pace??I stand amid eternal ways,
And what is mine shall know my face
Asleep, awake, by night or day,
The friends I seek are seeking me;?No wind can drive my bark astray,
Nor change the tide of destiny--
The waters know their own, and draw
The brooks that spring in yonder height;?So flows the good with equal law
Unto the soul of pure delight.
The stars come nightly to the sky;
The tidal wave unto the sea;?Nor time, nor space, nor deep, nor high,
Can keep my own away from me.
_John Burroughs_
The thing that pays, and that makes for a well balanced, useful, and happy life, is not necessarily and is not generally a somber, pious morality, or any standard of life that keeps us from a free, happy, spontaneous use and enjoyment of all normal and healthy faculties, functions, and powers, the enjoyment of all innocent pleasures--use, but not abuse, enjoyment, but enjoyment through self-mastery and not through license or perverted use, for it can never come that way. Look where we will, in or out and around us, we will find that it is the middle ground--neither poverty nor excessive riches, good wholesome use without license, a turning into the bye-ways along the main road where innocent and healthy God-sent and God-intended pleasures and enjoyments are to be found; but never getting far enough away to lose sight of the road itself. The middle ground it is that the wise man or woman plants foot upon.
For evil poisons; malice shafts?Like boomerangs return,?Inflicting wounds that will not heal?While rage and anger burn.
Tell me how much one loves and I will tell you how much he has seen of God. Tell me how much he loves and I will tell you how much he lives with God. Tell me how much he loves and I will tell you how far into the Kingdom of Heaven,--the kingdom of harmony, he has entered, for "love is the fulfilling of the law."
And in a sense love is everything. It is the key to life, and its influences are those that move the world. Live only in the thought of love for all and you will draw love to you from all. Live in the thought of malice or hatred, and malice and hatred will come back to you.
And so love inspires love; hatred breeds hatred. Love and good will stimulate and build up the body; hatred and malice corrode and tear it down. Love is a savor of life unto life; hatred is a savor of death unto death.
"There are loyal hearts, there are spirits brave,?There are souls that are pure and true;?Then give to the world the best you have,?And the best will come back to you.
"Give love, and love to _your_ heart will flow,?A strength in your utmost need;?Have faith, and a score of hearts will show?Their faith in _your_ word and deed."
The kind of a man for you and me!?He faces the world unflinchingly,?And smiles as long as the world exists,?With a knuckled faith and force like fists:?He lives the life he is preaching of,?And loves where most is the need of love;?And feeling still, with a grief half glad,?That the bad are as good as the good are bad,?He strikes straight out for the right--and he?Is the kind of a man for you and me!
_James Whitcomb Riley_
After a certain age is reached in any life, the prevailing tone and condition of that life is the resultant of the mental habits of that life. If one have mental equipment sufficient to find and to make use of the Science of Thought in its application to scientific mind and body building, habit and character building, there is little by way of heredity, environment, attainment of which he or she will not be the master.
One thing is very certain--the mental points of view, the mental tendencies and habits at twenty-eight and thirty-eight will have externalized themselves and will have stamped the prevailing conditions of any life at forty-eight and fifty-eight and sixty-eight.
Who puts back into place a fallen bar.?Or flings a rock out of a traveled road,?His feet are moving toward the central star,?His name is whispered in the Gods' abode.
_Edwin Markham_
We need changes from the duties and the cares of our accustomed everyday life. They are necessary for healthy, normal living. We need occasionally to be away from our friends, our relatives, from the members of our immediate households. Such changes are good for us; they are good for them. We appreciate them better, they us, when we are away from them for a period, or they from us.
We need these changes to get the kinks out of our minds, our nerves, our muscles--the cobwebs off our faces. We need them to whet again the edge of appetite. We need them to invite the mind and the soul to new possibilities
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