Thursday, 15 October 2015

You May Count That Day


A class of little settlement girls besought Mrs. George Herbert Palmer, one insufferable summer morning, to tell them how to be happy. "I'll give you three rules," she said, "and you must keep them every day for a week. First, commit something good to memory each day. Three or four words will do, just a pretty bit of poem, or a Bible verse. Do you understand?" A girl jumped up. "I know; you want us to learn something we'd be glad to remember if we went blind." Mrs. Palmer was relieved; these children understood. She gave the three rules--memorize something good each day, see something beautiful each day, do something helpful each day. When the children reported at the end of the week, not a single day had any of them lost. But hard put to it to obey her? Indeed they had been. One girl, kept for twenty-four hours within squalid home-walls by a rain, had nevertheless seen two beautiful things—a sparrow taking a bath in the gutter, and a gleam of sunlight on a baby's hair.


  If you sit down at set of sun
     And count the acts that you have done,
     And, counting, find
  One self-denying deed, one word
  That eased the heart of him who heard-
     One glance most kind,
  That fell like sunshine where it went-
  Then you may count that day well spent.

  But if, through all the livelong day,
  You've cheered no heart, by yea or nay-
     If, through it all
  You've nothing done that you can trace
  That brought the sunshine to one face-
     No act most small
  That helped some soul and nothing cost-
  Then count that day as worse than lost.
  

By George Eliot

Tuesday, 13 October 2015

Meetin' Trouble


Some students of biology planned a trick on their professor. They took the head of one beetle, the body of another of a totally different species, the wings of a third, the legs of a fourth. These members they carefully pasted together. Then they asked the professor what kind of bug the creature was. He answered promptly, "A humbug." Just such a monstrosity is trouble--especially future trouble. Some things about it are real, but the whole combined menace is only an illusion, not a thing which actually exists at all. Face the trouble itself; give no heed to that idea of it which invests it with a hundred dire calamities.

  Trouble in the distance seems all-fired big--
    Sorter makes you shiver when you look at it a-comin';
  Makes you wanter edge aside, er hide, er take a swig
    Of somethin' that is sure to set your worried head a-hummin'.
  Trouble in the distance is a mighty skeery feller--
  But wait until it reaches you afore you start to beller!

  Trouble standin' in th' road and frownin' at you, black,
    Makes you feel like takin' to the weeds along the way;
  Wish to goodness you could turn and hump yerself straight back;
    Know 'twill be awful when he gets you close at bay!
  Trouble standin' in the road is bound to make you shy--
  But wait until it reaches you afore you start to cry!

  Trouble face to face with you ain't pleasant, but you'll find
    That it ain't one-ha'f as big as fust it seemed to be;
  Stand up straight and bluff it out! Say, "I gotter a mind
    To shake my fist and skeer you off--you don't belong ter me!"
  Trouble face to face with you? Though you mayn't feel gay,
  Laugh at it as if you wuz--and it'll sneak away!

 by Everard Jack Appleton 
  From "The Quiet Courage."

Tuesday, 6 October 2015

Life


"What is life?" we ask. "Just one darned thing after another," the cynic replies. Yes, a multiplicity of forces and interests, and each of them,even the disagreeable, may be of real help to us. It's good for a dog, says a shrewd philosopher, to be pestered with fleas; it keeps him from thinking too much about being a dog.

What's life? A story or a song;
    A race on any track;
  A gay adventure, short or long,
    A puzzling nut to crack;
  A grinding task; a pleasant stroll;
    A climb; a slide down hill;
  A constant striving for a goal;
    A cake; a bitter pill;
  A pit where fortune flouts or stings;
    A playground full of fun;
  With many any of these things;
    With others all in one.
  What's life? To love the things we see;
    The hills that touch the skies;
  The smiling sea; the laughing lea;
    The light in woman's eyes;
  To work and love the work we do;
    To play a game that's square;
  To grin a bit when feeling blue;
    With friends our joys to share;
  To smile, though games be lost or won;
    To earn our daily bread;
  And when at last the day is done
    To tumble into bed.
  
by Griffith Alexander


From "The Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger."

Monday, 5 October 2015

The Stone Rejected

          The story here poetically retold of the great Florentine sculptor shows how much a lofty spirit may make of unpromising material.

  For years it had been trampled in the street
  Of Florence by the drift of heedless feet--
  The stone that star-touched Michael Angelo
  Turned to that marble loveliness we know.

  You mind the tale--how he was passing by
  When the rude marble caught his Jovian eye,
  That stone men had dishonored and had thrust
  Out to the insult of the wayside dust.
  He stooped to lift it from its mean estate,
  And bore it on his shoulder to the gate,
  Where all day long a hundred hammers rang.
  And soon his chisel round the marble sang,
  And suddenly the hidden angel shone:
  It had been waiting prisoned in the stone.

  Thus came the cherub with the laughing face
  That long has lighted up an altar-place.

By Edwin Markham.

From "The Gates of Paradise, and Other Poems."

Saturday, 3 October 2015

Keep sweet.



Even the direst catastrophes may be softened by our attitude to them.
Charles II said to those who had gathered about his deathbed: "You'll
pardon any little lapses, gentlemen. I've never done this thing before."

  Don't be foolish and get sour when things don't just come your way--
  Don't you be a pampered baby and declare, "Now I won't play!"
      Just go grinning on and bear it;
      Have you heartache? Millions share it,
      If you earn a crown, you'll wear it--
                  Keep sweet.

  Don't go handing out your troubles to your busy fellow-men
  If you whine around they'll try to keep from meeting you again;
      Don't declare the world's "agin" you,
      Don't let pessimism win you,
      Prove there's lots of good stuff in you--
                  Keep sweet.

  If your dearest hopes seem blighted and despair looms into view,
  Set your jaw and whisper grimly, "Though they're false, yet I'll be true."
      Never let your heart grow bitter;
      With your lips to Hope's transmitter,
      Hear Love's songbirds bravely twitter,
                  "Keep sweet."

  Bless your heart, this world's a good one, and will always help a man;
  Hate, misanthropy, and malice have no place in Nature's plan.
      Help your brother there who's sighing.
      Keep his flag of courage flying;
      Help him try- 'twill keep you trying
                  Keep sweet.
  

by Strickland W. Gillilan.

Friday, 2 October 2015

Appreciation


  Life's a bully good game with its kicks and cuffs--
    Some smile, some laugh, some bluff;
  Some carry a load too heavy to bear
    While some push on with never a care,
  But the load will seldom heavy be
    When I appreciate you and you appreciate me.

  He who lives by the side of the road
    And helps to bear his brother's load
  May seem to travel lone and long
    While the world goes by with a merry song,
  But the heart grows warm and sorrows flee
    When I appreciate you and you appreciate me.

  When I appreciate you and you appreciate me,
    The road seems short to victory;
  It buoys one up and calls "Come on,"
    And days grow brighter with the dawn;
  There is no doubt or mystery
    When I appreciate you and you appreciate me.

  It's the greatest thought in heaven or earth--
    It helps us know our fellow's worth;
  There'd be no wars or bitterness,
    No fear, no hate, no grasping; yes,
  It makes work play, and the careworn free
    When I appreciate you and you appreciate me.

 By William Judson Kibby,

Thursday, 1 October 2015

Morality


We can't always, even when accomplishing, have the ardor of accomplishment; we can only hold to the purpose formed in more inspired hours. After a work is finished, even though it be a good work which our final judgment will approve, we are likely to be oppressed for a time by the anxieties we have passed through; the comfort of effort has left us, and we recall our dreams, our intentions, beside which our actual achievement seems small. In such moments we should remember that just after the delivery of the Gettysburg Address Lincoln believed it an utter failure. Yet the address was a masterpiece of commemorative oratory.
  
  We cannot kindle when we will
    The fire which in the heart resides;
  The spirit bloweth and is still,
  In mystery our soul abides.
    But tasks in hours of insight will'd
    Can be through hours of gloom fulfill'd

  With aching hands and bleeding feet
  We dig and heap, lay stone on stone;
  We bear the burden and the heat
  Of the long day and wish 'twere done.
    Not till the hours of light return,
    All we have built do we discern.
  
                       by Matthew Arnold