Part 8 (1/2)
He called on an advertiser who wanted him to travel at a figure so low that the question arose as to how he would pay his board, when the advertiser told him he supposed his applicant understood that he ”would have to beat the hotels!” In September came the news of the death of his sister and mother. And still he tramped. He was now in what his casual acquaintances considered ”a hard hole.” His landlady was ”carrying”
him--that is, she was wanting his room worse than his company, but, being a kind-hearted Irish woman, she could not believe another week would pa.s.s without better success. No one with a trade--no one with the slightest influence--knows what difficulties are before a stranger in a strange land.
AS G.o.d WOULD HAVE IT,
on Sat.u.r.day the seventh of October, 1871, he started out, again full of hope. About a mile and a half to the west of the city he entered a hotel at which he had often applied before. The proprietor had broken his leg the day before. He wanted ”a likely young man,” Here was one. The proprietor was himself an Englishman. Here was a youth whose rosy cheeks proclaimed the sh.o.r.es of Albion. On Sunday he made ready. That night and the following two days there came a calamity that horrified the civilized world--perhaps the barbarians as well. The employers who had refused him shelter and food ran like droves of wolves before a prairie-fire, and filled their famished bodies off a charity that has been likened to that of the Savior of the world, so freely was it given.
His hotel was not burned. In the arduous labors of housing three where one had before been quartered he showed an ability which attracted the attention of a dealer in real estate who soon took him into his office.
Here he learned a trade. His employer soon found that he had a man who could make a map worth fifty dollars as well as the map-makers, and this gave the young man practice. Hope, kindled into such a flame, led the young man in a march of improvement that even continued in his dreams, for he often dreamed out some combination of colors, some freak of lettering, that elicited everybody's admiration. All this improvement
DID NOT COME IN A WEEK OR A YEAR,
but it led to his permanent engagement in a substantial enterprise of the kind, where work, elegant and original, will always await him, and where his usefulness is ever apparent to the most unwilling investigator. From being the victim of the most cruel circ.u.mstances which a man in health ever encountered under my observation, he has become the valued companion of the leaders of thought, of art, and of music, and I feel confident that the whole of his ultimate success at one time in his career depended on the fact that he had more hope than any other man I ever saw.
HOPE IS LIKE THE CORK TO THE NET,
which keeps the soul from sinking in despair. Hope is the sun, which as we journey towards it, casts the shadow of our burden behind us. Dr.
Johnson has well and truly said that the flights of the human mind are not from enjoyment to enjoyment, but from hope to hope. It is a strange frailty of human nature that we part more willingly with what we really possess than with our expectations of what we wish for. The man who curbs this tendency is known as a man of wisdom. What a beautiful poem is
CAMPBELL'S ”PLEASURES OF HOPE!”
How the changes ring upon the beauties of ”Hope, the charmer,” until, at last, we see her smiling at the general conflagration, we see her lighting her torch at nature's funeral pile! And yet what an ingenious device was that of the ancient, who, knowing the powerful allurements of Hope, put on the front of the magic s.h.i.+eld ”Be bold! Be bold!” and on the other side ”Be not too bold!” There is a development of hope known as audacity. A touch of audacity is generally considered necessary to get along in the world. Be careful that your audacity is never called ”cheek.” When you have rights to retrieve, you cannot be too audacious; when you expect something for nothing, and demand instead of appealing, you are ”cheeky.” It does not pay in the long run. It is the sign and seal of a greedy nature.
WHEN POOR FRANCE
trembled in the nightmare of the Revolution, and the Kings of Europe had agreed to conquer and dismember her, there arose a dark-faced man in the tribune of the French Congress. He was a man of terrible personal power and magnetism. Hope must have cradled him in his babyhood. He hurled a defiance at Europe that fairly shook France to a delirium of patriotism, and as he was drawing to a close he thundered; ”What needs France to vanquish her enemies, to terrify them? Naught but audacity!--still more audacity!--always! audacity!” Fourteen republican armies sprang forth full armed, as though Danton's words had been the fabulous dragon's teeth sown ages before in the bright fields of mythology.
FRANCE WAS RIGHT,
therefore G.o.d inspired her. Be sure, when your flights are bold, that you have the right. ”Thrice armed is he who hath his quarrel just.” Hope has been defamed more than any other of the joys of life, just as the most charitable become the target of the greater portion of the malignity of fault-finding fellow-creatures. Treat Hope fairly, my young friend, and she will never desert you, neither will she poison your expectations, as did the hags who prophesied to Macbeth.
BE CORRECT.
Who sees with equal eye, as G.o.d of all, A hero perish or a sparrow fall, Atoms or systems into ruin hurled, And now a bubble burst, and now a world.--Pope.
I have here quoted one of the grandest flights of the human fancy, and with a purpose. If G.o.d, who is perfection, and in whose image we are faintly formed, watches the weakliest of his lambs, supports the weariest of his poor sparrows, should not we, in trying to be true men, endeavor to pay equal care to all things intrusted to our attention, be they great or be they small! And more than that. The little errors beget myriads of their kind. ”Many mickles make a muckle.”
The habit sooner or later, leads some of us into an awful abyss, where it had been better we had not lived. Errors creep into character just as ideas get into our brain. Says Moore:
And how like forts, to which beleaguers win Unhoped-for entrance through some friend within, One clear idea, wakened in the breast By memory's magic, lets in all the rest.
Says Franklin: ”A little neglect may breed great mischief; for want of a nail the shoe was lost; for want of a shoe the horse was lost; for want of a horse the driver was lost; being overtaken and slain by an enemy, all for the want of care about a horse-shoe nail.” ”In persons grafted with a serious trust,” says Shakspeare ”negligence is a serious crime.”