THE THINGS THAT HAVEN'T BEEN DONE BEFORE a It is said that if you hold a stick in front of the foremost sheep in a flock that files down a trail in the mountains, he will jump it-and that every sheep thereafter will jump when he reaches the spot, even if the stick be removed. So are many people mere unthinking imitators, blind to facts and opportunities about them. Kentucky could not be lived in by the white race till Daniel Boone built his cabin there. The air was not part of the domain of humanity till the Wright brothers made themselves birdmen. THEhose are the things to try; THE things that haven't been done before, Columbus dreamed of an unknown shore At the rim of the far-flung sky, As he ventured in dangers new, Or the fears of the doubting crew. With guideposts on the way, With a chart for every day. On the road he has traveled o'er, Are the things that were known before. Where never a man has been, To see what no man has seen. Though battered and bruised and sore, Do nothing not done before. Are the tasks worth while to-day; Are you one of the flock that follows, or Are you one that shall lead the way? At the jeers of a doubting crew, Edgar A. Guest. THE HAS-BEENS I READ the papers every day, and oft encounter tales which show there's hope for every jay who in life's battle fails. I've just been reading of a gent who joined the has-been ranks, at fifty years without a cent, or credit at the banks. But undismayed he buckled down, refusing to be beat, and captured fortune and renown; he's now on Easy Street. Men say that fellows down and out ne'er leave the rocky track, but facts will show, beyond a doubt, that has-beens do come back. I know, for I who write this rhyme, when forty-odd years old, was down and out, without a dime, my whiskers full of mold. By black disaster I was trounced until it jarred my spine; I was a failure so pronounced I didn't need a sign. And after I had soaked my coat, I said (at forty-three), “I'll see if I can catch the goat that has escaped from me." I labored hard; I strained my dome, . to do my daily grind, until in triumph I came home, my billy-goat behind. And any man who still has health may with the winners stack, and have a chance at fame and wealth-for has-beens do come back. Walt Mason. From "Walt Mason, His Book," WISHING Horace Greeley said that no one need fear the editor who indulged in diatribes against the prevalence of polygamy in Utah, but that malefactors had better look out when an editor took up his pen against abuses in his own city. We all tend to begin our reforms too far away from home. The man who wishes improvement strongly enough to set to work on himself is the man who will obtain results. Do you wish the world were better? Let me tell you what to do. Keep them always straight and true. Let your thoughts be clean and high. Of the sphere you occupy. Do you wish the world were wiser ? Well, suppose you make a start, In the scrapbook of your heart; Live to learn, and learn to live. You must get it, ere you give. Then remember day by day As you pass along the way, May be ofttimes traced to one, Ella Wheeler Wilcox. AWARENESS a A man must keep a keen sense of the drift and significance of what he is engaged in if he is to make much headway. Yet many human beings are so sunk in the routine of their work that they fail to realize what it is all for. A man who was tapping with a hammer the wheels of a railroad train remarked that he had been at the job for twenty-seven years. “What do you do when a wheel doesn't sound right?” a passenger inquired. The man was taken aback. "I never found one that sounded that way,” said he. OD—let me be aware. Let me not stumble blindly down the ways, God-let me be aware. Miriam Teichner. Permission of ONE OF THESE DAYS The worst fault in a hound is to run counter-to follow the trail a backward, not forward. Is the fault less when men are guilty of it? Behind us is much that we have found to be faithless, cruel, or unpleasant. Why go back to that? Why not go forward to the things we really desire? SAY! Life is so large and the world is so wide. Say! Let's forget it! Let's wipe off the slate, Say! Let's not mind it! Let's smile it away, Say! Let's not take it so sorely to heart! |