boy who became a famous missionary in South
+Africa, was fifteen years old when, one day while following the plow in
+Perthshire, he began to brood over the future. "What was it to be?" The
+question flashed across his mind, "Might I not make more of my life than
+by remaining here?" Then he said, "God helping me, I will be a
+missionary." At another time, while hunting with a cousin, he said "Jim,
+I shall never be satisfied till I am in Africa with a Bible in my pocket
+and a rifle on my shoulder, to supply my wants."
+
+James Robertson was a school teacher in Canada when he became a
+Christian. On the Sunday he was to take his vows as a follower of
+Christ, he walked two miles to church with a friend who has told of his
+memories of the day thus:
+
+"As we went along the Governor's Road there was a bush, 'Light's Woods,'
+on the south side of the road. Robertson suggested that we turn aside
+into the bush, not saying for what purpose. We penetrated it a short
+distance, when, with a rising hill on our right and on comparatively
+level ground, the tall maples waving their lovely heads far above us,
+and the stillness of the calm, sunny day impressing us with a sense of
+the awful, we came to a large stone. Robertson proposed that we engage
+in prayer. We knelt down together. He prayed that he might be true to
+the vows he was about to take, true to God and ever faithful in his
+service."
+
+From that day the young man's purpose was inflexible. He would be a
+minister. He did not dream of conspicuous places in the church. When the
+temptations came to seek place and position, he wrote to Miss Cowing,
+who had promised to be his wife, "We are no longer our own. The time for
+self is gone for us."
+
+William Duncan likewise was tempted to seek a position of prominence.
+When he decided to become a missionary, his employers sought to dissuade
+him. "You have one of the keenest brains in England," one of them said.
+"Don't you see you are making a fool of yourself?" "Fool or no fool, my
+mind is made up, and nothing can change it," was the positive reply. And
+he set his face like a flint, and in time began the wonderful work that
+has written his name indelibly in the history of the Indians of Western
+Canada and Alaska.
+
+Washington Gladden was a country newspaper man in Owego, New York, when
+he united with the church, and began to make definite plans for a larger
+future than he had yet dreamed of. First he went to the Academy and
+then to college, with the ministry always in view.
+
+George Grenfell, who became a missionary in Africa, was thirteen years
+old when he began to think of devoting his life to work for others. The
+reading of Livingstone's first book turned his thoughts to Africa.
+
+William Waddell was fifteen years old when he became a Christian. At the
+time he was working for a ship-joiner at Clydebank, Scotland. The
+ambition took possession of him to become a missionary to Africa.
+Neither lack of education nor scarcity of funds was allowed to stand in
+his way. He kept at his work until he saw an advertisement asking for
+men to go to the Orange Free State to assist in building a church. He
+volunteered, and, as a layman and a mechanic, began his wonderful career
+in Africa.
+
+David Lloyd-George was an orphan in Wales when he determined to be a
+lawyer. So he read, under the guidance of his shoemaker uncle, and when
+he was fourteen he was ready for the preliminary examination. For six
+years more he continued his preparation. Before he was twenty-one he set
+out on the career that has made him the leader to whom King and people
+of England alike turned eagerly.
+
+These men found their place and did their work, not because they sought
+great things for themselves, but because they lived in the spirit of the
+advice given by a celebrated Canadian to a company of young people:
+
+"You cannot all attain high positions: there are not enough to go
+around. You cannot all be preachers or premiers, but you can all do
+thoroughly and well what is set you to do, and so fit yourselves for
+some higher duty, and thus by industry and fidelity and kindness you can
+fill your sphere in life and at last receive the 'Well done' of your
+Lord."
+
+
+III
+
+USING TIME WISELY
+
+A remark made by an acquaintance in the street car showed such
+familiarity with the work and trials of the busy conductor that inquiry
+followed.
+
+"Yes, I was a conductor once," the man said, "but I had my eye on
+something else. At night I took a business course, and soon was able to
+take a position with a railroad company."
+
+"That was fine!" was the answering comment. "How you must have enjoyed
+resting on your oars as you reaped the fruits of extra toil."
+
+"Enjoyment--yes! But rest--no!" came the reply. "I wasn't done. I still
+had my evenings, and I kept on studying. The things I learned in these
+extra hours came in handy when the Superintendent asked me to become his
+secretary."
+
+Service in the railroad office was interrupted by enlistment in the
+army, although the worker was well beyond the age of the draft. "How
+could I think of anything but service at the front?" he said, with a
+matter-of-fact accent. While in the service the habit of study in spare
+hours persisted; becoming familiar with the military manual he attracted
+the attention of his officers, and was marked for added responsibility.
+At the close of the war he resumed his work for the railroad and entered
+a technical school which provides night courses for the ambitious.
+
+Forty years of age, and still learning!
+
+An employer has written of an employee who, ten years ago, was securing
+fifteen dollars per week. But he was studying, and he soon attracted the
+attention of the head of the business, who called him "a rough diamond."
+He knew that the ambitious man seemed to lack some of the vital
+elements of success. But he watched him as he took evening courses in
+business psychology and salesmanship. "This man is paid by me to-day
+from $12,500 to $15,000 a year," was the gratifying conclusion of the
+employer's story.
+
+A great executive recently told in a magazine article of a young man in
+the office of his employment director who attracted attention because of
+an exceptionally pleasing personal appearance. Before the director saw
+him the executive asked him what he was studying. "When I left school,"
+was the reply, made with something of a sneer, "I promised myself I
+would never open a book again as long as I lived, and I'm keeping my
+promise."
+
+The executive was about to leave the office for a two weeks' vacation.
+First, however, he wrote a few words about the applicant, placed them in
+a sealed envelope, and left this with the employment director, to be
+kept for him. On his return he asked about the applicant, by name. The
+answer came, with prompt disgust:
+
+"That fellow was the limit! Fired him two days after he was hired. Dead
+from the neck up!"
+
+Then the sealed letter was produced and the message enclosed was read:
+
+"You will hire A---- H---- on his looks. Within two weeks you will fire
+him. He's dead from his neck."
+
+A writer in _Association Men_ has made a comparison between two men, and
+the way they spent their leisure:
+
+"Here is my friend Chris Hall--that is not his real name, but I assure
+you he is a real person. I like Chris, and so does everybody who knows
+him. He is honest and kind and clean, but in spite of these splendid
+characteristics he never makes progress. Five years ago he was promoted
+to his present position, and he draws as salary just about what he did
+then. And there is no prospect that he will ever draw much more. Yet he
+could make himself worth four times as much in a very short while--$200
+a week instead of $50--if he would only fit himself for the job ahead.
+But he lives entirely in the present. Perhaps the best way to describe
+him is to give his diary for a week, a record of how he spent his time
+when not actually working. And, please notice that everything he did was
+perfectly legitimate and honorable; but also notice, that everything was
+for immediate personal pleasure:
+
+ _Monday_--Rainy evening; went to bed early after
+ playing a while with the kids.
+
+ _Tuesday_--Strolled over to see Mollie's brother,
+ who is just back from France; he looks well but
+ would not talk much about the fighting; advised
+ him not to hurry about getting a job, as he
+ deserved a good long spell of rest after the hard
+ campaign.
+
+ _Wednesday_--Left office early; first big league
+ game this year; went around to the club and talked
+ it all over with the boys after supper.
+
+ _Thursday_--Office closed all day on account of
+ parade of returning troops; took Mollie and
+ children to see it; awfully tired and went to bed
+ early.
+
+ _Friday_--Sold my two Liberty Bonds which I had
+ bought on installments; Mollie needed summer
+ dresses and there were several small debts I had
+ to pay; took Mollie to the movies after supper.
+
+ _Saturday_ (afternoon)--Whole family went to
+ Seaside Park by steamer--children enjoyed it for a
+ while but soon got tired and fretful; what with
+ the heat and the crowds and the late hour of
+ getting home it really didn't pay.
+
+ _Sunday_--In bed till nearly noon; read the
+ papers; changed the soil in Mollie's potted
+ plants; afternoon, Tom and his wife and Charlie
+ Nichols and his best girl came over and all stayed
+ to supper; strolled over to Mother's and found
+ everyone there.
+
+"Over against that let me put a few lines from the diary of Elihu
+Burritt:
+
+ _Monday_--Headache; 40 lines Cuvier's 'Theory of
+ the Earth'; 64 pages French; 11 hours forging.
+
+ _Tuesday_--60 lines Hebrew; 30 pages French; 10
+ pages Cuvier; 8 lines Syriac; 10 lines Danish; 10
+ lines Bohemian; 9 lines Polish; 15 names of
+ stars; 10 hours forging.
+
+ _Wednesday_--25 lines Hebrew; 8 lines Syriac; 11
+ hours forging.
+
+"Who was Elihu Burritt? He was a New England blacksmith who worked on an
+average 10 hours a day at his forge; but who studied in his spare
+moments until he became known and honored all over the world as 'the
+learned blacksmith.' He became great--not by forging--but by the way he
+used his afterwork hours."
+
+
+IV
+
+WORKING HARDER
+
+"It was the rule of his life to study not how little he could do, but
+how much."
+
+These words were spoken of a great publisher and might have been made
+the text of the volume issued to commemorate the centenary of the
+business house founded by the man of whom they were spoken.
+
+The young man was sixteen when his father drove him from their country
+home to the city, and apprenticed him to a firm of printers.
+
+As an apprentice he and another young man were frequently partners in
+working an old-fashioned hand press. "One applied the ink with
+hand-balls, and the other laid on sheets and did the pulling. They
+changed work at regular intervals, one inking and the other pulling."
+The biographer who gives this description of the work of the two, adds
+that his hero was accustomed to remain at his press after the other men
+had quit work whenever he could secure a partner to assist him.
+
+The young man's fellow worker was often persuaded to assist him in these
+extra efforts--usually much against his will. While he often felt like
+rebelling because of his partner's ambition to do his utmost for his
+employers, he could not restrain his admiration for the man's industry.
+
+Once the unwilling partner said: "Often, after a good day's work, he
+would say to me, 'Let's break the back of another token (two hundred and
+fifty impressions)--just break its back.' I would often consent
+reluctantly but he would beguile me, or laugh at my complaints, and
+never let me off till the token was completed, fair and square. It was a
+custom for us in the summer to do a clear half-day's work before the
+other boys and men got their breakfast. We would meet by appointment in
+the grey of the early morning and go down to the printing-room."
+
+Fellow workmen made sport of the ambitious young man, not only because
+of what they felt was his excessive industry, but because of his
+homespun clothes and heavy cow-hide boots. He seldom retorted, but once,
+when jests had gone further than usual, he said to a tormentor: "When I
+am out of my time and set up for myself, and you need employment, as you
+probably will, come to me and I will give you work." The man little
+thought the prophecy would be fulfilled, but forty years after, when the
+industrious apprentice was mayor of the city and one of the world's
+leading publishers, he was reminded of the promise made to the
+tormentor, and the promised position was given to him. The workman who
+believed in doing more than was expected of him had won his way to fame
+and fortune, while his derider had made no progress.
+
+In 1817 the industrious apprentice asked a brother--who in the meantime
+had served his apprenticeship in a printing office--to go into business
+with him. Later two other brothers were taken into the firm. All were
+believers in the doctrine that had led the oldest member of the firm to
+success--the doctrine of doing as much instead of as little as possible.
+
+Their readiness to work constantly enabled the four brothers, who
+started with little capital except their knowledge of their trade, to
+build up within a generation one of the world's greatest publishing
+houses. They improved every moment. But they were never tempted to work
+on Sunday; business was never so pressing that they would break into the
+day of rest, or make their men do so. In this they were only living in
+accordance with purposes formed during their days of working for others.
+It is stated of one of the brothers, whose employer rejoiced in his
+readiness to do hard work and plenty of it, that he was expected to work
+on Sunday, in order to get ready the catalogue of an auction sale which
+was to be held next day. "That I will not do," he said, respectfully but
+firmly: "I cannot work on Sunday." He did work till midnight; then--in
+spite of the threat that he would be discharged--he laid down his
+composing stick on the case. On Monday morning his employer apologized
+and asked him to return to work.
+
+Thirty-six years after the founding of the house, it occupied five
+five-story buildings on one street and six on another street. Then a
+careless plumber started a fire that--within a few hours--destroyed the
+entire property. But the energetic men who knew how to work were not
+discouraged at the thought of beginning again. The night after the fire
+they met for conference. As they separated one of them remarked that the
+evening had seemed more like a time of social festivity than a
+consultation over a great calamity.
+
+Business associates hastened to make offers of loans. Within forty-eight
+hours the firm was tendered more than one hundred thousand dollars.
+Publishers offered their presses, printing material and office room.
+Authors wrote that they were ready to wait indefinitely for pay, while
+employees not only made a like suggestion, but said they were willing to
+have their pay reduced. While none of these offers were accepted, they
+were greatly appreciated, for they told of the place the brothers had
+won for themselves by untiring industry and sterling integrity.
+
+After the fire the house became greater than ever, so that to-day it
+stands as an example of what "hard work coupled with high ideals" may
+accomplish. And to every young man the thought of it gives inspiration
+to follow in the steps of the founder who "made it the rule of his life
+to study not how little he could do, but how much."
+
+
+V
+
+ABUSING THE WILL TO WORK
+
+There are times when the real test of a worker's courage is not his
+readiness to work but his will to curb the temptation to be intemperate
+in work.
+
+When the word "intemperance" is mentioned most people think at once of
+strong drink; many people are unwilling to think of anything but strong
+drink. As if where there is no temptation to drink there can be no
+temptation to intemperance!
+
+Paul had a different idea. When he wrote to the Corinthians, "Every man
+that striveth for the mastery is temperate in all things," he must have
+had in mind scores of different ways in which intemperance endangers
+success.
+
+If people were to make a list of some of the aspects of intemperance
+that are characteristic of modern life, it is quite likely that a large
+proportion would omit one of the most serious of all--the intemperance
+of the man who lives to work, who drives himself to work, who is never
+happy unless he is working, who makes himself and others unhappy because
+he labors too long, and too persistently, perhaps with the result that
+his own promising career is wrecked and the industry of others is
+interfered with seriously.
+
+One of the most striking illustrations of intemperance in work is
+supplied by the life of Samuel Bowles, editor of the Springfield,
+Massachusetts, _Republican_, one of the famous editors of the generation
+beginning a few years after the Civil War.
+
+Mr. Bowles was but eighteen years old when he had his first warning that
+his system could not stand the strain of the work to which a strong will
+drove him. His mother used to set a rocking chair for him at the table
+at meal-time, because, as she said, "Sam has so little time to rest."
+But the rocking chair was empty for months, when a breakdown sent him
+South for a long period of recuperation.
+
+When he returned home he plunged into work with all his might. "He
+worked late at night; vacations and holidays were unknown; of recreation
+and general society he had almost nothing," his biographer says. For
+years his office hours began before noon and continued until one or two
+in the morning. Finally the strain became too great, and loss of sight
+was feared. Still he forced himself to work, and the injury to his brain
+was begun that was later to cause his death. He would take a bottle of
+cold tea to the office, that by its use he might aid his will to work
+when nature said, "Stop!" For a long time his only sleep--and it was
+sadly broken sleep--was on a lounge in the office, from two to six or
+seven in the morning. Then he would set to work again. "By his unceasing
+mental activity he wore himself out," the comment was made on his
+career. "For the last twenty years of his life his nerves and stomach
+were in chronic rebellion. Heavy clouds of dyspepsia, sciatica,
+sleeplessness, exhaustion, came often and staid long."
+
+The intemperate worker knew what he was doing. Once he wrote to a
+friend, "You can't burn the candle at both ends, and make anything by it
+in the long run; and it is the long pull that you are to rely on, and
+whereby you are to gain glory." Persistent headaches, "nature's sharp
+signal that the engine had been overdriven," added to the warning. At
+last, when he was thirty-seven, he wrote: "My will has carried me for
+years beyond my mental and physical power; that has been the offending
+rock. And now, beyond that desirable in keeping my temper, and forcing
+me up to proper exercise and cheerfulness through light occupation, I
+mean to call upon it not at all, if I can help it, and to do only what
+comes freely and spontaneously from the overflow of power and life. This
+will make me a light reader, a small worker."
+
+Well for him if he had kept his resolution. Still he drove himself to
+work beyond what his body and brain could stand. Then came paralysis.
+"Nothing is the matter with me but thirty-five years of hard work," he
+said. At the time of his death he was not fifty-one years old.
+
+His friends could not but admire him for strength of will, for
+achievement in the face of ill health, for triumph, by sheer will-power,
+over every obstacle except the will that drove him to his death. He
+accomplished much, but how much more he might have accomplished if he
+had been temperate in his use of the wonderful powers of mind and body
+which God had given him!
+
+In connection with this glimpse of the life of one who illustrates the
+disaster brought by the will to be intemperate, it is helpful to think
+of the life of another American man of letters whose will to be
+temperate in his treatment of a body weak and frail prolonged life and
+usefulness.
+
+Francis Parkman, the historian, was never a well man after his trip
+that resulted in the writing of _The Oregon Trail_. In fact, he was a
+physical wreck at twenty-five years of age. He could not even write his
+own name, until he first closed his eyes; he was unable to fix his mind
+on a subject, except for very brief intervals, and his nervous system
+was so exhausted that any effort was a burden. However, in spite of this
+limitation, which became worse, if possible, instead of better, he
+managed to accomplish an immense amount of the finest literary work by
+doing what he could and stopping when this was wise. His will to take
+care of himself was given the mastery of his will to work. For
+forty-four years after the completion of _The Oregon Trail_ he labored
+on, preparing history after history. He was seventy years old when he
+died, leaving behind him achievements that would have been a tremendous
+task for a man in perfect health.
+
+To everyone is given the marvelous equipment of body and brain, as well
+as the will which makes possible their judicious investment or their
+prodigal waste in the struggle to make life count.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FOUR
+
+_THE COURAGE OF FACING CONSEQUENCES_
+
+
+YOUNG people sometimes play the game of "Consequences." The sport
+increases in proportion to the strangeness of the results.
+
+Perhaps the reason the game has so many attractions is the fact that
+life is a long story of consequences.
+
+There are people who do not like to play the game of life seriously
+because they say the consequences of self-denial and self-sacrifice are
+too uncertain; they prefer the cowardice of inaction to the courage of
+purposeful living.
+
+The folks worth while are those who, refusing to be troubled by what may
+or may not be the consequences of their acts, still have the pluck to go
+on with what they know is right. Let the results be what they may, they
+propose to be straightforward and true. This is the courage that counts.
+
+There may be uncertainty as to the specific form the results of their
+stand may take, yet that result is sure to be pleasing and helpful.
+
+
+I
+
+VENTURING
+
+When Washington Irving was about to return to America from Madrid, where
+he had been minister of the United States to the court of Spain, the
+Philadelphia house that had been publishing his books, discouraged by
+the decreasing sales, sent word to him that the public was not able to
+appreciate his books, and they would have to allow them to go out of
+print. The books had been printed directly from the type, so there were
+no plates which another publisher might use to bring out further
+editions at small expense.
+
+The author, who was then sixty-five years of age, sorrowfully accepted
+the verdict of his publisher, and planned to take desk-room in the New
+York office of his brother, John Treat Irving, where he hoped to make a
+living by the practice of law.
+
+But this was not to be. In New York was a young publisher who believed
+that Washington Irving's works were classics, and that the American
+public would buy them eagerly if properly approached. Friends told him
+that he might make a mistake, but he had the courage to go ahead. So he
+wrote to the discouraged author what must have seemed to other
+publishers a daring letter; he proposed to publish new editions of all
+Irving's old books, on condition that new books, also, be given to him;
+and he promised that royalties for the first year should be at least one
+thousand dollars, for the second year two thousand dollars, and for the
+third year three thousand dollars.
+
+When Irving received the letter, he kicked over the desk in front of
+him, at the same time saying to his brother:
+
+"There is no necessity, John, for my bothering with the law. Here is a
+fool of a publisher going to give me a thousand dollars a year for doing
+nothing."
+
+But the publisher was not so foolish as he seemed. His promises were
+more than made good. Sales were large. Other authors were attracted,
+until the publishing house became one of the leaders among American
+publishers.
+
+Nine years later Washington Irving had an opportunity to show his
+gratitude. Just before the panic of 1857 a young man whom the generous
+publisher had taken into partnership, involved him seriously. The
+defalcations were not discovered until the accidental death of the
+partner. Thus weakened, the firm was unable to survive the panic; its
+affairs were put in the hands of a receiver, and all accounts were
+sold. At the age of forty-two, the head of the firm bravely faced the
+necessity of beginning life over.
+
+At the receiver's sale Washington Irving bought the plates of all his
+books. A number of publishers offered him fancy terms if he would permit
+them to bring out new editions, but he turned a deaf ear to their
+entreaties and offered the plates to their former owner, to be paid for
+in annual installments. Touched by the gratitude of his friend, the
+publisher accepted the offer.
+
+The author never had cause to regret his action. During the years that
+elapsed before his death the results of the new venture were more
+satisfactory than ever. The courageous action of both publisher and
+author had been amply vindicated by results.
+
+
+II
+
+FORMING CHARACTER
+
+The best time to learn the courage that proves so effective in the
+struggle of life is in youth. More than fifty years ago two boys in
+Scotland were hunting rabbits. Tiring of the comparatively easy hunting
+on the ground, they looked longingly at a cliff of hard clay several
+hundred feet high, in whose precipitous side were many rabbit burrows.
+They managed to climb the cliff. At length they were making their way
+along an almost perpendicular parapet, cutting their way with their
+knives. Then one of the boys fell, with a scream, to the bottom of the
+cliff. There was a moment of terror. This was succeeded by a grim
+determination to go forward, the only way of escape. Driving his knife
+deep in the clay, he rested on this for a moment. That moment, it has
+always since seemed to him, marked the first momentous period in his
+life, the time when his personality first emerged into consciousness. He
+says: "I whispered to myself one word, 'Courage!' Then I went on with my
+work." At length he reached the ground.
+
+The lesson learned at such fearful cost told emphatically on the boy's
+character. From that day he showed that there was in him the making of a
+man who would not be balked by unfavorable circumstances. He did not
+understand how or why, but he felt that new will-power had come to him
+with the appeal to himself to take courage in the face of death.
+
+A few years later he went to Brazil. A Spaniard told him that moral
+deterioration within six months was all but certain to come to every
+young man who began life there. But he was determined not to give way to
+bad habits. When he reached Santos, his companions urged him to give
+himself up to all kinds of vice; they told him that it was either this
+or death, or perhaps something worse than death. They emphasized their
+words by pointing to a young man who had determined to keep straight,
+and had been left to himself until he was demented. But the boy who had
+learned courage on the precipice made up his mind that he must live as
+God wished him to live, and he turned a deaf ear to all entreaties.
+
+Another book of biography tells of a boy who delighted in playing cards
+with his father and mother. But when he united with the Church and
+became President of the Christian Endeavor Society he began to wonder if
+he was doing right. One night his father took up the cards and called
+him to play whist.
+
+"I don't think I'll play whist any more," he said quietly. "I've been
+thinking that perhaps it wasn't right for me to play."
+
+"Are you setting yourself up to judge your father and mother, young
+man?" his father asked, sternly.
+
+"No, I didn't say it isn't all right for you to play," was the reply.
+"But you know I am President of the Christian Endeavor Society and some
+of the members don't think it is right to play. So I guess I'd better
+not."
+
+His father looked at him thoughtfully for a minute, then picked up the
+cards and threw them back into the drawer.
+
+"Charlie," he said, "I want you to understand that I think you have done
+a manly thing to-night, and I honor you for your courage."
+
+That was the end of whist in that house.
+
+Courage showed itself in much the same way in the life of J. Marion
+Sims, the great surgeon. He used to tell how, when he was a boy at a
+South Carolina School, he was able to take a stand that had its effect
+on his whole after-life. Many of his fellow students were sons of
+wealthy planters, and their habits were not always the best. On several
+occasions they tried to lead him into mischief. They were particularly
+anxious to make him a companion in their drinking bouts. Twice he gave
+way to their pleas, but after sorrowful experience of the results of his
+lapses, he decided to make a brave stand. So he said to his tempters:
+
+"See here, boys, you can all drink, and I cannot. You like wine and I do
+not. I hate it; its taste is disagreeable, its effects are dreadful,
+because it makes me drunk. Now, I hope you all will understand my
+position. I don't think it is right for you to ask me to drink wine when
+I don't want it, and when it produces such a bad effect on me."
+
+To say this required real courage, but the results were good, not only
+in himself, but also, fortunately, in some of his companions.
+
+
+III
+
+TRUTH TELLING
+
+Those who, in early life, learn to be courageous in the face of
+difficult tasks will be ready for the temptation that is apt to come to
+most young people to compromise with what they know to be right and
+true, to allow an exception "just this once!" in the straightforward
+course they have marked out for themselves. And the worst of it is that
+such a temptation is apt to come without the slightest warning and to
+present itself in such a light that it is easy to find an excuse for
+yielding, and to deem it quixotic and unreasonable not to yield.
+
+Once a young teacher who later became famous at Harvard, had occasion to
+censure a student who had given, as he believed, the wrong solution of
+a problem. On thinking the matter over at home, he found that the pupil
+was right and the teacher wrong. It was late at night and in the depth
+of winter, but he immediately started for the young man's room, at some
+distance from his own home, and asked for the man he had wronged. The
+delinquent, answering with some trepidation the untimely summons, found
+himself the recipient of a frank apology.
+
+"Why, in the name of reason, do you walk a mile in the rain for a
+perfectly unimportant thing?" this man was asked on another occasion.
+"Simply because I have discovered that it was a misstatement, and I
+could not sleep comfortably till I put it right," was the reply.
+
+Again the story is told of him that he borrowed a friend's horse to ride
+to a town where he expected to take the stage. He promised to leave the
+animal at a certain stable in the town. Upon reaching the place he found
+that the stage was several miles upon its way. This was a serious
+disappointment. A friend urged him to ride to the next town, where he
+could come up with the vehicle, promising himself to send after the
+borrowed horse and forward it to its owner. The temptation to accept the
+offer was great. The roads were ankle deep in mud, and the stage
+rapidly rolling on its way. The only obstacle was his promise to leave
+the horse at the appointed place. He declined the friendly offer,
+delivered the horse as he had promised, and, shouldering his baggage,
+set off on foot through the mud to catch the stage.
+
+At this time he was eighteen years old, but he had learned the lesson
+that made him remarkably efficient and dependable through life.
+
+Dr. W. T. Grenfell has told of a hardy trapper in Labrador, the partner
+of a man who was easily discouraged; the arrangement was that they
+should share equally the hardships and the rewards of the trapping
+expeditions. Both were very poor. The stronger man was most unselfish in
+his treatment of his associate. One winter their lives were all but lost
+during the severity of a storm which burst on them while they were
+setting their traps on an ice-girt island. On reaching the mainland the
+timid man insisted on dissolving the partnership; he was unwilling to
+repeat the risks, even for the sake of his needy family. In a few days
+the hardy trapper revisited the traps on the mainland. To his great joy
+he found in one trap a magnificent silver fox, whose skin was worth five
+hundred dollars--a fortune to the Labrador trapper, especially welcome
+during that hard winter. "How glad I am the partnership has been
+dissolved, and that the fox is all mine," was his first thought. But
+first thought was not allowed to be last thought. There was a struggle.
+At length the decision was made that the needy man who had set the trap
+with him should share in the prize; the argument that he had forfeited
+all right to a share was not allowed to weigh against the unselfish
+arguments for division.
+
+A friend of young people has told of an incident which occurred in a
+great Boston department store where she sought to match some dress
+goods. After turning away from several discourteous clerks she showed
+her sample to a salesman who gave respectful attention to her. Glancing
+at the slits cut in the side of the bit of goods, he remarked:
+
+"That isn't one of my samples. I will ask the clerk who mailed this
+sample to wait on you."
+
+"But I don't want any other clerk to wait on me," responded the women,
+hastily, fearing that the sample might have come originally from one of
+the discourteous clerks first encountered; "I want you to have this
+sale."
+
+"If you had asked for goods of that quality, width and price, without
+showing me the sample, I could have found it for you at once," replied
+the clerk, with a smile, "but now, this sale belongs to the clerk who
+sent out the sample."
+
+"Then I won't give you this sample to hunt it up by," said the woman,
+wishing to see if she could carry her point, and she proceeded to tuck
+the sample away in her purse.
+
+"But I know that I have seen it, and my conscience knows it," was the
+clerk's comment, as he laughingly laid his hand on his heart and turned
+to look for the other salesman.
+
+The purchaser went on to tell thus of the salesman's unerring loyalty to
+his principles: "In a moment he returned. The other clerk was at lunch.
+What a sigh of relief I gave! 'I will make out the sale and turn it over
+to him when he comes in,' he said, displaying the shining black folds of
+the goods I desired."
+
+A real estate dealer in a Texas city was once tempted to be false to his
+principles, "just once," when he felt sure a sale depended on it. His
+prospective customer was a foreigner, who wished the salesman to drink
+with him after a trip to examine the property on Saturday and then to
+promise to make an engagement to continue the search next morning. But
+the business man was opposed to the use of liquor, and he had never done
+business on Sunday. What was he to do on this occasion? Would it hurt
+anything if he should make an exception in favor of this customer who
+could not be expected to understand his scruples?
+
+The temptation was acute; but it was conquered. Respectfully but firmly
+the buyer was told why the salesman could not join him in taking a
+drink, and why he could not go with him again until Monday morning. The
+man went away in a rage.
+
+Next morning the real estate man saw the foreigner in the hands of a
+rival. "That sale is gone!" he thought. When three days more passed
+without the return of the buyer he decided that he had paid heavily for
+being true to his better self.
+
+But on Thursday evening the foreigner sought the conscientious real
+estate dealer and surprised him by saying:
+
+"Those other fellows showed me lots of farms, but you wouldn't drink
+with me, nor show me land on Sunday because you think it wrong. So,
+maybe, I think you won't lie to me. I buy my farm of you."
+
+Many times the reward of being true to one's conscience will not come so
+promptly--except in the satisfaction the man has in knowing that he has
+done the right thing. But the sure result is to bring him a little
+nearer to the great reward that must come to a man whose integrity has
+stood the test of years--the appreciation of those who know him and
+their confidence in his honor.
+
+
+IV
+
+DUTY DOING
+
+It is not always necessary that a man should be aquainted with another
+to be able to repose implicit confidence in him. A life of fearless,
+straightforward duty-doing will inevitably leave its record in the face.
+Sometimes a frank, open countenance that cannot be misread is far better
+than any letter of introduction.
+
+"We are suspicious of strangers," a man said to one who had sought at
+his hands a favor that called for trust; then he added, with a smile,
+"but some faces are above suspicion," and proceeded, with overwhelming
+generosity, to grant far more than had been asked.
+
+Years ago a business man unexpectedly found himself without sufficient
+funds to continue his journey through Europe. As this was before the
+days of travelers' checks or the ocean cable, he was at a loss what to
+do. In his uncertainty he went to an Italian banking house and asked
+them to cash a large draft on his home bank. After an instant's pause
+the request was granted. Years later the merchant again saw the
+accommodating banker, and asked why a stranger was given such a large
+sum. "In plain truth, it was just your honest face, and nothing else,"
+was the reply. On another trip abroad the merchant had a similar
+experience. During a thunderstorm he took refuge with his wife in a
+curio shop. The English-speaking woman in charge was so cordial, and her
+goods were so pleasing, that the visitor said he would have liked to
+make some purchase, but his remaining funds were not more than
+sufficient for his journey home. The reply was: "Take whatever you
+please, sir. No one could look in your face and distrust you."
+
+A similar story was told by a Russian Jew who entered New York a
+penniless immigrant. After a disheartening period of working in the
+sweatshop he saw an opportunity to start in business for himself. But he
+had no capital. At a venture he asked a business man to trust him for
+the stock in trade. After gazing at him closely the man said, "You have
+a credit face, so I will do as you ask."
+
+It is worth while to have a face that insures confidence. But let it be
+remembered that the possession of such a face is not an accident; it
+belongs only to those who have the courage to think honestly, deal
+fairly and live truly.
+
+
+V
+
+FINDING HIS LIFE
+
+During the boyhood of Charles Abraham Hart, who was later the youngest
+soldier in the War with Spain, he was on confidential terms with his
+mother. One day when they were visiting together, she asked him about
+something that had happened the winter before, which she was unable to
+understand. His father had given to him and to his brothers two dollars
+each to spend for Christmas presents. William spent the entire sum, but
+Charles bought cheap presents, and it was evident that he had kept back
+a part of the amount. Other members of the family misunderstood him, but
+his mother thought she knew him well enough to be sure he had done
+nothing selfish.
+
+The record of the conversation between mother and son is told in the
+boy's biography:
+
+"The presents you bought were very cheap presents," she said to him. "I
+don't think they could have cost more than seventy-five cents."
+
+"They cost sixty-five cents," he told her.
+
+"And your father asked what you had done with the rest of your money,
+and you said you didn't want to tell him."
+
+"Yes, I remember that father thought I was stingy, too."
+
+"Do you mind telling me now what you did with the money?"
+
+The boy did not answer for a few moments. Then he said, quietly:
+
+"I bought a Bible for Fred Phillips. He didn't have a good Bible, and I
+thought he needed one more than you and the boys needed expensive
+presents."
+
+"But why didn't you tell your father?"
+
+"Because Fred was ashamed not to be able to buy the Bible for himself,
+and he wouldn't take mine until I had promised that I wouldn't tell
+anybody that I had given it to him. Since Fred has moved to Boston, I
+feel he wouldn't care if I told you. I want you to know, for I just
+heard to-day that Fred has joined the church. Isn't that good news?"
+
+"Yes, indeed. Perhaps your giving him the Bible helped him to do it,
+too. Charles, when you get to be a man, do you suppose you will always
+be so careless of how others may misunderstand you?"
+
+"I am not careless of that now," he declared. "The desire to be popular
+is one of the things I have to fight against all the time."
+
+What shall we choose? Comfort of service? Ease, or honorable performance
+of duty? The desire for popularity, or the purpose to be of use? Service
+is the best way to find comfort; honorable performance of duty is the
+sure road to the only ease worth while, and thoughtfulness for others is
+the open sesame to popularity.
+
+There is nothing new in this statement. It is only one of the thousand
+and one possible applications of the lesson taught by the great Teacher
+when He said, "He that loseth his life for My sake shall find it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER FIVE
+
+_COURAGE FOR THE SAKE OF OTHERS_
+
+
+FROM Norway comes a moving tale of a lighthouse keeper. One day he went
+to the distant shore for provisions. A storm arose, and he was unable to
+return. The time for lighting the lamp came, and Mary, the elder child,
+said to her little brother, "We must light the lamp, Willie." "How can
+we?" was his question. But the two children climbed the long narrow
+stairs to the tower where the lamp was kept. Mary pulled up a chair and
+tried to reach the lamp in the great reflector; it was too high. Groping
+down the stairs she ascended again with a small oil lamp in her hand. "I
+can hold this up," she said. She climbed on the chair again, but still
+the reflector was just beyond her reach. "Get down," said Willie, "I
+know what we can do." She jumped down and he stretched his little body
+across the chair. "Stand on me," he said. And she stood on the little
+fellow as he lay across the chair. She raised the lamp high, and its
+light shone far out across the water. Holding it first with one hand,
+then with the other, to rest her little arms, she called down to her
+brother, "Does it hurt you, Willie?" "Of course it hurts," he called
+back, "but keep the light burning."
+
+The boy was wise beyond his years. He would do the important thing, no
+matter how it hurt. Here the thing of chief importance was looking out
+for the men at sea. To put them first took real courage. But what of it?
+That is the attitude toward life of the worker worth while; he does not
+stop to ask, "Is this easy?" Instead he asks, "Is this necessary? Will
+it be helpful?" Having answered the question he proceeds to do his best.
+It may hurt at first, but the time will come when it will hurt so much
+to leave the service undone that the inconvenience involved in doing it
+is lost sight of.
+
+
+I
+
+IMPARTING COURAGE
+
+A young man won local fame as a bicycle long-distance rider. But
+over-fatigue, possibly coupled with neglect, caused contraction of
+certain muscles. He was unable to stand erect. He walked with bent back,
+like an old man. "What useful work can he do, handicapped as he is?"
+his friends asked.
+
+But he did not lose courage. He continued to smile and make cheer for
+others. Finally he secured work in the office of the supervisor of a
+National Forest. And he made good. Most of his activities were at the
+desk; when he sat there his back was normal.
+
+According to the idea of many, it would have been enough for the
+crippled man to look out for himself. What could he do for others? But
+he had not been trained in such a school; the cheerfulness that enabled
+him to be useful made it impossible for him to see another in need and
+not plan to do something for him.
+
+The man who needed him was at hand--a cripple, whose feet were clumsy,
+misshapen. No one else thought that anything could be done for him but
+to speak dolefully and to assure him that he was fortunate in having
+parents and brothers who would look out for him.
+
+But the man in the Forestry Service urged the cripple to apply for a
+summer appointment on the rocky, windy summit of a mountain nine
+thousand feet high. There it would be his duty to keep a vigilant eye on
+the forest stretching far away below his lofty eyrie, and to report the
+start of a forest fire. At first he laughed at the idea; had he not
+been told that he could never hope to do anything useful? Yet as he
+listened to his friend his eyes began to sparkle. Finally he dared to
+agree to make application for the position.
+
+During the winter months the forester spent many evenings with his
+friend, coaching him in some of the lore of the forests, giving him
+books to read, and showing him what his specific duties would be, and
+how to perform them.
+
+In the spring the situation was secured, and when the season of forest
+fires came the young man bravely climbed the steep trail over the snow
+to his lonely cabin. An able-bodied man is able to make the climb from
+the end of the wagon road in much less than an hour; the cripple
+required more than five hours to reach the top. Then he took up his
+residence there, cooking his own food, making his observations from
+morning until night, receiving his mother and his brothers when from
+time to time they came to see how he was getting on and to help him in
+some of the rougher tasks about the cabin. They thought they would need
+to speak words of cheer to a lonely, discouraged man, but they soon
+learned their error; not only did he have cheer enough for himself, but
+he was able to send his visitors away happier than when they came
+because of their contact with the man for whom life had been made over
+by the acts of a thoughtful friend, a friend whose own courage had been
+increased by his efforts to encourage a friend.
+
+
+II
+
+CONQUERING HAPPINESS
+
+In a volume of short stories published some years ago there is included
+the vivid narrative of two humble citizens of an Irish village, a
+husband and wife, upon whom hard times have come. The husband is too
+feeble to make his living as of old at his trade as a road-mender. Their
+only hope is a son in America, and not a word comes from him, so they
+are compelled to go to the poor house.
+
+Friends condole with them, and they are sad enough to suit the notions
+of those who feel that an awful ending is coming to their lives. One of
+the saddest of their friends is their physician who dreads going to see
+the unhappy old people in their new home. At last, however, he drives to
+the entrance to the poor farm. There he has his first surprise. Instead
+of seeing the disreputable place he had been accustomed to, he notices
+that the gate is on its hinges, the weeds by the side of the driveway
+are no longer in evidence, and an attempt has been made to give the
+house itself a more presentable appearance. About the doors are no
+discontented-looking old people, quarreling with one another. And when
+the wife of the poor farm keeper answers his knock at the door, the
+doctor hardly recognizes her; instead of a discouraged-looking slattern
+she is actually neat and cheerful looking.
+
+"You wonder what has happened here, don't you?" the woman remarks. "It's
+all because of those blessed old folks you are asking for. They were
+disheartened, just at first, but soon they began to do helpful things
+for the rest of the folks. That cheered us all up, and it's made a
+different place of the farm."
+
+The doctor's errand that day is to take word to the couple that their
+son from America wishes them to spend the remainder of their days with
+him. He has expected them to be overjoyed by the news. But, after
+talking together of the invitation, they assure him that their place is
+where they are. "We be road-mending here, making ways smoother for the
+folks that have rough traveling," is the explanation. "We think we ought
+to bide at the farm."
+
+Thus the old people took the way of conquering unhappiness made known so
+long ago by Him who set the example of finding joy in caring for other
+people, the way taken by a modern follower of His who wrote home from
+the army:
+
+"I cast my lot where I knew the road would be rough, and why should I
+complain? It seems to me at times that I must give way to my lower self
+and let the work slip off my back on others perhaps more tired than
+myself. But I have a tender, kind Father in heaven who tells me that my
+way is right. I have very little to uphold me in this work away from my
+friends. My happy moments are those which I spend with my Bible during
+my night watches, or thinking of happy days gone by, or building me
+air-castles for days to come. I am happy, too, when I read the little
+verse written in the front of my Testament, and so thankful for the
+power to understand it:
+
+ "So nigh is grandeur to our dust,
+ So near is God to man,
+ When duty whispers low, 'Thou must,'
+ The youth replies, 'I can.'"
+
+Yet there are those who insist that it is the duty of one whose lot is
+hard to be morose and sad; that by covering his sadness with the
+gladness of service he is making a cheat of himself! In verse a writer
+with insight has pilloried such critics:
+
+ "He went so blithely on his way,
+ The way men call the way of life,
+ That good folks who had stopped to pray,
+ Shaking their heads, were wont to say,
+ It was not right to be so gay
+ Upon that weary road of strife.
+
+ "He whistled as he went, and still
+ He bore the young where streams were deep,
+ He helped the feeble up the hill,
+ He seemed to go with heart athrill,
+ Careless of deed and wild of will--
+ He whistled, that he might not weep."
+
+
+III
+
+MAKING LITTLE THINGS COUNT
+
+There are people who spend so much time looking for the large,
+spectacular opportunities for serving others, that they pass by as
+unworthy of notice the opportunities for doing what seem to be little
+kindnesses. Fortunately, however, there are people who are so taken up
+with rendering what they call little services, that they have no time to
+worry because the big opportunities do not come their way.
+
+A magazine writer tells of one of these doers of simple kindnesses:
+
+"I was the shabbiest girl in the office," she says. "It was no one's
+fault and no one's shame that we were poor. I had intelligence enough to
+know that. I knew, too, what a sacrifice mother had made to pay for my
+tuition at business school. Still, the knowledge of my shabby clothes
+forced itself upon me, particularly my old black skirt! Mother had
+cleaned it and pressed it and cleaned it, but it seemed bent with age,
+and all the office girls looked so fresh and pretty in their trim
+business suits. I imagined all the first morning that they were pitying
+me and felt them looking at my shabbiness, and during noon hour I was so
+miserable; but when I went back next morning, I noticed that one of the
+girls had on nearly as old clothes as I did, and she was so nice to me
+that I fancied she was glad I had come because of our mutual poverty.
+Not until after I earned enough money to buy some suitable, nice clothes
+did I realize that the 'poor girl,' as I thought her, had drifted back
+into the prettiest, most tasteful clothes worn by any of the girls. She
+had only borne me company at a most trying time, and she knew, because
+her fellow-workers all admired her, that the little object lesson would
+keep them from hurting my feelings. The day has come now when new
+clothes are usual, when I may even achieve an appearance that is known
+as 'stylish.' But in my office, when a girl comes in shabby, painfully
+sensitive, as I was, I 'bear her company' until the better times shall
+come."
+
+From another observer comes the story of the simple deeds of kindness
+done by a company of young people in Brooklyn to a young woman married
+to an elderly and uncongenial man. She showed symptoms of taking her
+life into her own hands. She felt that the world owed her happiness, and
+she was tempted to take it anywhere it might be found, especially in one
+undesirable direction. She was poor and outside of many ordinary social
+pleasures. The word was passed along the line that Mrs. D... needed
+especial attention and friendliness shown her. Immediately one girl,
+whose notice was in itself a compliment, invited her to attend a concert
+with her. Two more volunteered to see her home from Sunday school, and
+call for her as well. Books were loaned her, calls made, and in brief, a
+rope of warm sturdy hands steadying her over the hard place in the road,
+until she found herself and settled down to the duty she was on the
+point of leaving forever.
+
+The widespread hunger for such little kindnesses was shown one day when
+a New York man accosted in Central Park a poor foreigner, who could
+speak little English. Noting that the man looked dejected, he offered
+him his hand. Then he asked the man if he was in need. "No, I don't need
+money," was the reply; "I was just hungry for a handshake." Blessings on
+those who are not too busy to think of the poor who are hungry for the
+little services they can render.
+
+If they could know the ultimate effect of some of their deeds, these
+would not always seem insignificant. The man who is always on the
+lookout for little chances for service is more apt to perform services
+that are of great importance, than the man who spends his time dreaming
+of big things he will do some day.
+
+
+IV
+
+DID HE GO TOO FAR?
+
+When an urgent call went out from Washington for physicians to go to
+France for hospital work among the men of the American Expeditionary
+Force, a specialist in a city of the Middle West decided to respond. Of
+course some of his friends told him he was foolish; they urged that he
+was needed for service at home. "Let doctors go who can be spared
+better than you," they said. "Think of the great work you are
+doing--work that will be more than ever necessary because thousands of
+others are leaving practices and going to the Front. Think of your
+past--how you worked your way through medical college at cost of severe
+toil; think of your family and the increasing demands on you; think of
+the future--what will become of your lucrative practice?"
+
+The specialist did think of these things; he had delayed decision
+because the arguments had presented themselves forcibly to his own mind.
+
+At last, however, his mind was made up. He would go to France. He would
+leave his patients in charge of two capable friends who would do
+everything possible to turn over, on the return of the volunteer, the
+lucrative office practice built up through many years.
+
+He spent six months in camp with the members of the hospital unit of
+which he was given charge. Just before he went "over there" a friend
+said to him:
+
+"It is fortunate that your practice is to be cared for so efficiently."
+
+"What's that?" was the reply. "Oh, you mean the colleagues who took over
+my patients? They, too, have enlisted, and will soon be going abroad."
+
+"But what of your $35,000 income?" was the dismayed rejoinder. "Surely
+you haven't the courage to give up all that!"
+
+The major snapped his fingers, and said, with a smile, "_That_ for the
+practice! It is my business to respond to my country's call. Don't talk
+of the sacrifice. What if I do have to start all over again when I come
+home? Just now I don't have to think about that."
+
+This incident came to mind when reading in a popular weekly a telling
+story, camouflaged as to names, location and business, but recorded as
+the experience of a captain of industry. The story made him a
+manufacturer of shoes who, in the beginning, was rejoicing that his
+plants were running full time, turning out so many shoes for the regular
+trade that the profits of the year were bound to be tremendous. With
+others, he heard the plea of the Government for shoes for the soldiers.
+Carefully he assured himself that he would not need to respond; there
+were many manufacturers who would rush headlong for government
+contracts. When he learned that there were not enough volunteers he felt
+uncomfortable. Then, to his relief, he was asked to take the
+chairmanship of the subcommittee on shoes of the State Council of
+Defense.
+
+"I'll do it!" he decided. "That will let me out honorably. As chairman I
+shall be criticized if I bid on the contracts myself."
+
+Of course he learned his mistake. At length he decided to turn over one
+of his six plants to government contracts. The decision made him feel
+quite virtuous. Content was his only a little while, however. So he
+decided to devote another plant. Yet when he made his figures he thought
+he would add five cents a pair to his bid, as an extra margin of safety.
+Again his calculations were upset when his son told him that he had
+enlisted.
+
+"That wasn't necessary," the father said. "What made you do it?"
+
+"Why, dad, you know you'd expect me to feel ashamed if you didn't do
+just every little thing you could in a business way to help win this
+war--if you held back a shoe that would help the Government or charged a
+cent more than you ought to. You furnish the shoes and I'll furnish the
+shoots!"
+
+Of course more had to be done after that. Soon half the plants were
+enlisted for the country. Surely nothing more could be asked than that
+he should go fifty-fifty, half for the country and half for himself.
+
+The remainder of the story can be imagined--in one form it was lived out
+in the experience of millions. "Why don't you have done with that
+half-way patriotism?" came a voice that he could not silence.
+
+The battle between Patriotism and Private Profits was decided
+gloriously--in the only possible manner. Away with fifty per cent.
+patriotism! Every one of the plants was put on Government orders.
+
+Naturally there were those who asked, "Was such a sacrifice necessary?"
+But the reply was convincing.
+
+That is the question that has been asked of Christians ever since the
+day when Christ said to Peter and Andrew, "Follow me." Our hearts are
+stirred by the simple record of what followed: "Straightway they left
+their nets,"--their livelihood, their associates, their families, their
+position in the world, everything--"and followed Him." The question was
+put to Prince Gallitzin when he renounced title and fortune and went to
+the mountains of Pennsylvania to make a home for some of his oppressed
+Russian countrymen. The words were hurled at the son of a wealthy
+English brewer, because he decided that if he would obey Christ fully
+he must renounce the source of his wealth as well as the money that had
+been made in an unrighteous business. The inquiry was heard many times
+by Matthias W. Baldwin, the builder of Old Ironsides and founder of the
+Baldwin Locomotive Works, when he gave up the making of jewelry because
+he thought that, as a Christian man, he ought to make his talents count
+for something more worth-while, and later on when he insisted on
+borrowing from the banks in time of financial panic to pay his pledges
+to Christian work.
+
+Still the query persists, as it will persist long as the world stands.
+
+You have heard it yourself, if you, like Caleb of old, are trying to
+follow God wholly. "Was the sacrifice necessary?"
+
+Beware of the question, for it is a temptation to slack service, though
+often spoken by one who would show himself a friend. Necessary? Of
+course. Isn't it involved in courageous following of Christ?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SIX
+
+_GOLDEN RULE COURAGE_
+
+ "There is so much good in the worst of us,
+ And so much bad in the best of us,
+ That it hardly becomes any of us
+ To talk about the rest of us."
+
+
+THAT popular rhyme hits the nail squarely on the head. We are not to
+judge others. The world would be a pleasanter dwelling place if we would
+lay aside our critical attitude, and look on the best side of the men
+and women about us. Instead, however, it sometimes seems as if we were
+determined to forget all the good, and remember only the evil. Our
+additions to the comments of others are not praise, but blame. We do not
+seek to correct an unfavorable comment by saying, "But think of the good
+there is in his life"; we insist on drowning merited praise by saying,
+"But think how selfish he is; how careless of the comfort of others!"
+That is the cowardly thing to do. And life calls for courage.
+
+The worst thing about the maker of such comments is that the readier he
+is to see--or imagine--faults in another, the more blind he is apt to
+become to faults in himself. This inability to see his own shortcomings
+would be ludicrous if it were not so pitiful. Yet these shortcomings are
+apparent to all who know him. Jesus, who knew human nature, said, "Judge
+not, that ye be not judged ... first cast out the beam out of thine own
+eye; then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy
+brother's eye."
+
+The courageous task of reforming ourselves seems prodigious when we
+think what good opinions we have of ourselves and what poor opinions we
+have of others, but the task is not impossible, for God has promised to
+give us the help we need, and He will never disappoint us. An earthly
+father knows how to give good things to his children; shall not the
+Heavenly Father do as much and more?
+
+Since we have such a Father, it is the least we can do to learn of Him
+the true philosophy of life. Listen while He tells us what it is:
+
+"All things, therefore, whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you,
+even so do ye also unto them."
+
+Impossible and impracticable? Let us see.
+
+
+I
+
+LOOKING OUT FOR OTHERS
+
+The president of a big manufacturing concern, who is also its active
+operating head, is quoted as saying that he finds a growing tendency
+among young men to go after business by sharp practice when they cannot
+get it any other way. They will "cut the corners of a square deal to
+land an order." In applying for positions, he goes on to say, some young
+fellows have tried to recommend themselves by telling how they got
+orders for former employers by some neat trick.
+
+"I have had to tell them, square and plain," he adds, "that there wasn't
+any recommendation in that kind of talk with me. I have made up my mind
+that I am going to write out some plain talks on righteousness and post
+them up around the offices and shops where everybody will have a chance
+to read them. I have explained my plan about these bulletins to a number
+of other manufacturers, and I think several of them are going to do the
+same thing. Besides the moral reasons for the policy, it's the only
+policy to build up a sound business on. Take even the men who would be
+willing to make profit for themselves by shady deals, and they all want
+to buy goods for themselves of a firm that they can depend on. I think
+our history this past year has proved the wisdom of it; business has
+been rolling in from points that we never had an idea of getting
+anything from. The Golden Rule works."
+
+Nathan Strauss was once asked what contributed most to his remarkable
+success. "I always looked out for the man at the other end of the
+bargain," he said.
+
+In 1901 the State of Wisconsin struck a beautiful bronze medal in honor
+of Professor Stephen Moulton Babcock, the inventor of the milk test
+machine. Professor Babcock, so one admirer says, "knew its value to
+farmer and dairyman. He also knew its possibilities of fortune for
+himself. This invention has 'increased the wealth of nations by many
+millions of dollars and made continual new developments possible in
+butter and cheesemaking.' All this Professor Babcock knew it would do
+when he announced his discovery in a little bulletin to the farmers of
+Wisconsin. But at the bottom of that bulletin he added the brief and
+unselfish sentence, 'this test is not patented.' With that sentence he
+cheerfully let a fortune go. He wanted his invention to help other
+people, rather than make himself rich."
+
+What a difference it would make if everyone should take the Golden Rule
+as the motto for each day, asking Christ's help in living in accordance
+with it! What a difference it would make in every home if father and
+mother and all the sons and daughters should resolve to make theirs a
+Golden-Rule household! The first thing necessary in bringing about such
+a change in the home is for one member to make the resolution and to do
+his best to live up to it. Others will follow inevitably when they note
+his careful, unselfish life and helpful acts.
+
+There is a Jewish tradition that a Gentile came to Hillel asking to be
+taught the law, in a few words, while he stood on one foot. The answer
+was given, "Whatsoever thou wouldst that men should not do to thee, that
+do not thou to them." This was good, as far as it went, but there was
+nothing positive about it. Christ's teaching supplies the lack, showing
+what we are to do as well as what we are to leave undone. Christ always
+gives the touch required to make old teachings glow with life.
+
+
+II
+
+SUCCEEDING BY COURAGEOUS SERVICE
+
+When John E. Clough was a student working his way through college, he
+was employed in a menial capacity at a hotel in a western town. His
+employer was absent for a season and the student was compelled to take
+charge of the hotel. He was successful, for he learned how to handle men
+of many sorts, how to provide for their comfort, how to make them feel
+that he was doing his best for them.
+
+Years later, when he was a missionary in India, it became necessary for
+him to plan for the temporary entertainment of the men and women who
+came to the mission station by hundreds, and even by thousands, seeking
+Christian baptism. For days it was necessary to provide for their
+comfort. Many men would have been dismayed by the task, but to Dr.
+Clough the problem presented was simple; he had only to do on a large
+scale the very things which made his boyhood efforts at hotel-keeping
+such a pronounced success.
+
+Experience in a hotel is a good course of preparation for any young man,
+whether he plans to be a missionary or to serve in any of the home
+callings that demand the Christian's time and thought. However, it is
+not possible for more than a very small proportion of young people to
+serve a period in a hotel; so it will be helpful to them to read some of
+the suggestions that have been made by a successful hotel proprietor.
+Those who heed these suggestions are apt to be successful in dealing
+with men and women anywhere.
+
+It is worth while to note some of these rules:
+
+"The hotel is operated primarily for the benefit and convenience of its
+guests.
+
+"Any member of our force who lacks the intelligence to interpret the
+feeling of good will that this hotel holds toward its guests, cannot
+stay here very long.
+
+"Snap judgments of men often are faulty. The unpretentious man with the
+soft voice may possess the wealth of Croesus.
+
+"You cannot afford to be superior or sullen with any patron of the
+hotel.
+
+"At rare intervals some perverse member of our force disagrees with a
+guest as to the rightness of this or that.... Either may be right.... In
+all discussions between hotel employees and guests, the employee is dead
+wrong from the guest's standpoint, and from ours....
+
+"Each member of our force is valuable only in proportion to his ability
+to serve our guests.
+
+"Every item of extra courtesy contributes towards a better pleased
+guest, and every pleased guest contributes toward a better, bigger
+hotel...."
+
+Yet a young man should not have to go to a hotel to learn these lessons.
+They were taught in the Book that every one of us should know better
+than any other book in our library. Listen to these messages of the
+Book, and compare them with the rules of the hotel:
+
+"Not looking each of you to his own things, but each of you also to the
+things of others....
+
+"Be tenderly affectioned one to another, in honor preferring one
+another....
+
+"Judge not that ye be not judged.... The rich and the poor meet
+together: Jehovah is the maker of them all....
+
+"Better it is to be of a lowly spirit....
+
+"He that is slow in anger appeaseth strife....
+
+"I am among you as he that serveth....
+
+"Ye are the light of the world...."
+
+The best book for anyone who is trying to be a success in the world is
+the Bible, for the Bible teaches how to serve, and he who has the
+courage best to serve his fellows in the name of the great Servant is
+the most successful man.
+
+
+III
+
+SERVICE BY SYMPATHY
+
+It has been said that, while the word "sympathy" does not occur in the
+Bible, the idea is there; it is in bud in the Old Testament, but it is
+in full blossom in the New Testament. Christ was always sympathetic. He
+felt for the disturbed host at the wedding; His heart went out to
+Zaccheus; He wept with Mary and Martha; He listened to the plea of the
+blind and the lepers; He was deeply stirred as He saw the funeral
+procession of him who was the only son of his mother, a widow.
+
+An eloquent preacher was talking to his people of this glorious flower
+of the Christian life. "Beholding the lily," he said, "sympathy breathes
+a prayer that no untimely frost may blight the blossom; beholding the
+sparrow, sympathy fills a box with seeds for the birds whose fall 'the
+Heavenly Father knoweth'; beholding some youth going forth to make his
+fortune, sympathy prays that favorable winds may fill these sails and
+waft the boy to fame and fortune. Do the happy youth and maiden stand
+before the marriage altar, the Christian breathes a prayer that love's
+flowers may never fall, and that 'those who are now young may grow old
+together.'"
+
+One of the pleasing stories told of Richard Harding Davis, the writer
+and war correspondent, was of an incident when real sympathy transformed
+him.
+
+In May, 1898, when the Massachusetts troops were about to go from
+Florida to Cuba, Mr. Davis entered the encampment as the men were
+saddened by the first death in the company. At once his cheerful face
+took on a subdued look. The next day proved to be "a broiling dry hot
+day which set the blood sizzling inside of one," but Davis tramped for
+two hours in the search of flowers. Then he learned that eight miles
+away he might secure some. Though no one was abroad who did not have to
+be, Mr. Davis started on a sixteen-mile horseback trip. Securing the
+flowers, he brought them back and made a cross of laths on which he tied
+them. Then came the search for colors to make the flag. Again he tramped
+a weary distance, but at last he found red, white and blue ribbon. That
+night he laid his tribute on the casket.
+
+An American author who lived several generations before Davis was noted
+for his sympathetic attitude to the suffering. Richard Henry Dana was
+compelled when a young man to take a voyage around Cape Horn on a
+sailing ship. That classic of the sea, "Two Years Before the Mast," was
+one of the results of that experience. Another result was that when the
+author became a lawyer in Boston, his knowledge of ships made him a
+favorite advocate in nautical cases. His knowledge of the sufferings of
+the men before the mast, who were so often abused, was responsible for
+his taking their part in many an unprofitable case. He had learned by
+bitter experience what the sailors under a brutal captain had to suffer,
+and any mistreated seaman had in him a firm friend and a fearless
+pleader.
+
+The truest sympathy comes from those who, like Dana, know what suffering
+means. An author in Scotland, who lived in Dana's generation, never
+heard of the American friend of seamen, but he had the same spirit, born
+of his own suffering. He was not accustomed to complain, and was always
+reticent in speaking of himself. Once, however, for the sake of a
+friend, he allowed himself to tell of his own life:
+
+"With all your sorrows I sympathize from my heart," he wrote. "I have
+learned to do so through my own sufferings. The same feeling which made
+you put your hand into your pocket to search among the crumbs for the
+wanting coin for the beggar, leads me to search in my heart for some
+consolation for you. The last two years have been fraught to me with
+such sorrowful experiences that I would gladly exchange my condition for
+a peaceful grave. A bankrupt in health, hope and fortune, my
+constitution shattered frightfully, and the almost certain prospect of
+being a cripple for life before me, I can offer you as fervent and
+unselfish a sympathy as ever one heart offered another. I have lain
+awake, alone, and in darkness, suffering severe agony for hours, often
+thinking that the slightest aggravation must make my condition
+unbearable and finding my only consolation in murmuring to myself the
+words patience, courage and submission."
+
+That, surely, is a part of what Robert Louis Stevenson meant when, as
+one element in his statement of the ideal for the perfect life, he named
+"to be kind." True kindness is impossible without sympathy.
+
+So long as there is so much real sympathy in the world there can be no
+place for the maunderings of a pessimist. Every sight of a man, a woman
+or a child whose life is beautified by the outgoing of sympathy is an
+effective message of courage, of cheer, of hope.
+
+
+IV
+
+DOING BUSINESS FOR OTHERS
+
+A Boston boy, Samuel Billings Capen, wanted to become a minister. Yet it
+did not seem possible to secure the special training which was
+essential. Instead of being discouraged, he determined to go into
+business.
+
+But he resolved that he would be a business man of God. From the first
+he carried his Christian principles with him into the carpet business.
+His faithful work as office boy was a part of his testimony for Christ,
+and when--within five years--he became a member of the firm, he was
+known as one of the solid Christian men of the city. Always his duty to
+Christ came first. In the words of his biographer, "There was not a
+moment when he would not have left the firm with which he was associated
+had the business demanded any compromise with the best things of
+character."
+
+Once he spoke to young men of these few things essential to vital
+living:
+
+"The first is fidelity--that kind of conscientiousness which performs
+the smallest details well.
+
+"The second condition is earnestness. There is no chance for the idle or
+indifferent.
+
+"The third condition is integrity--not that lower form which refuses to
+tell a downright falsehood, but that higher form of conscientiousness
+which will not swerve a hair's breadth from the strictest truth, no
+matter what the temptation; the courage to lose a sale rather than to do
+that which is mean or questionable.
+
+"The fourth condition I would name is purity of heart and life. I do not
+believe it is possible for any man to be true and pure and faithful in
+every respect without help from above. We need the personal help of a
+personal God."
+
+Thirteen years after beginning his service as apprentice, Mr. Capen's
+health failed. For many months his life was in danger. God used the
+sickness to draw the young man nearer to Himself. "Compelled to remain
+for months in absolute idleness, unable to talk to his friends except to
+a limited extent, he made the solemn resolve with his God that if his
+health was restored he would never shirk any work nor complain of any
+task that might be presented to him."
+
+For a generation he was not only a leader in business, but he was as
+conspicuous in his service of the State as in his services in the
+Church.
+
+Why did he succeed? He was not a genius. His health was poor. He was
+not mentally brilliant. In these respects he was just an average man.
+But in other respects he was above the average. He had the courage to
+give himself in service of his fellows. "He believed that conscious
+fellowship with God is the foundation of every strong life."
+
+A life like that influenced for good everyone about him. Many men were
+drawn by him into the paths of righteousness. Others were held back by
+him from ways of evil. Once he presided over a public meeting which
+corrupt politicians had planned to capture for their own purpose. But
+they made no attempt to carry out their plans. "How could we succeed
+with that man watching us?" they asked their friends.
+
+It is good to be a minister of the gospel. But for every minister the
+world needs hundreds of men who are possessed of Samuel B. Capen's
+courageous eagerness to live for God in the midst of business cares.
+
+
+V
+
+PRAYING AND HELPING
+
+A business man entered the office of a friend just as the friend was
+hanging up the receiver of the telephone. There were tears in the eyes
+of the man at the desk as he turned from the instrument to take the hand
+of his visitor.
+
+"I'm afraid you have had bad news," the visitor said, deciding that it
+was not a propitious time to talk of the matter on which he had come.
+
+"No bad news--the best of news," was the reply. "Now see if you don't
+agree with me. This morning my wife, who is always thinking of other
+people, remarked that it was too bad my pastor's wife could not have a
+vacation this summer; she shows the need of it because of a severe
+strain that had been on her. Yet we knew that she could not look forward
+to a vacation.
+
+"'Let's pray about it,' my wife suggested, just before we knelt at the
+family altar. We prayed then; we've been praying since. And the answer
+has come quickly. My wife was on the telephone just now; she told me
+that the postman had brought a letter from a California friend of whom
+we had all but lost sight. Fifteen years ago we lent him a sum of money
+which we never expected to see again. Yet the letter contained a check
+for the amount of the loan!
+
+"'What shall we do with the money?' my wife asked.
+
+"'I wonder if you are not thinking the same thing I am,' I said to her.
+
+"'Yes, isn't it the answer to our prayer?' she replied. 'I'm going to
+take it to our pastor's wife right now.'"
+
+The business man was thoughtful as he passed from his friend's office.
+Just a few hours before he had been told by an acquaintance of his
+longing, when on a long trip, to have such a glimpse of the life of one
+of the many passengers near him that he would be able to help that
+passenger before the end of the journey. The wish was a prayer. Not long
+after the making of the prayer he noted a man who was so restless that
+he could not sit still. Every moment or two he looked at his watch, then
+studied his time table. Evidently he was disturbed because the train was
+late.
+
+"I hope you are not to lose a connection in Chicago?" the observing
+traveler said to him.
+
+"Yes, I'll miss it--and my baby is dying five hours from Chicago," was
+the response, given with a sob.
+
+The time was short, but there was opportunity for the interchange of a
+few words, then for a conference with the conductor, who wired asking
+that the connecting train--at another station and on another road--be
+held for ten minutes.
+
+A week later came a note from the happy father. His babe was rapidly
+recovering. "And I'll never forget the words you spoke to me in my
+agony," he wrote. "God is more real to me since our talk as we went into
+Chicago. You put heart into me."
+
+
+VI
+
+GIVING THAT COUNTS
+
+An old fable tells of a good man to whom the Lord said he would give
+whatever he most desired. Besought by friends to ask great things, he
+refused. Finally he asked that he might be able to do a great deal of
+good without ever knowing it. And so it came about that every time the
+good man's shadow fell behind him or at either side, so that he could
+not see it, it had the power to cure disease, soothe pain and comfort
+sorrow.
+
+When he walked along, his shadow, thrown on the ground on either side or
+behind him, made arid paths green, caused withered plants to bloom, gave
+clear water to dried up brooks, fresh color to pale little children, and
+joy to unhappy mothers.
+
+But he simply went about his daily life, diffusing virtue as the star
+diffuses light and the flower perfume, without ever being aware of it.
+And the people, respecting his humility, followed him silently, never
+speaking to him about his miracles. Little by little, they even came to
+forget his name, and called him only "The Holy Shadow."
+
+It would be a splendid thing if all would learn the lesson taught in the
+fable--that the man who would do good should have the courage to be
+unconscious of the good he is doing, and so as unlike as possible the
+rich woman of whom some one has told, who turned a deaf ear to every
+petition for help unless there was a subscription paper circulated and
+she was given the chance to head the list. "But no poor person came into
+her house who said, 'May God reward you!' She never experienced the
+pleasure of making a poor woman on the back stairs happy with a cup of
+warm coffee, or hungry children with a slice of bread and butter, or an
+infirm man with a penny. Perhaps she satisfied her conscience by saying
+that she did not believe in indiscriminate charity. Frequently that
+excuse is given conscientiously but how often the real meaning is, 'I do
+not believe in charity that does not make people talk of my
+generosity.'"
+
+In the Sermon on the Mount Jesus taught the folly of giving in such a
+manner. The lesson was enforced by two pictures--a man standing on the
+street, giving alms to the poor, while attention is called to his
+generosity by the sounding of a trumpet which everyone must hear, and a
+man whose giving is so much a matter of secrecy that he does not think
+of it a second time. There is no rolling of it over as a sweetmeat under
+his tongue, as if to say, "What a generous man I am!" Nor is there any
+motive in the giving but pure desire to glorify God. All this is
+properly included in the interpretation of "Let not thy left hand know
+what thy right hand doeth."
+
+
+VII
+
+EXPENSIVE ECONOMY
+
+A magazine editor offered a prize for the best account by a reader of
+the adjustment of income and expenditure made necessary by the vaulting
+prices of recent years. The prize was awarded to one whose revised
+budget showed the revision downward of many items, and the elimination
+of two or three other items. The comparison of the budgets was
+interesting and helpful; most readers would be apt to approve heartily
+all but one of the changes and eliminations. This was the exception:
+the earlier budget allowed five dollars per month for "church and
+charity," while the revised budget made no mention of the claims of
+others, no provision for the privilege of giving.
+
+If you had been a judge in that contest, would you have felt like giving
+the prize to a paper that suggested such an omission? Suppose you had
+the task of cutting your budget, would you feel like revising downward
+the provision for giving? What do you think of the statement of a famous
+business man who, having insisted in time of financial reverses on
+making gifts as usual, said to objecting friends, "Economy should not
+begin at the house of God." Why not let economy begin there?
+
+What answer would have been given to such a query by the poor tenement
+dweller in New York City who, though compelled to earn the support of
+her family by scrubbing floors in a great office building, set aside a
+dollar and a half per week for the care of four orphans in India who but
+for her gifts would have starved?
+
+What answer would have been made by the Polish Jew, long resident in
+America, who directed in his will that regular gifts be made at
+Christmas and Easter to the Christians as well as to the Jews of his
+home town in Europe? That bequest was made in memory of days and nights
+of terror when, as a boy, he hid in the house from the fiendish
+persecutions of so-called Christians who thought Easter and Christmas
+favorable times for the intimidation of the Jews. What would he have
+said to the idea of economy that forgets the needs of others and makes
+no provision for satisfying the hungry, to help the suffering?
+
+What would have been the comment of Him who told the parable of the rich
+man who built great barns to hold the surplus product of his lands,
+thinking that there was nothing better in life than to eat, drink, and
+be merry; who compared the gifts of the rich man and the poor widow; who
+commended the love of the woman who poured out the costly ointment upon
+His head; who promises glorious recognition to those who give, in His
+name, to any who are in need?
+
+A successful manufacturer, whose eyes have been opened to the folly of
+attempting to save by cutting off gifts, has written a series of essays
+on "The Business Man and His Overflow," his purpose being to show that
+happiness is dependent on helpfulness. "Who is the most successful
+business man?" he asks. "The man who has the largest bank account? Not
+necessarily.... The most successful business man is he who renders the
+greatest service to mankind and whose life is most useful."
+
+Two paths are open to us: we can give, and we can give more, or we can
+economize in giving until we give nothing.
+
+Which is the path of courage?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER SEVEN
+
+_COURAGE THROUGH COMPANIONSHIP_
+
+
+THE world is full of lonely people--people who keep to themselves,
+turning away from every approach of others, from all invitations to come
+out of retirement. They persist in living alone, thinking their own
+thoughts, pleasing only themselves.
+
+"I can have no place in my life for friendship," one of these
+unfortunates says.
+
+"I can't be expected to devote myself to my family; it is all I can do
+to make a living," is the complaint of another.
+
+"I live in the present," says a third; "the past has no interest for me,
+and the future holds nothing but worries."
+
+"Live more out-of-doors, you say!" is the word of a fourth. "Why should
+I bother about Nature when Nature does nothing but thwart me?"
+
+"Make God my friend?" a fifth asks in surprise. "Talk to me in rational
+terms. God doesn't bother about me; why should I bother about Him?"
+
+Is it any wonder that the lives of so many everywhere are empty? It does
+not occur to them that by their determination to isolate themselves they
+cut themselves off from the surest road to courage, both received and
+given--the road of companionship with the people and things most worth
+while.
+
+
+I
+
+COMPANIONSHIP WITH FRIENDS
+
+There are those who say that friendship is a lost art; that modern life
+is too busy for friendship. "Why don't you pause long enough to call on
+B----?" a father asked his son; "you used to be such good friends." "Oh,
+I haven't time for that now," was the careless reply; "if I am to get
+ahead, I feel I must devote myself only to those things that can be a
+decided help to my advancement."
+
+The mistake made by that son is emphasized by the advice of a keen old
+man, spoken to a business associate: "If I were asked to give advice to
+a group of young men who wanted to get ahead in business, I would simply
+say, 'make friends.' As I sat before the fire the other night I let my
+mind run back, and it was with surprise that I learned that many of the
+things which in my youth I credited to my ability as a business man came
+to me because I had made influential friends who did things for me
+because they liked me. The man who is right has the right kind of
+friends, and the man who is wrong has the kind of friends who are
+attracted by his wrongness. A man gets what he is."
+
+Possibly some will think that advice faulty in expression, for it seems
+at first glance to put friendship on a coldly calculating basis, as if
+it urged the maker of friends to say before consenting to try for a
+man's friendship, "Is there anything I can get out of such a friendship
+for myself?" Of course it is unthinkable that anyone should estimate
+friendship in that way; friendship that calculates is unworthy the name,
+and the calculator ought to be doomed to the loneliest kind of life.
+But, evidently, what the adviser had in mind is the spirit that makes
+friends because it is worth while to have friends for friendship's sake,
+that never counts on advancement through the efforts of others. Such a
+spirit is bound to be surprised some day by the realization that for his
+success he owed much to the friends whom he made without a thought of
+self.
+
+One beginner in business decided that he must find his friendships in
+serving others. There were those who told him he was making a mistake,
+but he went calmly on, devoting hours each week to service with an
+associate in a boys' club. Nothing seemed to come of this but
+satisfaction to himself and joy to a group whose homes were cheerless.
+Yet, there was something more--the pleasure of friendship with his
+associate. One day he was surprised by an invitation to call on the head
+of a large manufacturing concern. "You don't know me," the man said,
+"but I know you, for you have been teaching with my son down at the
+boys' club. For a long time I have been on the lookout for a young man
+who can come into this business with a view to taking up the work with
+my son when I must retire. From what I have heard your friend, my son,
+tell of you, you are the man I have sought."
+
+It is impossible to count on a thing like that as a result of
+friendship, and the man who is worthy of such a friendship never thinks
+of reckoning on anything but giving to his friend the best that is in
+him as he enjoys the comfort of association with him.
+
+Many years ago the author of _The Four Feathers_ wrote of such a
+friendship between two men:
+
+"It was a helpful instrument, which would not wear out, put into their
+hands for a hard, lifelong use, but it was not and never had been spoken
+of between them. Both men were grateful for it, as for a rare and
+undeserved gift; yet both knew that it might entail an obligation of
+sacrifice. But the sacrifices, were they needful, would be made, and
+they would not be mentioned."
+
+It has been well said that "Love gives and receives, and keeps no
+account on either side," but that is very different from deliberately
+using friendship for selfish ends.
+
+
+II
+
+SUCCESSFUL COMRADES
+
+For days two men had been together, tramping, driving, boating, eating,
+sleeping, talking. And when the time for separation came, one said to
+the other: "Will you please give a message to your wife? Tell her for
+me, if you will, that she has made her husband into a real comrade."
+
+That man would have been at a loss to tell what are the elements that go
+to the making up of a good comrade. In fact, he intimated as much on the
+last day of the excursion. "You can no more tell the things that go to
+make up a real comrade than you can explain the things that make a
+landscape beautiful; you can only see and rejoice."
+
+Just so, it is possible to see instances of good comradeship and
+rejoice.
+
+In order that there may be real comradeship between two individuals it
+is not at all necessary that they shall belong to the same station in
+life. One of those to whom John Muir, the great naturalist, proved
+himself a true comrade was a guide who many times went with him into the
+fastnesses of the high Sierras of California. "It was great to hear him
+talk," the guide has said. "Often we sat together like two men who had
+always known each other. It wasn't always necessary to talk; often there
+would be no word said for half an hour. But we understood each other in
+the silence."
+
+Nor is it essential that people shall be much together before they can
+be real comrades. Theodore Roosevelt and Joel Chandler Harris knew one
+another by reputation only until the red letter day when Uncle Remus
+entered the door of the White House, in response to an urgent letter of
+invitation in which the President wrote: "Presidents may come and
+presidents may go, but Uncle Remus stays put. Georgia has done a great
+many things for the Union, but she has never done more than when she
+gave Joel Chandler Harris to American literature." When the two
+animal-lovers finally came together there was real comradeship. That the
+reporters understood this was evident from the wire one of them sent to
+his paper: "Midnight--Mr. Harris has not returned to his hotel. The
+White House is ablaze with light. It is said that Mr. Harris is telling
+the story of Br'er Rabbit and the Tar Baby." But the Georgian's own
+colloquial account of the memorable session with his comrade at
+Washington was more explicit:
+
+"There are things about the White House that'll astonish you ef ever you
+git there while Teddy is on hand. It's a home; it'll come over you like
+a sweet dream the minnit you git in the door.... It's a kind of feelin'
+that you kin have in your own house, if you've lived right, but it's the
+rarest thing in the world that you kin find it in anybody else's
+house.... We mostly talked of little children an' all the pranks they're
+up to from mornin' till night, an' how they draw old folks into all
+sorts of traps, and make 'em play tricks on themselves. That's the
+kinder talk I like, an' I could set up long past my bedtime an' listen
+to it. Jest at the right time, the President would chip in wi' some of
+his adventures wi' the children.... I felt just like I had been on a
+visit to some old friend that I hadn't seen in years."
+
+When Robert Louis Stevenson and Edward Livingston Trudeau spent days
+together at Dr. Trudeau's Adirondack sanitarium--the one as patient, the
+other as physician--they proved that true comradeship is possible even
+when men's tastes are most unlike. It was possible because they knew how
+to ignore differences and to find common ground in the worth-while
+things. "My life interests were bound up in the study of facts, and in
+the laboratory I bowed duly to the majesty of fact, wherever it might
+lead," Dr. Trudeau wrote. "Mr. Stevenson's view was to ignore or avoid
+as much as possible unpleasant facts, and live in a beautiful,
+extraneous and ideal world of fancy. I got him one day into the
+laboratory, from which he escaped at the first opportunity.... On the
+other hand, I knew well I could not discuss intelligently with him the
+things he lived among and the masterly work he produced, because I was
+incompetent to appreciate to the full the wonderful situations his
+brilliant mind evolved and the high literary merit of the work in which
+he described the flights of his great genius."
+
+Yet these two men were great companions, for in spite of differences as
+to details, their hopes and ambitions and ideals all pointed to the best
+things in life. After the author's departure, he sent to the doctor a
+splendidly bound set of his works, first writing in each volume a
+whimsical bit of rhyme, composed for the occasion.
+
+Though all of these men were real comrades, there is a higher
+manifestation of comradeship than this. This was shown in the relation
+of Daniel Coit Gilman, later President of Johns Hopkins University, when
+he wrote to a fellow student of the deepest things in his life:
+
+"I don't wish merely to thank you in a general way for writing as you
+did an expression of sympathy, but more especially to respond to the
+sentiments on Christian acquaintance which you there bring out. I agree
+with you most fully and only regret that I did not know at an earlier
+time upon our journey what were your feelings upon a few such topics. I
+tell you, Brace, that I hate cant and all that sort of thing as much as
+you or anyone else can do. It is not with everyone that I would enjoy a
+talk upon religious subjects. I hardly ever wrote a letter on them to
+those I know best. But when anyone believes in an inner life of faith
+and joy, and is willing to talk about it in an earnest, everyday style
+and tone, I do enjoy it most exceedingly."
+
+Theodore Storrs Lee cultivated the relation of a comrade with his fellow
+students that he might talk to them, without cant, on the deepest things
+of life. His biographer says: "Many a time did he seek out men in lonely
+rooms, bewildered or weakened by the college struggles. Many a quiet
+talk did he have as he and his selected companion trod his favorite
+walk. No one else in college had so many intimate talks with so many
+men.... On one occasion, when he was urging a friend to give his life to
+Christian service, he seemed to be unsuccessful--until, on leaving the
+man at the close of the walk, he made a genial, large-minded remark that
+opened the way to the heart of his friend." ... "It was only natural
+that I should try to meet him half-way," the friend said later, in
+explanation of his own changed attitude. He had been won by real
+comradeliness. "It was this devotion to the men in college that led him
+into the holy of holies of many a man's heart," wrote a friend, "causing
+many of us to feel in a very real way the sentiment expressed by Mrs.
+Browning:
+
+ "The face of all the world is changed, I think
+ Since first I heard the footsteps of thy soul."
+
+
+III
+
+COMPANIONSHIP WITH THE PAST
+
+What, courage from companionship with the past? The pessimist says,
+"Impossible! The past was so much better than the present. See how the
+country is going to the dogs!" and they point to the revelations of
+dishonesty in high places. "There were no such blots on our records when
+the country was young."
+
+A public man gave an effective answer to such croakers when he said:
+
+"As we go on year by year reading in the newspapers of the dreadful
+things that are occurring; wicked rich men, wicked politicians and
+wicked men of all kinds, we are apt to feel that we have fallen on very
+evil times. But are we any worse than our fathers were? John Adams, in
+1776, was Secretary of War. He wrote a letter which is still in
+existence, and told of the terrible corruption that prevailed in the
+country; he told how everybody was trying to rob the soldiers, rob the
+War Department, and he said he was really ashamed of the times in which
+he lived. When Jefferson was President of the United States it was
+thought that the whole country was going to be given over to French
+infidelity. When Jackson was President people thought the country
+ruined, because of his action in regard to the United States Bank. And
+we know how in Polk's time the Mexican War was an era of rascality and
+dishonesty that appalled the whole country."
+
+It is a mistake to look back a generation or two and say, "The good old
+days were better than these." In the address already referred to the
+speaker continued:
+
+"Only thirty years ago, on my first visit to California, I went with a
+friend to the mining district in the Sierras. One summer evening we sat
+upon the flume looking over the landscape. My friend was a distinguished
+man of great ability. In the distance the sun was setting, reflecting
+its light on the dome of the Capitol of the state, at Sacramento, twenty
+miles off. He turned to me and said suddenly: 'I would like to be you
+for one reason, that you are thirty years younger than I am, and they
+are going to be thirty of the greatest years the world has ever seen.'
+He is dead now, but his words were prophetic. He and I used to talk
+about how we could send power down into the mines. An engine would fill
+the mine with smoke and gases, and yet we must have power to run the
+drills, etc., using compressed air. How easy to-day, just to drop a wire
+down and send the power of electricity! At that time there was but a
+single railroad running across the continent, which took a single
+sleeping car each day. Look at the difference now, with six great trunk
+lines sending out more than a dozen trains, and more than a hundred
+sleeping cars each day."
+
+Students of American history know something of the fears of early
+adherents of the United States Government lest the republic prove a
+failure, and of the threats of doubters and disaffected citizens to do
+their best to replace the republic by a monarchy. But comparatively few
+realize how great were the fears, and how brazenly the prophecies were
+spoken.
+
+An examination of "The Complete Anas of Thomas Jefferson," the
+collection of private memoranda made by the patriot when he was
+successively Secretary of State, Vice-President, and President,
+discloses the fact that some of the gravest of these fears were held by
+those high in authority, and that the prophecies of evil came from men
+who were leaders in the nation.
+
+On April 6, 1792, President Washington, in conversation with Jefferson,
+"expressed his fear that there would, ere long, be a separation of the
+Union, that the public mind seemed dissatisfied and tending to this." On
+October 1, 1792, he spoke to the Secretary of his desire to retire at
+the end of his term as President. "Still, however, if his aid was
+thought necessary to save the cause to which he had devoted his life
+principally, he would make the sacrifice of a longer continuance."
+
+On April 7, 1793, Tobias Lear, in conversation with Jefferson, spoke
+pessimistically of the affairs of the country. The debt, he was sure,
+was growing on the country in spite of claims to the contrary. He said
+that "the man who vaunted the present government so much on some
+occasions was the very man who at other times declared that it was a
+poor thing, and such a one as could not stand, and he was sensible they
+only esteemed it as a stepping-stone to something else."
+
+On December 1, 1793, an influential Senator (name given) said to several
+of his fellow Senators that things would never go right until there was
+a President for life, and a hereditary Senate.
+
+On December 27, 1797, Jefferson said that Tenche Coxe told him that a
+little before Alexander Hamilton went out of office, he said: "For my
+part I avow myself a monarchist; I have no objection to a trial being
+made of this thing of a republic, but, ... etc."
+
+On February 6, 1798, it was reported to Jefferson that a man of
+influence in the Government had said, "I have made up my mind on this
+subject; I would rather the old ship should go down than not." Later he
+qualified his words, making his statement hypothetical, by adding, "if
+we are to be always kept pumping so."
+
+On January 24, 1800, it was reported to Jefferson that, at a banquet in
+New York, Alexander Hamilton made no remark when the health of the
+President was proposed, but that he asked for three cheers when the
+health of George III was suggested.
+
+On March 27, 1800, the Anas record: "Dr. Rush tells me that within a few
+days he has heard a member of Congress lament our separation from Great
+Britain, and express his sincere wishes that we were again dependent on
+her."
+
+On December 13, 1803, Jefferson told of the coming to President Adams of
+a minister from New England who planned to solicit funds in New England
+for a college in Green County, Tennessee. He wished to have the
+President's endorsement of the project. But "Mr. Adams ... said he saw
+no possibility of continuing the union of the States; that their
+dissolution must take place; that he therefore saw no propriety in
+recommending to New England men to promote a literary institution in the
+South; that it was in fact giving strength to those who were to be their
+enemies, and, therefore, he would have nothing to do with it."
+
+One who reads bits like these from Jefferson's private papers
+appreciates more fully some of the grave difficulties that confronted
+the country's early leaders; he rejoices more than ever before that the
+United States emerged so triumphantly from troubled waters until, little
+more than a century after those days of dire foreboding, it was showing
+other nations the way to democracy; he takes courage in days of present
+doubt and uncertainty, assured that the country which has already
+weathered so many storms will continue to solve its grave problems, and
+will be more than ever a beacon light to the world.
+
+
+IV
+
+COMPANIONSHIP WITH NATURE
+
+"Look at the World," is the advice David Grayson gives to those who
+follow him in his delightful essays on Great Possessions--possessions
+that cannot be measured with a yardstick or entered in the bank book.
+This is his cure for all the trials and vexations that come in the
+course of a busy life. For how can a man remain unsettled and morose and
+distressed when he is gazing at the broad expanse of the sky, studying
+the beauty of the trees, or listening to the mellow voices of the birds?
+How can the wanderer in field and forest forget that God is love?
+
+Some people think that to drink in the glories of nature they must go to
+the mountains, or seek some other far-away spot. Mistake! The place to
+enjoy God's world is just where one is, and the time is that very
+moment. This was the lesson taught so impressively by Alice Freeman
+Palmer, when she described the little dweller in the tenements who
+resolved to see something beautiful each day, and who, one day, when
+confined to the house, found her something in watching a rain-soaked
+sparrow drinking from the gutter on the tin roof. And this was the
+thought in the mind of Mr. Grayson when he said:
+
+"I love a sprig of white cedar, especially the spicy, sweet inside bark,
+or a pine needle, or the tender, sweet, juicy end of a spike of timothy
+grass drawn slowly from its sheath, or a twig of the birch that tastes
+like wintergreen."
+
+Hamlin Garland, in "A Son of the Middle Border," has told the story of
+his boyhood on an Iowa farm. He knew how to enjoy the sights to which so
+many are blind:
+
+"I am reliving days when the warm sun, falling on radiant slopes of
+grass, lit the meadow phlox and tall tiger lilies to flaming torches of
+color. I think of blackberry thickets and odorous grapevines, and
+cherry-trees and the delicious nuts which grew in profusion throughout
+the forest to the north. The forest, which seemed endless and was of
+enchanted solemnity, served as our wilderness. We explored it at every
+opportunity. We loved every day for the color it brought, each season
+for the wealth of its experiences, and we welcomed the thought of
+spending all our years in this beautiful home where the wood and the
+prairie of our song did actually meet and mingle.... I studied the
+clouds. I gnawed the beautiful red skin from the seed vessels which hung
+upon the wild rose bushes, and I counted the prairie chickens as they
+began to come together in winter flocks, running through the stubble in
+search of food. I stopped now and again to examine the lizards unhoused
+by the shares, ... and I measured the little granaries of wheat which
+the mice and gophers had deposited deep under the ground, storehouses
+which the plow had violated. My eyes dwelt enviously on the sailing hawk
+and on the passing of ducks.... Often of a warm day I heard the
+sovereign cry of the sand-hill crane falling from the azure throne, so
+high, so far, his form could not be seen, so close to the sun that my
+eyes could not detect his solitary, majestic, circling sweep.... His
+brazen, reverberating call will forever remain associated in my mind
+with mellow, pulsating earth, spring grass and cloudless glorious
+May-time skies."
+
+Henry Fawcett lived at about the same period in a rural district in
+England. He, too, delighted to ramble in the fields. One day, when he
+was out hunting with his father, an accidental gunshot deprived him of
+his eyesight. But the boy would not think of shutting himself away from
+the joys of nature which meant so much to him. "I very soon came to the
+resolution to live, as far as possible, just as I had lived before....
+No one can more enjoy catching a salmon in the Tweed of the Spey, or
+throwing a fly in some quiet trout stream in Wiltshire or Hampshire."
+
+In the story of the life of John J. Audubon an incident is told that
+shows how the greatest joy can be found in what seems like one of the
+most ordinary things in the life of the forest--the nesting of the
+birds:
+
+"He became interested in a bird, not as large as the wren, of such
+peculiar grey plumage that it harmonized with the bark of the trees, and
+could scarcely be seen. One night he came home greatly excited, saying
+he had found a pair that was evidently preparing to make a nest. The
+next morning he went into the woods, taking with him a telescopic
+microscope. The scientific instrument he erected under the tree that
+gave shelter to the literally invisible inhabitants he was searching
+for, and, making a pillow of some moss, he lay upon his back, and
+looking through the telescope, day after day, noted the progress of the
+little birds, and, after three weeks of such patient labor, felt that he
+had been amply rewarded for the toil and the sacrifice by the results he
+had obtained."
+
+When a boy David Livingstone laid the foundation for the love of the
+open that helped to make his life in Africa a never-ending delight.
+"Before he was ten he had wandered all over the Clyde banks about
+Blantyre and had begun to collect and wonder at shells and flowers," one
+of his biographers says.
+
+Not far away, also in Scotland, Henry Drummond spent his boyhood. He,
+too, knew the pleasure of wandering afield. He liked to go to the rock
+on which stands grim Stirling Castle, and look away to the windings of
+the crooked Forth, the green Ochil Hills, and, farther away, Ben Lomond,
+Ben Venue, and Ben Ledi, the guardians of the beautiful Highland lochs.
+He was never weary of feasting his eyes on them. In later years he would
+go back to the scenes of his boyhood, climb to the Castle, and, looking
+out on the beautiful prospect, would say "Man, there's no place like
+this; no place like Scotland."
+
+Bayard Taylor first made a name for himself by his ability to see the
+things that many people pass by, and to describe them sympathetically.
+But he, also, in boyhood days learned the lesson that paved the way for
+later achievements. He was not six years old when he used to wander to a
+fascinating swamp near his Pennsylvania home. If the child was missed
+from the house, the first thing that suggested itself was to climb upon
+a mound which overlooked the swamp. Once, from the roof of the house, he
+discovered unknown forests and fresh fields which he made up his mind to
+explore. Later, in company with a Quaker schoolmaster, he took long
+walks, and thus learned many things about the trees and plants. When he
+was twelve he began to write out the thoughts that came to him in this
+intimate study of nature.
+
+In far-away Norway Ole Bull had a like experience. At an early age he
+began to be on familiar terms with the silent things about him. The
+quality of his later work was influenced by the grandeur of the scenery
+in which he lived. To him trees, rocks, waterfalls, mountains, all spoke
+a language which demanded expression through the strings of his violin;
+he turned everything into music. His biographer says:
+
+"When, in early childhood, playing alone in the meadow, he saw a
+delicate bluebell moving in the breeze, he fancied he heard the bell
+ring, and the grass accompanying it with most exceptionally fine
+voices."
+
+John Muir, who later wrote of the great Sequoias of California and the
+glaciers of Alaska, when a boy of ten found delight in scenes of which
+he wrote as follows:
+
+"Oh, that glorious Wisconsin wilderness! Everything new and pure in the
+very prime of spring, when nature's pulses were beating highest and
+mysteriously keeping tune with our own! Young hearts, young leaves,
+flowers, animals, the winds and the streams and the sparkling lake, all
+wildly, gladly rejoicing together."
+
+There is something missing in the life of one who cannot enter into the
+feelings of a boy like Muir or Taylor or Drummond. And when such a boy
+grows up, the gap in the life will be more conspicuous than ever.
+
+Think of the poverty of the stranger to whom a traveler, feeling that he
+must give expression to his keen delight in the autumn foliage, said,
+"What wonderful coloring!" "Where?" came the reply. "Oh, the trees!
+Well, I'm not interested in trees. Talk to me about coal. I know coal."
+
+
+V
+
+COMPANIONSHIP WITH GOD
+
+Some people insist that it is impractical moonshine to speak of making a
+companion of God, that folks who talk about such things are dreamers,
+far removed from touch with the cold reality of daily life.
+
+Then how about the nephew of whom Dr. Alexander MacColl told at
+Northfield? He was surely a practical man. For four years he had been in
+the thick of the fighting in France. Yet at the close of one of his
+letters to his uncle he said: "I hope when the war is over that I may
+be able to spend a month somewhere among the hills. I often think that
+if more people in the world had lived among such hills as we have in
+Scotland there would have been no world war."
+
+"When I came yesterday afternoon, and saw again the glory of these
+hills," was Dr. MacColl's comment, "I found myself sharing very deeply
+in that feeling of my good nephew, and wishing that more people in the
+world had known what it is to commune with God in the silences."
+
+That fine young Scotchman would have known how to take a college student
+who, while having a country walk with a friend, was explaining the
+reason for his belief in God and his trust in Him. As he concluded his
+message he pointed to a large tree which they were passing, saying as he
+did so, "God is as real to me as that tree."
+
+He had a right to say such a thing, for he not only believed, but he was
+conscious that God was with him, his Companion wherever he went. This
+being the case, prayer became for him the simplest and most natural
+thing in the world. God was by his side; then why should not he talk to
+God, by ejaculation as well as by more formal utterance? Yet his talks
+with God never became formal. They were always intimate and
+confidential--like the approaches of Principal John Cairns, the famous
+Scotch minister. His biographer tells of a time when he was at the manse
+of a country minister in whose church he was to preach next day. The
+minister's wife withdrew to get a cup of tea for the old man, leaving
+her little boy there. By and by she heard a strange, unaccustomed sound,
+as it seemed to her under such conditions. And as she listened and
+looked, she saw that the old man was kneeling with the boy. It had
+seemed to him the most natural thing in the world to speak to his Great
+Friend about his little friend.
+
+Dr. Arthur Smith was like that with God, and his son Henry took after
+him. One January day in 1905 the father reached New York from China and
+sought his son. They went to a hotel room to bridge the time of absence
+by "a tremendous lot of back conversation," as the son wrote to the
+mother. But before they had any chance to talk of other matters the
+father said, "Come, boy, let's have a prayer." "Wasn't that just like
+him?" Henry asked his mother.
+
+A minister who was spending his vacation in the northern woods was
+called in to see a dying lumberman. Before leaving the visitor prayed
+with the sick man, and suggested that he pray for himself. The objection
+was made that it was useless to pray--God understood a man's trials, and
+He knew what was wanted before a request was made. The minister asked
+him if he didn't know what his children needed before they asked him, if
+he didn't know they were disappointed or troubled; yet didn't he wish to
+have them talk over these things with him?
+
+The man thought a moment. Then he said, "Do you think that would be
+prayer--just for me to lie here and tell God what He knows already--how
+it hurts, and all my disappointment, and my anxiety for the future of my
+children and my wife--and everything--just to tell Him?"
+
+"I think it would," said the minister. "I think it would be prayer of a
+very real kind."
+
+One who had learned that prayer is not a mere formal exercise, to be
+dreaded and postponed, has said:
+
+"Pray often--in bits, with a persistency of habit that betrays a
+childlike eagerness and absorption. Rise up to question God as children
+do their earthly parents--at morning, noon and night and between times.
+Ask Him about everything. Be with Him more than with all other persons.
+Acquire the home habit with Him. Be a child in His hands. Do not fear
+lest He be too busy to listen, or too grown up to care or to understand.
+Just talk to Him, in broken sentences, half-formed with crude wishes; in
+foolish chatter, if need be. Make the Heavenly Father the center of your
+life, the source and judge of all your satisfactions. Be sure to let Him
+put you to bed, waken you in the morning, wait on you at table, order
+your day's doings, protect you from harm, soothe your disquiet, supply
+all your daily needs."
+
+Such a prayer is good, not only when one is sick, but when one is well
+and busy with the affairs of daily life. A clergyman has told of a visit
+to London during which he called on a merchant whom he had met in
+America. At the business house he was told that he could not see the
+merchant, as it was steamer day, and orders had been given not to
+disturb him. But when the card was taken up, the merchant appeared, his
+face beaming with pleasure. After a moment's greeting the visitor
+offered to go away, but the merchant took him into his office, and said:
+
+"I am very glad you have called. I would not have had you fail. I am
+very busy, but I always have a moment for my Lord. I have a little
+place for private prayer. You must come in with me, and we shall have a
+season of prayer together."
+
+Busy, but not too busy for prayer, longing to see his friend, but eager
+to spend the ten minutes of the call in prayer with that other Friend
+who made the brief visit worth while!
+
+In telling this incident, one writer on the subject of prayer has said:
+
+"Several, perhaps many merchants in one of our large cities have fitted
+up for themselves dark, narrow, boxlike closets, whither, each by
+himself, they are wont to retire for a few minutes at times, during the
+pressure of the day's business, for the refreshment of soul, which they
+find they really need in communion with God. One of these men is
+reported to have said: 'On some days, if I had not that resort, I
+believe I should go mad, so great is the pressure.'"
+
+Dr. Purves once told an incident of the distinguished scientist,
+Professor Joseph Henry, as given him by one of Dr. Henry's students. "I
+well remember the wonderful care with which he arranged all his
+principal experiments. Then often, when the testing moment came, that
+holy as well as great philosopher would raise his hand in adoring
+reverence and call upon me to uncover my head and worship in silence,
+'because,' he said, 'God is here. I am about to ask God a question.'"
+
+To Mary Slessor of Calabar, whom the Africans learned to love devotedly,
+prayer was as simple and easy as talking to a friend in the room. "Her
+religion was a religion of the heart," her biographer says. "Her
+communion with her Father was of the most natural, most childlike
+character. No rule or habit guided her. She just spoke to Him as a child
+to its father when she needed help and strength, or when her heart was
+filled with joy and gratitude, at any time, in any place. He was so real
+to her, so near, that her words were almost of the nature of
+conversation. There was no formality, no self-consciousness, no
+stereotyped diction, only the simplest language from a quiet and humble
+heart. It is told of her that once, when she was in Scotland, after a
+tiresome journey, she sat down at the tea table alone, and, lifting up
+her eyes, said, 'Thank you, Father--ye ken I'm tired,' in the most
+ordinary way as if she had been addressing her friend. On another
+occasion in the country, she lost her spectacles while coming from a
+meeting in the dark. She could not do without them, and she prayed
+simply and directly, 'O Father, give me back my spectacles!' A lady
+asked her how she obtained such intimacy with God. 'Ah, woman,' she
+said, 'when I am out there in the bush, I have often no other one to
+speak to but my Father, and I just talk to Him....'"
+
+"I just talk to Him!" There is the secret of getting and keeping close
+to the Father, the most worth-while Companion we can possibly have with
+us on country walk, on vacation excursion, amid business perplexities,
+in the desert or in the thronged city street, when the days are crowded
+with burdens, or when the time of rest after work has come.
+
+Try Him and see if it is not so.
+
+
+VI
+
+A CHAPTER OF--ACCIDENTS?
+
+A man had planned a three-day trip with care. On paper everything looked
+promising for a combination of business and pleasure that would make
+these days stand out in the record of the year.
+
+In the morning he would go to Washington. There he would have
+opportunity to see in one of the Departments a man whose help in an
+emergency would prove invaluable. At four in the afternoon he would
+leave for Cincinnati. By taking the train he would miss a bit of scenery
+at Cumberland, which he had hoped to see. This could not be helped,
+however, for by the train he would be set down in Cincinnati in good
+season for the important one-day session of a committee, the primary
+object of the trip.
+
+To be sure, he would have to miss another important committee meeting at
+home, unless he should forego the Washington stop. But would it not be
+worth while to miss one of the meetings when he did not see how he could
+well arrange for both?
+
+The ticket was bought and reservation was made. Then interruption number
+one came. Most unexpectedly there was a call from a neighbor to render
+such a service as can be given but once in a lifetime. Yet that
+difficult service must be rendered at the moment when, according to
+program, he would be taking the train for Washington.
+
+Of course there could be no question as to his course. Instead of going
+to Washington and seeing the man with whom conference would mean so
+much, he must take train by a route more direct. This would enable him
+to reach Cincinnati in season for the committee meeting; and it would
+enable him also to attend the committee meeting at home which he had
+decided to put aside for the sake of the Washington opportunity.
+
+After serving his neighbor and attending the home meeting--this turned
+out to be so important that to miss it would have been little short of a
+calamity--the direct train for Cincinnati was taken, though not without
+a sigh for the lost opportunity in Washington.
+
+Yet the sigh was forgotten when on that train he became acquainted with
+three fellow-passengers who gave him some new and needed glimpses of
+life.
+
+A study of time tables showed him that he could return by way of
+Washington, and could have two hours for the interview there on which he
+had counted so much, before the hour came for completing the homeward
+journey.
+
+After a successful committee meeting in Cincinnati, the importance of
+which proved to be even greater than had been anticipated, the train for
+Washington was taken at the Cincinnati terminal. At the moment this
+train was due to leave, there drew in on an adjoining track cars from
+which weary, anxious-looking passengers alighted. "What train is that?"
+was the question that came to his lips.
+
+"Number two, boss," the porter replied. "Left Washington at four
+yesterday afternoon. She's ten hours late, 'count of that big wreck down
+in the mountains."
+
+And that was the train he had planned to take after finishing his
+business in Washington! If he had taken it, what of his touch with the
+Cincinnati meeting?
+
+In thankful spirit, and with the resolve renewed for the ten thousandth
+time that he would cease to question God's wisdom in thwarting his
+little plans, he went to his berth. First, however, he included in his
+evening prayer a petition that the train might not be late in reaching
+Washington, since the time there would be short enough, at best.
+
+Three hours later he roused with the start that is apt to come with the
+intense silence that marks a long night wait of a train between
+stations. The delay was so prolonged that soon the time table showed the
+loss of three hours.
+
+There was one consolation, however: he would be able to pass during
+hours of daylight through the incomparable mountains of West Virginia.
+
+The unexpected blessing was forgotten when the train drew into the
+Washington station so near the close of the afternoon that the traveler
+thought he might as well go home at once. Later on, he might be able to
+make a special trip to the Capital. "And I might have finished my
+program without all that expense and trouble," he thought.
+
+But while he was there he decided he would call on the telephone the man
+in the department whom he wished to see. He told the man of his late
+train and his disappointment.
+
+"Perhaps it is just as well," was the word from the other end of the
+wire. "I have been afraid that the time set aside for our work this
+afternoon was altogether too short. What do you say to coming to me the
+first thing in the morning? Then we can devote to our program all the
+time that proves necessary."
+
+So he remained overnight. The evening gave him the chance he had sought
+for a year to spend an evening consulting authorities at the
+Congressional Library. Next morning the real business of the stopover
+was attended to. Then he learned why it would have been impossible to
+receive the afternoon before the attention he received during the
+morning hours. He knew, too, that it would have been out of the question
+to seek a second interview on the same business; therefore he would
+have had to rest content with the results of the first conference.
+
+The time came to take the train for the final stage of the journey. On
+that train his seat-mate, a man he had never seen before, perhaps never
+would see again, gave him a number of bits of vital information on the
+very business that had led him to Washington!
+
+Is it worth while to ask God to look out for the everyday needs of His
+people?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER EIGHT
+
+_GOD THE SOURCE OF COURAGE_
+
+
+"BE strong and of a good courage!" More than three thousand years ago
+the inspiring words were spoken by a great military leader to men about
+to undertake a tremendous task. Some of them were dismayed. The
+difficulties in the path appeared insurmountable. Their minds were
+filled with worries and fears and anxieties, until the present was heavy
+with doubt and the future loomed before them dread, angry, portentous.
+Their hearts were like water, until Joshua, the leader, with great
+confidence gave his message:
+
+ "Be strong and of a good courage--
+ "Only be strong and very courageous--
+ "Have not I commanded thee?
+ "Be strong and of a good courage.
+ "For Jehovah thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest."
+
+
+I
+
+THAT'S FOR ME!
+
+Two men were going around the marvelous horseshoe curve on the Tyrone
+and Clearfield Division of the Pennsylvania Railroad when one called the
+attention of his companion to the most picturesque part of the way.
+
+"I was looking at that precipice when I had my first understanding of
+the fact that the Bible is a personal message; that I had the right to
+appropriate its words to my own life.
+
+"It was the summer following the end of my final year in college. A few
+months earlier I had reluctantly yielded to the urging, first of my
+physician, then of a nerve specialist, by turning my back on college at
+the vital portion of the year. They told me that if I persisted in
+remaining they would not answer for the consequences; they said I had
+applied myself unwisely to my books until my brain was in revolt. 'It is
+a grave question if you will ever be able to take the professional
+course to which you have been looking forward,' the specialist said.
+'One thing is certain, however: if you do not do as you are told you
+will not do any real brain work the rest of your days.'
+
+"That scared me, for my heart was wrapped up in my plans for the
+future. I felt that life would not be worth while without some sort of
+active brain work. So I gave myself to a real bit of vacation. For
+months I cut myself loose from all books except the little copy of the
+Testament and Psalms which I carried with me more for form's sake than
+for any other reason, I fear. Daily as I tramped here and there in the
+wilds I read a verse or two, more because I thought I ought to do this
+than because I had any idea of receiving help.
+
+"Toward the close of the summer I submitted myself to a specialist who
+shook his head, at the same time declaring that it was doubtful if even
+yet I could go on with my plan. He wouldn't say it was impossible for me
+to do brain work, but he urged that the probabilities were against me. A
+second specialist told me the same thing.
+
+"So I faced the future as all summer long I had feared to face it.
+Finally my mind was made up to turn my back on professional studies.
+When the decision was made a suggestion came that I go into the
+mountains of Pennsylvania to investigate opportunity for a sort of work
+that I might do.
+
+"The journey was begun. As we left Tyrone to climb the mountains my
+spirits sank lower and lower. I rebelled against the idea of taking the
+offered opening. How I longed to enter professional school in two weeks!
+But I dared not do it. To be sure, the physicians said that they saw no
+reason why I should not, though they feared the result. Why not try it?
+I had used all available means for restoration of the brain to the
+old-time keenness. Yet it would be awful to try and fail. No, I did not
+dare.
+
+"So I was in the depths when my hand touched the pocket Testament and
+Psalms. Mechanically the book was opened, probably because of the
+unconscious realization that the daily portion had not yet been read.
+But listlessness was gone in an instant when my eyes fell on the words
+of Psalm 37:5:
+
+"'Commit thy way unto the Lord; trust also in Him, and He will bring it
+to pass.'
+
+"At first the words dazed me. Then I said: 'That's for me, and I'll do
+it! I've spent the summer as the doctors said I must. Surely I am
+warranted in committing myself unto the Lord in just the way the Psalm
+says. Of course I can't be sure that the result of going back to school
+will be precisely what I hope; but I can trust, and do my best. Then if
+the attempt results in failure, I shall have the satisfaction of
+knowing that I am following Him to whom I have committed my way.
+
+"Some of my friends thought it was folly to begin my professional
+course. Can you imagine my joy when, from the day school opened, I had
+no recurrence of my trouble? Of course I was very careful until I could
+feel sure of my health."
+
+"How do you explain your ability to go on with your studies?" his
+companion asked.
+
+"I am not trying to explain it," was the reply. "But without question
+the assurance that came to me with that text from the Psalm, the
+assurance that God is my God and that I have a right to count on Him,
+made me strong to face things to which I had been unequal only a few
+months before.
+
+"And is it strange that I have often wondered if there would have been
+any breakdown in college, if I had only known a little sooner of the
+strength that waits for those who, while putting forth their own utmost
+endeavor, at the same time count on God's unfailing strength?"
+
+
+II
+
+BANKING ON GOD'S PROMISES
+
+Isn't it strange that so many Christians while believing, theoretically,
+in the reality and trustworthiness of God's promises, do not have the
+same sort of practical belief in Him which they show in the promise of
+their bank to pay them, on demand, the sum written down in their book of
+deposit?
+
+And banks have been known to fail in keeping their very limited
+promises, while God has never failed in keeping His unlimited assurances
+of blessing.
+
+For so many the strange delusion that God's promises are not to be
+counted on in the same literal sense as the promises of our associates
+persists through life, but there are fortunate Christians who have their
+eyes opened to the truth. And what a difference the knowledge makes to
+them!
+
+F. B. Meyer told in one of his public addresses of the transformation
+wrought for him when his eyes were opened to the truth. As a boy of
+thirteen he had been a student at Brighton College. He was timid and
+sensitive, and the older students soon learned that they could make his
+life a burden to him. With a sigh of relief he went home at the end of
+the first week of school. On Sunday, however, the thought that he must
+return came to him with oppressing force. How could he stand up against
+the older students? He was idly turning the pages of his Bible when he
+came to the 121st Psalm. "How voraciously I devoured it!" he said. "How
+I read it again and again, and wrapt it round me! How I took it as my
+shield! And the next day I walked into the great expanse in front of the
+college so serene and strong. It was my first act of appropriating the
+promises of God."
+
+Three years later the student was agonizing because he wanted to be a
+minister, yet feared to plan for the work because his voice was weak,
+and he feared that he would not have the courage to speak. He had been
+asking God to show him His will, and to help him in his difficulty. Then
+he found Jeremiah 1:7, and read it for the first time. "With
+indescribable feelings I read it again and again, and even now never
+come on it without a thrill of emotion," he said of his experience. "It
+was the answer to all my perplexing questionings. Yes, I was the child;
+I was to go to those to whom He sent me, and speak what He bade me, and
+He would be with me and teach my lips."
+
+Another man, who had learned to accept literally God's promise, "Ask,
+and it shall be given unto you," wrote gratefully of his experience:
+
+"My life is one long, daily, hourly record of answered prayer. For
+physical health, for mental overstrain, for guidance given marvelously,
+for errors and dangers averted, for enmity to the Gospel subdued, for
+food provided at the exact hour needed, for everything that goes to make
+up life and my poor service, I can testify with a full and often
+wonder-stricken awe that I believe God answers prayer. I know God
+answers prayer. Cavillings, logical or physical, are of no avail to me.
+It is the very atmosphere in which I live and breathe and have my being,
+and it makes life glad and free and a million times worth living."
+
+A worker among his fellows in India stated the ground of his belief in
+God's promise to supply the needs of his people. The sentence was
+written while he was at home on furlough:
+
+"Whatsoever you ask, believe that you have received it, and you shall
+have it. The belief is not the denial of a fact, but rather the
+assurance that the petition is in accordance with God's will, and that
+He is as disposed to give as we to receive; our reception of the gift
+depends on our holding on to His will. Now the practical question is,
+What is God's will? Am I conforming to it? Through lack of faith am I
+failing to receive and appropriate for myself and Satara what I and
+Satara need? Is it God's will that I should return and that there should
+be better paid work? More of it? More school-houses? New houses for
+workers?"
+
+A few days later he added to these notes the word "Yes." His faith
+enabled him to claim God's promise.
+
+A Christian young man in Japan was accustomed to stand at the entrance
+to the park in Tokyo, offering Bibles and preaching the Gospel. Years
+passed, and he saw no results of his work. Yet he believed in Him who
+had promised that His name should be exalted among the heathen. At
+length a Testament was bought by a young man to whom the words of John
+3:16 brought life and joy. He went back to the old man from whose hand
+he had received the book, and told him that he had become a Christian.
+The man was overcome with joy.
+
+"Ten years," he said, "I have been selling New Testaments here at the
+park gates, and you are the first who has ever come to tell me you were
+helped."
+
+But throughout those ten years the faithful worker was sustained by his
+belief in the faithfulness of Him who had promised to bless him in his
+work. He knew that God would not fail him.
+
+
+III
+
+PRACTICAL PRECEPTS FROM PROVERBS
+
+There is nothing like the Bible to put heart into a man. This is not
+strange, for the Book was written for this purpose by men of God's
+choosing whose business it was to strengthen their fellows.
+
+One of the most vivid parts of the Bible is the book of Proverbs.
+
+"Would that our young men were saturated with its thought," Albert J.
+Beveridge said of it, while he was a member of the United States Senate.
+"It is rich in practical wisdom for the minute affairs of practical
+life. It abounds in apt and pointed suggestions and pungent warnings
+concerning our companionship, our personal habits, our employments, our
+management of finance, our speech, the government of tongue and temper,
+and many other such things, which daily perplex the earnest soul, and
+daily occasion harm to the thoughtless and misguided."
+
+Years earlier, another eminent American, Washington Irving, used what is
+the keynote of the book in an earnest talk with George Bancroft, later
+the historian of his country, then a student in Europe. The two were
+taking a walking excursion, when the older man said something the
+student remembered all his life. It was natural, then, that Bancroft's
+biographer should give this in his subject's own words, in "Life and
+Letters of George Bancroft:"
+
+"At my time of life, he tells me, I ought to lay aside all care, and
+only be bent on laying in a stock of knowledge for future application.
+If I have not pecuniary resources enough to get at what I would wish
+for, as calculated to be useful to my mind, I must still not give up the
+pursuit. Still follow it; scramble to it; get at it as you can, but be
+sure to get at it. If you need books, buy them; if you are in want of
+instruction in anything take it. The time will soon come when it will be
+too late for all these things."
+
+More than a century ago an immigrant from Scotland landed in New York.
+In the story of his life he later told how the book of Proverbs became
+his rock. The first night he slept in an old frame building with a
+shingle roof. During the night he was aroused by a storm of rain
+accompanied by thunder and lightning such as he had never experienced in
+Scotland. Homesick, terrified, unable to sleep, he rose and took from
+his chest the Bible his father had carefully packed with his clothes. He
+wrote later that as the book was opened, "My eyes fell on the words, 'My
+Son.' I was thinking of my father. I read on with delight. Having
+finished the last verse I found I had been reading the third chapter of
+the Proverbs of Solomon. Get a Bible and read the chapter. Then suppose
+yourself in my situation--sore in body, sick at heart, and commencing
+life among a world of strangers, and see if words more suitable could be
+put together to fit my case. I looked upon it as a chart from heaven,
+directing my course among the rocks, shoals and storms of life.... I
+went forth with a light heart to work my way through the world, resolved
+to keep this chapter as a pilot by my side."
+
+The importance for to-day of the message in Proverbs 30:8, "Remove far
+from me vanity and lies," is illustrated by several incidents told by
+Lucy Elliot Keeler, in "If I Were a Boy:"
+
+"The son of a distinguished American recently entered business in New
+York, beginning, at his father's request, at the foot of the ladder, and
+receiving the princely salary of $20 a month. At a time when his
+father's name was in everybody's mouth the editor of a yellow journal
+sent for the son and invited him to join the staff. 'You need not write
+any articles,' he said, with a smile, 'nor do any reporting. Just sign
+your name to an article which I will furnish you each day, and I will
+pay you $200 a month....' The young man's reply was too emphatic to be
+accurately reported here, but it was to the effect that he would rather
+starve than pick untold dollars out of the gutter.
+
+"A few years ago an American commissioner occupying a house in the West
+Indies hired a man to wash the windows and another to scrub the floors.
+The bills submitted were for $12 and $7, respectively. 'What does this
+mean?' was the astonished query. '$12 for a day's work? Man, you are
+crazy!' 'Oh,' came the soft reply, 'of course, I only expect a dollar
+and a half for myself, but that was the way we always made out bills for
+the Spanish officers.' 'Take back your bills,' was the American's
+emphatic reply, 'and make them out honestly.'"
+
+The wisdom of the warning in Proverbs 27:2, "Let another man praise
+thee, and not thine own mouth," has seldom been more strikingly
+illustrated than at a large convention when several thousand people
+listened attentively as a speaker of reputation was introduced to them.
+He talked fluently for several minutes, then began to ramble. He made
+several attempts to regain his lost hold on his hearers, then took his
+seat.
+
+"I can't imagine what was wrong to-day," he said to his neighbor on the
+platform. "I had all ready what I felt sure would be a telling address,
+but somehow I couldn't say what I wanted." A sympathetic answer was
+given by the man to whom he had spoken, but if he had said all that was
+in his heart this would have been his message: "I know you had a telling
+argument to present, for I read your manuscript. But you spent the first
+three minutes in talking about yourself. It was there you lost the
+attention of the people; they did not come to hear about you, but to
+learn of your Master. And when you had put yourself in the foreground,
+it was impossible for you to present Him with power."
+
+The speaker's mistake is repeated every day, not merely by men on the
+platform, but by everyday people in the home, in the school, and at
+work. It is fatal to usefulness to put ourselves in the foreground; but
+those who forget self and remember others are welcome wherever they go.
+
+
+IV
+
+GETTING CLOSE TO THE BIBLE
+
+One of the blessings that came to the world out of the anguish of the
+Great War was a new appreciation of God's Word on the part of many who
+had never paid much attention to the inspired Book, and the formation of
+the habit of Bible reading by tens of thousands of those who were once
+heedless of God's Word.
+
+Absence from home in hours of danger, privation and suffering, opened
+the way for testing Him who reveals his power to give infinite blessing
+by saying tenderly, "As one whom his mother comforteth, so will I
+comfort you." The sense of absolute powerlessness in the face of
+barbarism led to dependence upon God who holds the worlds in His hands.
+Realization of the uncertainty of life and familiarity with death made
+easy and natural the approach to the Lord of life and death.
+
+Probably there were soldiers who laughed at the words of Field Marshal
+Lord Roberts, spoken when the first British troops were crossing the
+Channel:
+
+"You will find in this little Book (the Bible) guidance when you are in
+health, comfort when you are in sickness, and strength when you are in
+adversity," but the day came when one of the soldiers themselves, Arthur
+Guy Empey, wrote:
+
+"How about the poor boy lying wounded, perhaps dying, in a shell hole,
+his mother far away? Perhaps to him even God seems to have forgotten; he
+feels for his first-aid packet, binds up his wounds, and then
+waits--years, it seems to him--for the stretcher-bearers. Then he gets
+out his Testament; the feel of it gives him comfort and hope. He reads.
+That boy gets religion, even though when he enlisted he was an atheist."
+
+A Young Men's Christian Association secretary told of an incident when
+the soldiers were just leaving for the trenches. "He saw a young lad
+nervously making his way up to the counter. He knew the boy wanted
+something, and was afraid to ask or was timid about it. He said, 'Want
+something, lad?' 'Yes, sir, I have got a Bible and I don't know much
+about it. I'd like you to mark some passages in it. I am going out to
+the trenches to-night.' 'Sure!' said the secretary. 'Mark some good
+ones, now,' said the lad.
+
+"While he was marking the first lad's book half a dozen other boys came
+up and said, 'Mark mine, too, sir!' And for half an hour this secretary
+was busy marking verses in the Bibles of those boys. An interested
+observer asked him what he marked, and he said, 'Matthew 10:23; 11:28;
+6:19, 20; John 3:16; Romans 8:35-39.'"
+
+"Fighting" Pat O'Brian, of the Royal Fighting Corps, whose marvelous
+escape from his German captors thrilled multitudes, said:
+
+"I haven't been given to talking much about religion, but when, after
+two months of flight through an enemy country as an escaped prisoner,
+going without food except such as I could pick up in the fields and eat
+raw, and time and again coming within a hair's breadth of being caught,
+I finally got through the lines on to the neutral soil of Holland, I was
+mighty glad to get down on my knees and thank God that He had got me
+through. A lot of men who have never thought much about religion are
+thinking about it now. I believe they will read those little khaki
+Testaments, and I am sure they will get help from them."
+
+That "those little khaki Testaments" were going into the hands of the
+soldiers pleased General Pershing, who said, "Its teachings will fortify
+us for our great task." And Secretary of the Navy Daniels rejoiced that
+the books were going to the sailors, for he said, "The Bible is the one
+book from which men can find help and inspiration and encouragement for
+whatever conditions may arise."
+
+
+V
+
+THE BIBLE AND ONE MAN
+
+In June, 1862, John E. Clough was graduated from an Iowa college. He had
+been eager to make a name for himself. Many promising avenues of secular
+work had opened to him, and he had tried to take one or another of them.
+But always he knew that it was not right for him to plan for anything
+but the ministry. The impression was deepened when the president of the
+college took for the text of his baccalaureate sermon, "For none of us
+liveth to himself, and no man dieth to himself." So the young graduate
+left the college feeling that he was no longer free to go out and use
+his education for the career he had dreamed of.
+
+But he did decide to teach for a year. With Mrs. Clough, he made an
+engagement to teach a public school one year. But he did not dare stay
+for a second year, because the people were so good to the new teacher,
+and there was so much evidence of this popularity, that the Bible words
+kept ringing in his ears, "Woe unto you when all men shall speak well of
+you." He knew he was not in the right place. In later life, when
+opposition came to him because he was doing faithful Christian work, he
+was strengthened by the memory of this text that had once been anything
+but a comfort to him.
+
+At last came the beginning of the work in India that made the name of
+John E. Clough famous. His success was due, in large measure, to the
+fact that he emphasized God's Word. One of his first acts was to prepare
+a tract in Scripture language, telling the things necessary for
+salvation, and this proved useful throughout his services.
+
+Everywhere he went he quoted Scripture to the people. He felt that
+whatever else he might say to them, this would be most effective. One
+text was used more than any other, in private conversation and in
+sermons, the invitation of Jesus, "Come unto me, all ye that labor and
+are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." This, he said, was always
+new, and the people received his explanations gladly. Once, during a
+time of grievous famine, when about them millions of the natives died of
+want and disease, these words proved especially effective.
+
+As a measure of famine relief the missionary took the contract for a
+section of the great Buckingham Canal. Under his leadership the natives
+were set to work on this. Native evangelists as well as white
+missionaries toiled day after day, and this gave a splendid chance for
+preaching the gospel. "The name of Jesus was spoken all day long from
+one end of our line to the other," Mr. Clough wrote in his
+autobiography. "The preachers carried a New Testament in their pockets.
+It comforted the people to see the holy book of the Christians amid all
+their distress. They said, when they sat down for a short rest, 'Read us
+again out of your holy book about the weary and heavy laden.' That
+verse, 'Come unto me all ye that labor,' was often all I had to give the
+people by way of comfort. The preachers were saying it all day long. It
+carried us through the famine. We all needed it, for even the strongest
+among us sometimes felt our courage sinking."
+
+All through Dr. Clough's missionary career there was one verse in
+particular that carried him far. When he was out on tour among the
+people, often many miles distant from home, Mrs. Clough was accustomed
+to send after him a messenger who would take to him, for his
+encouragement, the message she felt he needed. Knowing his fondness for
+the text, "Be still, and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the
+heathen," she sent the words to him on more than one occasion. In the
+story of his life he told of a day when the text came to him with
+special force:
+
+"I was tempted to shake the dust off my feet and go. My helpers and I
+had camped in a new place, and had been trying hard to get the people to
+come and listen to the gospel, but they would not. I concluded that it
+was a hard place, and told my staff of workers that we were justified in
+leaving it alone and moving on elsewhere. Toward noon I went into my
+tent, closed down the sides, let the little tent flap swing over my
+head, and rested, preparatory to starting off for the next place. Just
+then a basket of supplies was brought to my feet by a coolie, who had
+walked seventy miles with the basket on his head. In the accompanying
+letter Mrs. Clough quoted my favorite verse to me. While reading this,
+some of the preachers put their heads into the tent and said, 'Sir,
+there is a big crowd out here; the grove is full; all are waiting for
+you. Please come out.'"
+
+Once the two verses that were the keynote of the missionary's life were
+especially prominent. For a long time he had been discouraged because
+results seemed slow and difficulties were great. But the day came when
+he stood before thousands and preached to them the Word, strong in the
+assurance of the presence of Him who said, "Be still, and know that I am
+God: I will be exalted among the heathen." The text that day, as so
+often before, was "Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden."
+For an hour the people listened to his words. Then they began to plead
+for baptism, and would not be denied. At length, after rigid
+examination, baptism was administered to 3,536 within three days. And he
+had not baptized one soul in fifteen months before this time!
+
+God's Word gave courage to Clough; it enabled him to give courage to
+others; and it will give courage to you.
+
+
+VI
+
+OUT OF THE DEPTHS
+
+During the year 1538 an Italian spent long weeks in a noisome
+underground prison cell, where he was kept on account of religious
+differences. For a precious hour and a half of each day, when the light
+struggled in through a tiny window, he read the Bible, especially the
+Psalms. Among the Psalms that meant most to him was the one hundred and
+thirtieth, whose beginning "Out of the depths have I cried unto thee, O
+Lord," expressed the longings of his heart for companionship and
+comfort.
+
+Exactly two hundred years later, on May 24, 1738, John Wesley, then in
+the midst of the greatest anxiety and longing for God, heard the choir
+at St. Paul's Cathedral sing, "Out of the depths have I cried unto thee,
+O Lord." The words brought joy to him. From the depths in which he found
+himself that afternoon he cried unto God, and that evening there came to
+him the knowledge of God's presence that gave him strength to begin the
+wonderful work that built up the great Methodist Church.
+
+These same words meant much to Josiah Royce, the American teacher of
+philosophy, who died in 1916. In one of his later books, he wrote:
+
+"We come to such deep places that we can only cry. We are astonished
+that we can cry. And then we become aware that our cry is heard. And he
+who hears is God. And so God is often defined for the plain man as 'He
+who hears man's cry from the depths.'"
+
+One who knew Professor Royce well wondered if he did not enter the
+depths from which he cried to God and received such satisfying response,
+after the death of his only son. In the same way those who delight in
+the message of Psalm 130 wonder what could have been the experience of
+depression that opened the way for his reception of God's blessing.
+
+We can only speculate about these things. But there is one thing of
+which we can be absolutely sure: there is no depth so low that the cry
+of one of God's children will not reach from it to the heart of the
+Father; no sorrow so crushing, no anxiety so overwhelming, no pain so
+intense, no difficulty seemingly so unsolvable, no sin so awful, that
+eager, earnest prayer will not bring God to the relief of the sufferer.
+
+"If out of the depths we cry, we shall cry ourselves out of the depths,"
+one has said who has written of the words that Professor Royce found so
+helpful. Then he asks: "What can a man do who finds himself at the foot
+of a beetling cliff, the sea in front, the wall of rock at his back,
+without foothold for a mouse, between the tide at the bottom and the
+grass at the top? He can do but one thing, he can shout, and, perhaps,
+may be heard, and a rope may come dangling down that he can spring at
+and catch. For sinful men in the miry pit the rope is already let down,
+and their grasping it is the same as the psalmist's cry. God has let
+down His forgiving love in Christ, and we need but the faith which
+accepts it while it asks, and then we are swung up into the light, and
+our feet set on a rock."
+
+Each one has depths peculiarly his own, and longs to be out of them.
+Then why not call to Him who hears men's cry from the depths, with the
+quiet confidence of quaint old Herbert, who wrote:
+
+ Of what an easie quick accesse,
+ My blessed Lord, art Thou! how suddenly
+ May our requests thine ears invade!
+ If I but lift mine eyes my suit is made;
+ Thou canst no more not heare than Thou canst die.
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors were corrected.
+
+Page 44, "conjuctions" changed to "conjunctions" (prepositions, and
+conjunctions)
+
+Page 56, "year'sexpenses" changed to "year's expenses" (next year's
+expenses)
+
+Page 62, "throughness" changed to "thoroughness" (thoroughness by
+performing)
+
+Page 96, "then" changed to "than" (further than usual)
+
+Page 98, "begining" changed to "beginning" (thought of beginning)
+
+Page 138 "mments" changed to "comments" (comments is that the)
+
+Page 153, "be-because" changed to "because" (need of it because)
+
+Page 164, "Yes" changed to "Yet" (Yet, there was something)
+
+Page 214, "woud" changed to "would" (would be most effective)
+
+
+
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+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #32438 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/32438)