Class Book .7 (kpightF. WC'4 COPXRIOHT DEPOSIT BOOKS COMPILED BY LADIES OF THE FABIOLA HOSPITAL AS- SOCIATION. BORROWINGS. A collection of favorite quota- tions. Cloth, illustrated, $1.25; plain edition, 75c; ooze leather, $1.50. MORE BORROWINGS. A sequel to "Borrow- ings." Cloth, 75c; illustrated edition, $1.25; ooze leather, $1.50. THOUGHTS. A book of beautiful quotations. Cloth, illustrated, $1.23; ooze leather, $2.00. FOR THY GOOD CHEER. A new book of ideal thoughts. Cloth, illustrated, $1.25; ooze leather $2.00. DODGE PUBLISHING COMPANY 23 E. 20th Street New York There are only two things that justify one in pre- senting a new book : one is that he has something new to tell, the other is that he can tell the old things with a new effectiveness because of better arrangement, or newer point of view. — Francis Bellamy. HENRY VAN DYKE w HO looks to heaven alone to save his soul, May keep the path but will not reach the yoal, But he who walks in lore may wander far, And God will briny him where the blessed are. jfor T£\>$ (3ooti Cfyttx A COLLECTION OF HELPFUL AND BEAUTIFUL THOUGHTS Selected and Compiled by the Ladies of the Fabiola Hospital Association Oakland, California mew jgovk C^e ©oDQe ^ubltstymg Company /nbafeers of beautiful ffioofcs 23 East 20tb Street LIBRARY of CONGRESS Two Cooles Received AUG 9 1904 Copyrfeht Entry QAA * e k-3~Ho + CLASS 0- XXo. No. I COPY B J ft* ft tf The compilers beg to tender grateful appre- ciation to Edwin Markhamand McClure, Phillips & Company, for the use of selections from "Lin- coln and Other Poems," and to Charles Wagner for selections from "The Simple Life;" to Dodd, Mead & Co., for selections from Hamilton Wright Mabie's "Before My Library Fire," "In the Forest of Arden"and other publications; to Lyman Ab- bott, David Starr Jordan, Horace W. Dresser, Henry van Dyke, William R. Hearst, the San Francisco Examiner, and many others, for the use of poems and selections of which they own the copyright. Copyright, 1903 by Jessie K. Freeman, Evelyn Stevens Wilson and Sarah S. B. Yule [New Edition, June, 1904] Copyright'. 1904 by Jessie K. Freeman, Evelyn Stevens Wilson and Sarah S. B. Yule > o d A happy-tempered bringer of the best. — Browning. (7) For Thy Good Cheer Friends give flowers To mark the hours Of changing seasons as they roll — Thoughts we give, By them we live, And thoughts are blossoms of the soul. —M. A. E. Benton. For Thy Good Cheer n Others shall Take patience, courage, to their heart and hand From thy hand and thy heart and thy brave cheer, And God's grace fructify through thee to all. — Elizabeth Barrett Browning. For Thy Good Cheer 13 "Good morrow is glad Christmas Day, To you my happy greeting ; All Yuletide blessings with you stay, E'en though the year be fleeting. May you know health and happy days, Throughout the year that's dawning, And walk in pleasant ways, Until next Christmas morning." "A bright New Year and a sunny track Along an upward way, And a song of praise on looking back, When the year has passed away, And golden sheaves, nor small, nor few ! This is my New Year's wish for you !" "Easter is becoming a universal festival, because more and more it expresses a universal hope." 14 For Thy Good Cheer "The character of our thinking determines the na- ture of our ideals." There is no day too poor to bring us an opportunity, and we are never so rich that we can afford to spurn what the day brings. Opportunities for character al- ways bloom along the pathway of our duty and make it fragrant even when it is thorny. — Samuel J. Barrows. It is almost always when things are all blocked up and impossible that a happening comes. If you are sure you are looking and ready, that is all you need. God is turning the world round all the time. —•A. D. T. Whitney. I am glad to think I am not bound to make the world go right, But only to discover and to do, With cheerful heart, the work that God appoints. — Jean Ingelow. No greater fortune can befall a child than to be born into a home where the best books are read, the best music interpreted, and the best talk enjoyed, for in these privileges the richest educational privileges are supplied. —Hamilton Wright Mabie. For Thy Good Cheer 15 Turn not in vain regret To thy fond yesterdays, But rather forward set Thy face toward the untrodden ways. Open thine eyes to see The good in store for thee, — New love, new thought, new service too For Him who daily maketh thy life new. Nor think thou aught is lost Or left behind upon the silent coast Of thy spent years : Give o'er thy faithless fears. Whate'er of real good, — Of thought, or deed, or holier mood, — Thy life hath known, Abideth still thine own, And hath within significance Of more than Time's inheritance. Thy good is prophecy Of better still to be. — Frederick L. Hosmer, 16 For Thy Good Cheer The best is yet to be The last of life, for which the first was made. — Browning. This is eternity noiv; you are sunk as deep in it, wrapped as close in it as you ever will be. The future is an illusion ; it never arrives ; it flies before you as you advance. Always it is to-day — and after death and a thousand years it is to-day. You have great deeds to perform and you must do them now. — Charles Ferguson. "There is not the slightest question to-day in the minds of the really intelligent that thought is a vital force — as powerful as electricity, though slower in its results." Whom the heart of man shuts out, Sometimes the heart of God takes in, And fences them all round about, With silence 'mid the world's loud din. — James Russell Lowell. Our love of the real draws us to permanence, but health of body consists in circulation, and sanity of mind in variety or facility of association. We need change of objects. Dedication to one thought is quickly odious. — Emerson. GOETHE H E who has learnt on solid grounds to put some value on himself, seems to have renounced the right of under- valuing others. For Thy Good Cheer 17 When God commands to take the trumpet And blow a dolorous or thrilling blast, It rests not in man's will what he shall do Or what he shall forbear. — John Milton. God, who registers the cup Of mere cold water for His sake To a disciple rendered up, Disdains not His own thirst to slake At the poorest love that ever was offered. And because my heart I proffered With true love trembling at the brim, He suffers me to follow Him. — Browning. Where'er a noble deed is wrought, Whene'er is spoken a noble thought, Our hearts in glad surprise To higher levels rise. The tidal wave of deeper souls Into our inmost being rolls, And lifts us unawares Out of all meaner cares. — Longfellow. 1 8 For Thy Good Cheer Genius seems to be allied to immortal youth. Goethe at eighty-four had the same deep interest in life that he felt at thirty or forty; and Gladstone at eighty-six is one of the most eager and aspiring men of his time. — Hamilton Wright Mabie. "A certain amount of opposition is a great help to a man ; kites rise against and not with the wind." Blessed is he who has found his work; let him ask no other blessedness. He has a work, a life purpose ; he has found it, and will follow it ! — Carlyle. "We cannot help liking positiveness ; the man who wilfully dangles in the air, hooked like a Hindu fakir, resting neither in heaven nor on the earth, is not a sight to inspire enthusiasm in others or to do any good." "How soon the millennium would come if the good things people intend to do to-morrow were only done to-day." Though we should be grateful for good houses, there is no house like God's out-of-doors. — Robert Louis Stevenson. Don't make too much of the faults and failings of those around you — even be good to yourself, and don't harry your soul over your own blunders and mistakes. — "Ada C. Sweet. For Thy Good Cheer 19 THE CHILD IN THE GARDEN. When to the garden of untroubled thought I came of late, and saw the open door, And wished again to enter, and explore The sweet, wild ways with stainless bloom inwrought. And bowers of innocence with beauty fraught, It seemed some purer voice must speak before I dared to tread the garden, loved of yore, That Eden list unknown, and found unsought, Then just within the gate I saw a child, A strange child, yet to my heart most dear, — He held his hands to me, and softly smiled With eyes that knew no shade of sin, or fear ; "Come in," he said, "and play awhile with me, I am the little child you used to be." — Henry van Dyke. 20 For Thy Good Cheer Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature's peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees. The winds will blow their own freshness into you, and the storms their energy, while cares will drop off like autumn leaves. — John Muir. For Thy Good Cheer 21 SHASTA. Majestic Mount, communing with the skies, Yet ever mindful of the humbler earth Whose travail in far ages gave thee birth, How royal art thou in thy ministries ! To thee the town-tired pilgrims lift glad eyes ; Thou storest tribute of the icy North, And from thy thousand caverns pourest forth Refreshment o'er the land that round thee lies. Thou signalest the mornings, as they rise, Unto the waiting vales and hills below ; And when the day in solemn splendor dies Thy snows still redden with its latest glow. The ancient stars come forth upon their way, While thou hold'st watch, steadfast and calm as they. — Frederick L. Hosmer. I saw the mountain stand Silent, wonderful, and grand, Looking out across the land When the golden light was falling On distant domes and spire; And I heard a low voice calling, "Come up higher, come up higher, From the lowland and the mire, From the mist of earth desire, From the vain pursuit of pelf. From the attitude of self ; Come up higher, come up higher." —James G. Clarke. 22 For Thy Good Cheer Refinement that carries us away from our fellow men is not God's refinement. — Henry Ward Beecher. True politeness is perfect ease and freedom. It sim- ply consists in treating others just as you love to be treated yourself. — Lord Chesterfield. "I believe in the sacredness of the human body ; this transient dwelling place of a living soul, and so I deem it the duty of every man and woman to keep his or her body beautiful through right thinking and right liv- ing." In landscape the painter should give the suggestion of a fairer creation than we know. The details, the prose of nature, he should omit and give us only the spirit and splendor. In a portrait he must inscribe the character and not the features. — Emerson. "It is not necessary for a man to be actively bad in order to make a failure of life ; simple inaction will ac- complish it. Nature has everywhere written her pro- test against idleness ; everything which ceases to strug- gle which remains inactive rapidly deteriorates. It is the struggle toward an ideal, the constant effort to get higher and further which develops manhood and char- acter." "I would rather be able to appreciate things I can not have, than to have things I am not able to appre- ciate." For Thy Good Cheer 23 "Forever the sun is pouring his gold On a hundred worlds that beg and borrow ; His warmth he squanders on summits cold, His wealth on the homes of want and sorrow. To withhold his largess of precious light Is to bury himself in eternal night ; To give Is to live." 24 For Thy Good Cheer Under the shadow of the twilight's wing, I heard a voice unto the heavens sing ; And suddenly from Heaven's window leaned The Stars to know the joy of listening. — Frank Dempster Sherman, One day at a time ! That's all it can be ; No faster than that is the hardest fate ; And days have their limits, however we Begin them too early and stretch them too late. One day at a time ! It's a wholesome rhyme — A good one to live by ; A day at a time. — Helen Hunt Jackson. The rewards of great living are not external things, withheld until the crowning hour of success arrives; they come by the way — in the consciousness of grow- ing power and worth, of duties nobly met and work thoroughly done. Joy and peace are by the way. — Hamilton Wright Mdbie. "I have to work like a slave," said a good woman, weary with her worries, but the answer came from a more way-wise comrade: "Oh, but, my dear, you can work like a queen." — Frances Willard. For Thy Good Cheer 25 WHERE DID IT GO? Where did yesterday's sunset go When it faded down the hills so slow — And the gold grew dim and the purple light Like an army with banners passed from sight? Will its flush go into the golden rod Its thrill to the purple aster's nod Its crimson fleck the maple-bough And the autumn-glory begin from now ? Deeper than flower fields sank the glow Of the silent pageant passing slow. It changed by the miracle none can see To the shifting lights of a symphony; And in resurrection of faith and hope And glory died on the shining slope. For it left its light on the hills and seas Where run a thousand memories. It flushed all night in many a dream It thrilled in the folding hush of prayer It glided into a poet's song It is setting still in a picture rare, — W. C. Gannett. 26 For Thy Good Cheer From the cradle to the grave, in his needs as in his pleasures, in his conceptions of the world, and of him- self, the man of modern times struggles through a maze of endless complication. Nothing is simple any longer; neither thought nor action: not pleasure, not even dying. With our own hands we have added to existence a train of hardships and lopped off many a gratification. I believe that thousands of our fellow- men suffering the consequences of a too artificial life, will be grateful if we try to give expression to their discontent, and to justify the regret for naturalness which vaguely oppresses them. — Charles Wagner. For Thy Good Cheer 27 You and I must not complain if our plans break down if we have done our part. That probably means that the plans of One who knows more than we do have succeeded. — Edward Everett Hale. For when the heart goes before like a lamp and illumines the pathway, many things are made clear that else lie hidden in darkness. — Longfellow. I saw a delicate flower had grown up two feet high between the horses' path and the wheel-track. One inch more to right or left had sealed its fate, or an inch higher, and yet it lived to flourish as much as if it had a thousand acres of untrodden space around it, and never knew the danger it incurred. It did not borrow trouble, nor invite an evil fate by apprehending it. — Thoreau. The years monotonous ? The same old seasons, and weathers, and aspects of nature ? Never anything new to admire or wonder at? The monotony is in our eye- sight, which goes on seeing nothing but the common and invariable things; simply because, from long familiarity, these are the easy things to see. But these are only the frame of the picture ; the picture is never twice alike. — Edward Rowland Sill. "A good word is as soon said as an ill one." Our deeds still travel with us from afar, And what we have been makes us what we are. — George Eliot. 28 For Thy Good Cheer A man who lives right and is right has more power in his silence than another has by his words. — Phillips Brooks. For to travel hopefully is a better thing than to ar- rive, and the true success is to labor. —Robert Louis Stevenson. Wait, and Love himself will bring The drooping flower of knowledge changed to fruit Of Wisdom. Wait : my faith is large in Time, And that which shapes it to some perfect end. — Tennyson. My friends, wait God's good time till He gives you the signal, and dismisses you from this service; then dismiss yourselves to go to Him. But for the present restrain yourselves, inhabiting the spot which He has at present assigned you. — Epictetus. "The greatest thing," says some one, "a man can do for his Heavenly Father is to be kind to some of His other children." I wonder how it is that we are not all kinder than we are. How much the world needs it! How easily it is done! How instantaneously it acts! How infallibly it is remembered! How superabun- dantly it pays itself back, — for there is no debtor in the world so honorable, so superbly honorable, as Love. —Henry Drummond. ' For Thy Good Cheer 29 — I I IIU gMaB Hii l 'l'- 1 " II I , 1 — — 1— — I— —j— I — — He is a wise man who does not grieve for the thing which he has not, but rejoices for those which he has. — Epictetus. We may be sure there is deliverance from every un- favorable condition of our lives when we have fitted ourselves to accept it. — Charles B. Newcomb. The deeper the feeling the less demonstrative will be the expression of it. — Balzac. "The habit of helplessness begins early. It grows and with many men becomes fixed before the voting age. The first symptom is the dodging of responsibil- ity, the effort to unload on to somebody else." The Indian says that when a man kills a foe the strength of the slain enemy passes into the victor's arm. In the weird fancy lies the truth. Each defeat leaves us weaker for the next battle, but each conquest makes us stronger. Nothing makes a prison to a human life, but a defeated broken spirit. The bird in its cage that sings all the while is not a captive. God puts his children in no position in which He does not mean them to live sweetly and victoriously. So in any circumstances we may be "more than conquerors through Him that loved us." — 7. R. Miller. 30 For Thy Good Cheer TRUST. "Searching for strawberries ready to eat; Finding them crimson and large and sweet ; What do you think I found at my feet, Deep in the green-hill side ? "Four brown sparrows, the cunning things, Feathered on back and breast and wings, Proud with the dignity plumage brings, Opening their four mouths wide. "Stooping lower to scan my prize, Watching the motions with curious eyes ; Dropping my berries in glad surprise, A plaintive sound I heard. "And looking up at the mournful call, I spied on a branch near the old stone-wall, Trembling and twittering, ready to fall, The poor little mother-bird. For Thy Good Cheer 31 "With grief and terror her heart was wrung, And while to the slender bough she clung, She felt that the lives of her birdlings hung On a still more slender thread. " 'Ah, birdie V I said, 'if you only knew My heart was tender and warm and true !' But the thought that I loved her birdlings, too, Never entered her small brown head. "And so through this world of ours we go, Bearing our burdens of needless woe, Many a heart beating heavy and slow Under its load of care. "But O, if we only, only knew, That God was tender, warm and true, And that he loved us through and through, Our hearts would be lighter than air." 32 For Thy Good Cheer The man who has begun to live more seriously within begins to live more simply without. — Phillips Brooks. It is always a mistake to plan a single detail of another's life; the more entirely one avoids this the safer is the relationship. — Edward Howard Griggs. Let us not concern ourselves about how other men will do their duties, but concern ourselves about how we shall do ours. — Lyman Abbott. However good you may be you have faults ; how- ever dull you may be you can find out what some of them are, and however slight they may be you had better make some — not too painful, but patient efforts to get rid of them. — Ruskin. Contentment comes neither by culture, nor by wish- ing ; it is a reconciliation with one's lot, growing out of an inward superiority to our surroundings. — /. K. McLean. Do we know ourselves or what good or evil circum- stances may bring from us? Thrice fortunate is he to whom circumstances are made easy, whom Fate visits with gentle trial, and Heaven keeps out of temptation. — Thackeray. CHARLES H. ELIOT ^ N OBODY has any right to find life uninteresting or unrewarding who sees within the sphere of his own activity a wrong he can help to rem- edy, or within himself an evil he can hope to overcome. For Thy Good Cheer 33 Now, therefore, see that no day passes in which you do not make yourself a somewhat better creature ; and in order to do that, find out first what you are now. Do not think vaguely about it; take pen and paper, and write down as accurate a description of yourself as you can, with the date to it. If you dare not do so, find out why you dare not. ... I do not doubt but that the mind is a less pleasant thing to look at than the face, and for that very reason it needs more looking at ; so always have two mirrors on your toilet- table, and see that with proper care you dress body and mind before them daily. After the dressing is once over for the day, think no more of it. I don't want you to carry about a mental pocket-comb; only to be smooth braided always in the morning. — Ruskin. 34 For Thy Good Cheer FOUR-LEAF CLOVERS. I know a place where the sun is like gold And the cherry blooms burst with snow ; And down underneath is the loveliest nook, Where the four-leaved clovers grow. One leaf is for hope, and one is for faith, And one is for love, you know, And God put another one in for luck, If you search you will find where they grow. But you must have hope, and you must have faith, You must have love and be strong, and so If you work, if you wait, you will find the place, Where the four-leaf clovers grow. — Ella Higginson. For Thy Good Cheer 35 I play not here marches for victors only — I play great marches for conquered and slain persons. Have you heard that it was good to gain the day? I also say it is good to fall — battles are lost in the same spirit in which they are won. I beat triumphal drums for the dead. . . . Vivas to those who have failed ! — Walt Whitman. "King Hassan, well beloved, was wont to say, When aught went wrong, or any labor failed, 'To-morrow, friends, will be another day V And in that faith he slept, and so prevailed." It is the test of fine character, as of fine singing, that the person displaying it, makes it seem, not a difficult thing well done, but the simplest thing in the world to do. — * Alice Wellington Rollins. Reading furnishes the mind only with materials of knowledge; it is thinking makes what we read ours. We are of the ruminating kind and it is not enough to cram ourselves with a great load of collections; unless we chew them over again they will not give us strength and nourishment. — Locke. Assuredly we spend too much labor and outlay in preparation for life. Instead of beginning at once to make ourselves happy in a moderate condition, we spread ourselves out wider and wider, only to make ourselves more and more uncomfortable. — Goethe. 36 For Thy Good Cheer LINCOLN, THE MAN OF THE PEOPLE. When the Norn-Mother saw the Whirlwind Hour Greatening and darkening as it hurried on, She left the Heaven of Heroes and came down To make a man to meet the mortal need. She took the tried clay of the common road — Clay warm yet with the genial heat of Earth, Dashed through it all a strain of prophecy ; Then mixed a laughter with the serious stuff. It was a stuff to hold against the world, A man to match our mountains, and compel The stars to look our way and honor us. The color of the ground was in him, the red earth*, The tang and odor of the primal things : The rectitude and patience of the rocks ; The gladness of the wind that shakes the corn ; The courage of the bird that dares the sea ; The justice of the rain that loves all leaves ; The pity of the snow that hides all scars ; The loving-kindness of the wayside well ; The tolerance and equity of light That gives as freely to the shrinking weed As to the great oak flaring to the wind — To the grave's low hill as to the Matterhorn That shoulders out the sky. For Thy Good Cheer 37 And so he came. From prairie cabin up to Capitol, One fair Ideal led our chieftain on. Forevermore he burned to do his deed With the fine stroke and gesture of a king. He built the rail-pile as he built the State, Pouring his splendid strength through every blow, The conscience of him testing every stroke, To make his deed the measure of a man. So came the Captain with the mighty heart ; And when the step of Earthquake shook the house, Wrenching the rafters from their ancient hold, He held the ridgepole up, and spiked again The rafters of the Home. He held his place — Held the long purpose like a growing tree — Held on through blame and faltered not at praise. And when he fell in whirlwind, he went down As when a kingly cedar green with boughs Goes down with a great shout upon the hills, And leaves a lonesome place against the sky. — Edwin Markham. 38 For Thy Good Cheer It is the great boon of such characters as Mr. Lin- coln's that they re-unite what God has joined together and man has put asunder. In him was vindicated the greatness of real goodness, and the goodness of real greatness. — Phillips Brooks. For Thy Good Cheer 39 The test of your Christian character should be that you are a joy-bearing agent to the world. — Henry Ward Beecher. "To widen your life without deepening it is only to weaken it." In the cultivation of soul, we are entirely our own master. Who is to say us nay, if we wish to grow and expand in tenderness, thoughtful consideration for others, love? — Thomas Van Ness. "Any one can carry his burden, however heavy, till nightfall. Any one can do his work, however hard, for one day. Any one can live sweetly, patiently, lovingly, purely, till the sun goes down. And this is all that life ever really means/' Why do we so often prefer to believe in the necessity of suffering and weakness rather than in the possibility of strength and gladness? — Charles B. Newcomb. "Dis is a purty 'bligin' oP worl'," said Uncle Eben, "an' if you let's it git giner'ly known dat's you's look- ing foh trouble, its mighty li'ble to 'commodate you." 40 For Thy Good Cheer I———— M— — — — — ■ —— i— — « II I II ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ It is joy to think the best we can of human kind. — Wordsworth. He who knows only how to enjoy, and not to endure, is ill fitted to go down the stream of life through such a world as this. — Henry van Dyke. Would you throw away a diamond because it pricked you ? One good friend is not to be weighed against the jewels of all the earth. If there is coolness or unkind- ness between us, let us come face to face and have it out. Quick, before love grows cold ! — Robert Smith. In the long run all goodly sorrow pays ; There is no better thing than righteous pain ; The sleepless nights, the awful thorn-crowned days, Bring sure reward to tortured soul and brain. Unmeaning joys enervate in the end, But sorrow yields a glorious dividend, In the long run. — Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Letting go the unworthy things that meet us, pre- tense, worry, self-seeking, and taking loyal hold of time, work, present happiness, love, let us so live as to be an inspiration, strength and blessing to those whose lives are touched by ours. —Anna Robertson Brown. HAMILTON WRIGHT MABIE A MAN can never be idle with safety and advantage until he has been so trained by work that he makes his freedom more fruitful than his toil. For Thy Good Cheer 41 "Teach your children to understand the law of at- traction. Let them know that if they form certain hab- its, and continue them until they become thoroughly fixed in their minds, they have through the power of thought become related to all people thinking and do- ing the things that have occupied their attention. "For instance, if it has been your habit to find fault with people, to criticise, through this habit of criticism all the fault-finding people of the world have become related to you. "If you are in the habit of thinking kindly and say- ing kind words, in a short time you will become men- tally related to all kindly natured people in the world, and you will have the force of their kind, loving thoughts pouring in upon you so that it will be easier for you to say a kind word than the reverse. "By indulging in healthy thoughts you attract to yourself everything necessary to your well being — hap- piness, health, strength and friends." 42 For Thy Good Cheer COMPENSATION. The universe pays every man in his own coin ; if you smile, it smiles upon you in return ; if you frown, you will be frowned at ; if you sing, you will be invited into gay company ; if you think, you will be entertained by thinkers ; and if you love the world and earnestly seek for the good that is therein, you will be surrounded by loving friends, and nature will pour into your lap the treasures of the earth. Censure, criticise and hate, and you will be censured, criticised and hated by your fel- low men. Every seed brings forth after its kind. Mis- trust begets mistrust, jealousy begets jealousy, hatred begets hatred, and confidence begets confidence, kind- ness begets kindness, love begets love. Resist and you will be resisted. To meet the aggressive assault every entity rises up rigid and impenetrable— while yonder mountain of granite melts and floats away on the bosom of the river of love. — N. W. Zimmerman. For Thy Good Cheer 43 "If we give all we have, and do all we can, and yet think unkindly, it profits us nothing. Our thoughts mould our life, because life and thought are one." Living will teach you how to live better than preacher or book. — Goethe. Make the most of yourself, for that is all there is of you. — Emerson. "Refinement is more a spirit than an accomplishment. All the books of etiquette that have ever been written cannot make a person refined. True refinement springs from a gentle, unselfish heart. Without a fine spirit a refined life is impossible." Think of yourself, therefore, nobly, and you will live nobly. You will realize on earth that type of char- acter and faith which is the highest ideal of philoso- pher and hero and saint. — Charles W. Wendte. The sane, strong, brave, heroic souls of all ages were the men who, in the natural order of things, have lived above all considerations of pay or glory. They have served not as slaves hoping for reward, but as gods who would take no reward. — David Starr Jordan. 44 For Thy Good Cheer To believe good of others floods the whole being with light. —R. E. Wilson. In every new department, one must in the first place begin again as a child ; throw a passionate interest over the subject; take pleasure in the shell till one has the happiness to arrive at the kernel. — Goethe, Here at the opening of the twentieth century amid the intensest moral questioning and spiritual hunger the world has ever known, there is an unbounded field for every well-directed effort for character upliftment. — Henry Wood. There is nothing noble in being superior to some other man. The true nobility is in being superior to your previous self. — Hindoo Sayings. "Take time to speak a loving word Where loving words are seldom heard ; And it will linger in the mind, And gather others of its kind, Till loving words will echo where Erstwhile the heart was poor and bare; And somewhere on thy heavenward track Their music will come echoing back, And flood thy soul with melody, Such is Love's immortality. " For Thy Good Cheer 45 WAITING. Serene, I fold my hands and wait, Nor care for wind nor tide nor sea ; I rave no more 'gainst time or fate, For lo! my own shall come to me. 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. What matter if I stand alone? I wait with joy the coming years ; My heart shall reap where it has sown, And garner up the fruit of tears. The waters know their own, and draw The brook that springs in yonder heights ; So flows the good with equal law Unto the soul of pure delights. 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. 46 For Thy Good Cheer What men usually say of misfortunes, that they never come alone, may with equal truth be said of good fortune ; nay, of the circumstances which gather round us in a harmonious way, whether it arise from a kind of fatality or that man has the power of attract- ing to himself things that are mutually related. — Goethe. For Thy Good Cheer 47 Do you think that because you have tried once and failed you cannot succeed. There is no condition that you cannot overcome. — Margaret Stowe. To live with a high ideal is a successful life. It is not what one does, but what one tries to do, that makes the soul strong and fit for a noble career. — E. P. Tenney. Still o'er the earth hastes Opportunity, Seeking the hardy soul that seeks for her. Swift willed is thrice willed ; late means never more; Impatient is her foot, nor turns again. — James Russell Lowell. I do not know of any way so sure of making others happy as of being so one's self. — Sir Arthur Helps. A man cannot speak but he judges himself. Every opinion reacts on him who uttered it. You cannot do wrong without suffering wrong. — Emerson. Religion is the life of hope. It is the spirit in man which leads him to say, I believe there is something better for the world than the world has yet come to, I believe there is something better for me than I have yet come to. It is the spirit which says, I am discontented with all that I have accomplished yet, and all that I am as yet, but because I am discontent, I will press on to something higher and better. — Lyman Abbott. 48 For Thy Good Cheer GOODBY. Bid me goodby ! No sweeter salutation Can friendship claim, Nor yet can any language, any nation, A sweeter frame. It is not final ; it forebodes no sorrow As some declare Who, born to fretting, are so prone to borrow To-morrow's share. "Goodby" is but a prayer, a benediction From lips sincere, And breathed by thine it brings a sweet conviction That God will hear. "Goodby !" Yes, "God be with you !" prayer and bless* ing In simplest phrase, Alike our need and his dear care confessing In all our ways. However rare or frequent be our meeting, However nigh The last long parting or the endless greeting, Bid me goodby! — Harriet McEwen Kimball. VICTOR HUGO T HE beautiful is as useful as the use fill. 4 8 For Thy Good Cheer 49 "The vision of God that a working soul gets, in the presence of right living, and of honest effort is the one great revelation of time." He who has conferred a kindness should be silent, he who has received one should speak of it. — Seneca. That which we are, we shall teach, not voluntarily, but involuntarily. Thoughts come into our minds by avenues which we never left open, and thoughts go out of our minds through avenues which we never voluntarily opened. — Emerson. "The working world understands that the only man who really knows things is the man who can do things." Certainly, in our little sphere, it is not the most active people to whom we owe the most. . . . It is the lives like the stars, which simply pour down on us the calm light of their bright and faithful being, up to which we look, and out of which we gather the deep- est calm and courage. — Phillips Brooks. The world only needs that we learn the laws of the universe and co-operate with God, and the health and joy and power that come with health may be ours. — Minot J. Savage. 50 For Thy Good Cheer "I thank God for his night. 'The stars are shining down upon the silent moun- tains and upon the whispering sea. The pulse of hu- manity is beating slowly and restfully. I, too, am a part of the All, God's All, and trust myself to the In- finite Care." For Thy Good Cheer 51 NIGHT. Mysterious Night! when our first parents knew Thee, from report divine, and heard thy name, Did he not tremble for this lovely frame, — This glorious canopy of light and blue? Yet 'neath a curtain of translucent dew, Bathed in the rays of the great setting flame, Hesperus, with the host of heaven, came, And lo ! creation widened in man's view. Who could hope through such darkness lay concealed Within thy beams, O sun ! or who could find, Whilst fly and leaf and insect stood revealed, That to such countless orbs thou mad'st us blind ! Why do we then shun death with anxious strife? If light can thus deceive wherefore not life? — Blanco White. 52 For Thy Good Cheer THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY'S BEGINNING. "I thank God for sunshine and bird-song, for the sweet morning light upon the hill-tops, and the tender eyes of my loved ones. The great world is awake and a-throb with life. I, too, am awake and life is pulsing through my veins. I have a part in the great world, in its work, its joy and its sorrow. To-day I can be a little center from which shall radiate peace, kindliness and good-will. I thank God for opportunity. A beau- tiful golden sunbeam has entered through my cham- ber window, and awakened me to the gladness and beauty of the morning. May my spirit be wakened and kindled by the Divine Spirit, so that all this day it may warm and gladden the hearts it touches." For Thy Good Cheer 53 Trust thyself; every heart vibrates to that iron string. — Emerson. Honest good humor is the oil and wine of a merry meeting, and there is no jovial companionship equal to that where the jokes are rather small and the laughter abundant. — Washington Irving. When you are asked where and how is your little achievement going into God's plan, point to your Mas- ter, who keeps the plans, and then go on doing your little service as faithfully as if the whole temple were yours to build. — Phillips Brooks. "Some men who marry and settle down would have done the world more good had they remained single and settled up." They that can walk at will Where the works of the Lord are revealed, Little guess what joy can be got From a cowslip out of the field; Flowers to these "spirits in prison" Are all they can know of the spring, They freshen and sweeten the wards, Like the waft of an angel's wing. ■—Tennyson. In the Children's Hospital 54 F° r Thy Good Cheer The only safety in our American life lies in spurn- ing the accidental distinctions which sunder one man from another, and in paying homage to each man only because of what he essentially is; in stripping off the husks of occupation, of position, of accident, until the soul stands forth revealed, and we know the man only because of his worth as a man. — Theodore Roosevelt. For Thy Good Cheer 55 Hats off! Along the street there comes A blare of bugles, ruffle of drums, A flash of color beneath the sky ; Hats off! The flag is passing by! Blue and crimson and white it shines Over the steel-tipped, ordered lines. Hats off! The colors before us fly; But more than the flag is passing by. Sea fights and land fights, grim and great, Fought to make and to save the state; Weary marches and sinking ships; Cheers of victory on dying lips ; Days of plenty and days of peace ; March of a strong land's swift increase; Equal justice, right, and law; Stately honor and reverend awe. Sign of a nation great and strong To ward her people from foreign wrong; Pride and glory and honor, all Live in the colors, to stand or fall. Hats off! Along the street there comes A blare of bugles, a ruffle of drums ; And loyal hearts are beating high ; Hats off! The flag is passing by ! — H. H. Bennett, 56 For Thy Good Cheer "Believe in yourself, believe in humanity, believe in the success of your undertakings. Fear nothing and no one. Love your work. Work, hope, trust. Keep in touch with to-day. Teach yourself to be practical and up-to-date and sensible. You cannot fail. For Thy Good Cheer 57 "LABORARE EST ORARE." "Labor is worship!" the robin is singing; "Labor is worship !" the wild bee is ringing. Listen! that eloquent whisper upspringing Speaks to thy soul from out nature's great heart. From the dark cloud flows the life-giving shower; From the rough sod blows the soft-breathing flower ; From the small insect, the rich coral bower ; Only man, in the plan, shrinks from his part. Labor is life! Tis the still water faileth; Idleness ever despaireth, bewaileth; Keep the watch wound, for the dark rust assaileth ; Flowers droop and die in the stillness of noon. Labor is glory ! — the flying cloud lightens ; Only the waving wing changes and brightens ; Idle hearts only the dark future frightens; Play the sweet keys, wouldst thou keep them in tune. Labor is health ! Lo ! the husbandman reaping, How through his veins goes the life current leaping! How his strong arm, in its stalwart pride sweeping, True as a sunbeam the swift sickle guides. Work — for some good, be it ever so slowly ; Cherish some flower, be it ever so lowly ; Labor ! — All labor is noble and holy ; Let thy great deeds be thy prayer to thy God. — Frances S. Osgood. 58 For Thy Good Cheer No one is really miserable who has not tried to cheapen life. — David Starr Jordan, In spite of the stare of the wise and the world's de- rision, Dare follow the star-blazed road, dare follow the vision. — Edward Markham. You must do the duty next your hand, that is cer- tain ; but of ten duties next your hand you are to choose that which you do most happily, which suits you best, or for which God fitted you. — Edward Everett Hale. "The world is looking for the man who can do some- thing, not for the man who can 'explain' why he didn't do it." The moment you find yourself in an absolutely hope- less and despairing state of mind regarding your work — take a vacation. If only for a day — still take it. Let your brain rest by giving it new thoughts. You will return to work like one reborn. —Ella Wheeler Wilcox. It is true there is much to be done, and perhaps you are weak-handed ; but stick to it steadily, and you will see great effects, for "constant dropping wears away stones ; and by diligence and patience the mouse ate in two the cable ; and little strokes fell great oaks." — Benjamin Franklin. For Thy Good Cheer 59 The truth-seeker is the only God-seeker. — Minot J. Savage. Proverbs, like the sacred books of each nation^ are the sanctuary of the intuitions. That which the dron- ing world, chained to appearances, will not allow the realist to say in his own words, it will suffer him to say in proverbs without contradiction. And this law of laws, which the pulpit, the senate and the college deny, is hourly preached in all markets and workshops by flights of proverbs, whose teaching is as true and as omnipresent as that of birds and flies. — Emerson. One need not journey far to discover the ravages made in modern society by the spirit of worldliness ; and if we have so little foundation, so little equilibrium, calm, good sense and initiative, one of the chief rea- sons lies in the undermining of the home life. The masses have timed their pace by that of people of fashion. They, too, have become worldly. They have broken with simplicity. We must learn again to live the home life, to value our domestic traditions. — Charles Wagner. 6o For Thy Good Cheer TWENTY-ONE. My darling One-and-Twenty boy, Rise to your strong young feet, And look up in the April blue And feel that life is sweet. The man who cowers in the shade And watches for the cloud Will watch and shiver every hour Until his back be bowed. Ought there to be a sermon preached When one is twenty-one? Mine is so short 'tis finished As soon as 'tis begun. Be happy, One-and-Twenty boy! To be just as you should Be happy, happy, happy, And 'tis like you'll find you're good. Here's a motto, One-and-Twenty boy, Engrave it 'neath your crest ; "The wisest man's the happiest one, The happiest one's the best." — Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett For Thy Good Cheer 61 Guard well thy words — How else can thou be master of thyself? Keep watch upon thyself And govern well thy lips as doors unto a treasure- house, That nothing may be stolen from thee unawares By sudden moods. — Mabel Percy Haskell. Just take hold of the first thing that comes in your way. If the Lord's got anything bigger to give you, He will see to it. — A. D. T. Whitney. And as the path of duty is made plain, May grace be given that I may walk therein, Not like the hireling for his selfish gain, With backward glances and reluctant tread, But cheerful in the light around me thrown, Walking as one to pleasant service led ; Doing God's will as if it were my own, Yet trusting not in mine, but in His strength alone ! —Whittier. "A little thing, a sunny smile, A loving word at morn. And all day long the day shone bright, The cares of life were made more light, And sweetest hopes were born." No man can instruct others in anything; we can, however, awaken thought and arouse impulses. And this is all there is of teaching — to supply an atmosphere in which thought can germinate and grow. — Elbert Hubbard. 62 For Thy Good Cheer The virtues of forbearance and self-control are still in a very rudimentary state, and of mutual helpfulness there is far too little among men. — John Fiske. Study the past to see how the present has grown out of it. Study the present to learn its tendencies, to learn where to cast your vote. Then formulate your ideal and hold fast to it till it does its work. Life thus becomes a definite science. — Horatio W. Dresser. Pleasure and simplicity are two old acquaintances. Entertain simply, meet your friends simply. If you come from work well done, are as amiable and genuine as possible toward your companions and speak no evil of the absent, your success is assured. — Charles Wagner. If you meet with ingratitude, trickery or disappoint- ment be assured you are not sending out the right mental stuff; the fault lies somewhere in yourself. Believe in yourself, believe in others. Keep hopeful and sympathetic. — Ella Wheeler Wilcox. For Thy Good Cheer 63 O Holy Father, inspire our hearts now by thy spirit, to think and feel the things that we do most truly be- lieve; and give depth and power to the stream of ex- perience, that wisdom and goodness and truth and moral beauty, may be a kind of common sense to our hearts, to our minds, and our souls. Let thy teaching be adapted to our weakness, to our ignorance, and to our want. Be gentle with us in our impatience, in our short-sightedness, and teach us how little we know, and yet kindle in our hearts an inextinguishable hope, a divine trust, a mighty con- quest of faith. Amen. — Horatio Stebbins. 64 For Thy Good Cheer A garden is a lovesome thing, God wot ! Rose plot Fringed pool, Ferned grot, — The veriest school Of peace ; and yet the fool Contends that God is not. Not God ! in Gardens ! when the eve is cool ? Nay, but I have a sign ; 'Tis very sure God walks in mine. — Thomas Edward Brown. EDWARD HOWARD GRIGGS T O look ever toward the noblest ideal for oneself, yet to forgive the failure to live up to it in every other — this is indispensible to right living. For Thy Good Cheer 65 IF I COULD LISTEN CLOSE ENOUGH. Sometimes in summer afternoons An undertone will fall, As if a hundred tongues must speak, — Must speak, and tell me all. O nature, dear interpreter, Would'st thou my sorrow heal? If I could listen close enough, What then, would'st thou reveal ? When fledgling stir within the nest As morn comes o'er the hill, Down deep among the water cress What says the lisping rill ? As freshening winds invade the wood, And all the trees rejoice; How easy then to half expect The fir to find a voice. The lark pours out so glad a note, To joy my heart is stirred ; If I could listen close enough, Perhaps he brings me word. — Elizabeth Ballard-Thompson. 66 For Thy Good Cheer Opportunities are swarming around us all the time, thicker than gnats at sun down. We walk through a cloud of them. —Henry van Dyke. Perpetual devotion to what a man calls his business is only to be sustained by perpetual neglect of many other things. And it is not by any means certain that a man's business is the most important thing he has to do. — Robert Louis Stevenson. Language can never explain to any one who does not already know, and since words are never a vindication, silence, when ballasted by soul, is effective beyond speech. — Elbert Hubbard. Time is infinitely long, and each day is a vessel into which a great deal may be poured, if one will actually fill it up. — Goethe. If I do not keep step with my companions it is be- cause I hear a different drummer. Let a man step to the music he hears, however measured, or however far away. — Thoreau. If you are tempted to be angry, pause a moment and still the rising activities. Deal in the same way with the tendency to be annoyed, resentful or depressed. Remember that if you spare yourself these useless ex- penditures of force, you husband and increase your energy. — Horatio W. Dresser. For Thy Good Cheer 67 The source of nearly all the evil and unhappiness of this world is selfishness. We know it; but we still keep on being selfish. We see that the world might be made ideally beautiful if only all people would live unselfish lives ; and yet we keep on being selfish. We strive after the things that will minister to our im- mediate satisfaction, and hate people who get in our way and hinder the attainment of these things. And so we keep on, and the world jars and is unharmonious and is darkened and is miserable ; and we wonder why God has not made things more fair, when it is we ourselves who are marring the purpose of God, which we can plainly see. — Minot J. Savage. 68 For Thy Good Cheer Happiness comes from striving, doing, loving, achieving, conquering, always something positive and forceful. — David Starr Jordan. For my own part, I believe in the immortality of the soul, not in the sense in which I accept the demonstrable truths of science, but as a supreme act of faith in the reasonableness of God's work. — John Fiske. One of the most vicious phases of conduct is to be generous at the expense of truth, that is, to pretend to kindly feelings, which are quite undeserved by the recipient and equally unfelt by the giver. To make everything smooth and pleasant for those who merit a firm rebuke is conduct which may call itself virtue, but is often the result of moral laziness, some tempera- ments choosing it as the most comfortable course. — Edward Howard Griggs. Live not without a friend : The Alpine rock must own Its mossy grace or else be nothing but a stone. — W. W. Story. Men degenerate without a strong grasp on morality, but they grow deformed and unhappy without art, for art is as truly the final expression of perfect character as of perfect thought, and beauty is as much a quality of divinity as righteousness. — Hamilton Wright Mabie. For Thy Good Cheer 69 Sail forth ; steer for the deep waters only — Reckless, O soul, exploring, I with thee and thou with me; For we are bound where mariner has not yet dared to go, And we will risk the ship, ourselves and all. O my brave soul ! O farther, farther sail ! O daring joy, but safe! Are they not all the seas of God? O farther, farther, farther sail! — W alt Whitman. 7o For Thy Good Cheer Do not look forward to what might happen to-mor- row; the same everlasting Father who cares for you to-day will take care of you to-morrow, and every day. Either He will shield you from suffering, or He will give you unfailing strength to bear it. Be at peace then, and put aside all anxious thoughts and imagina- tions. — St. Francis de Sales. One adequate support for the calamities of mortal life exists — one only! an assured belief that the pro- cession of our fate, howe'er sad, or disturbed, is or- dered by a Being of infinite benevolence and power, whose everlasting purposes embrace all accidents, con- verting them to good. — William Wordsworth. The dawn is not distant, Nor is the night starless; Love is eternal ! God is still God, and His faith shall not fail us ; Christ is eternal ! — Longfellow. What God is doing in this world is making men and women, and when He puts a child in the cradle, He says, You may help me. — Lyman Abbott, There is strength, repose of mind and inspiration in fresh apparel. God gives nature new garments every season. You are a part of Nature. The tree trusts, and grows, and takes storm and sun as divinely sent, and believes in its right to new apparel, and it comes. It will come to you if you do the same. — Ella Wheeler Wilcox. For Thy Good Cheer 71 The size of this world is the size which each person by his thought makes it. In a book published about a year ago of a course of lectures given at the Lowell Institute, the writer says that "the size of the universe depends upon the range of human interests. The with- drawal of interest from any phase of reality means practically the extinction of that phase for that person. Dead interests mean a dead universe." What an ap- palling thought is this ! If we withdraw our interest from all phases we have no world at all ! And yet it is an inspiration ; for if the statement is true, then it is a fact that we each live in a world of our own selection, our own choice. Of course, many a person is tied down by inevitable, or what seem to be inevitable, cir- cumstances, contrary to the nature of that person. But, after all, those environments do not determine the size of his world. His attitude toward those surroundings is the measuring-scale. — E. J. Daniels. 72 For Thy Good Cheer The birth of a little child reveals God ; the helpless- ness of a little child proves providence ; the innocence of a little child illustrates heaven ; the death of a little child implies immortality. Surely no little one sent into an earthly home, even but for a day, and bequeath- ing these beautiful and sublime lessons can be thought to have come and gone in vain. — William R. Alger. For Thy Good Cheer 73 MOTHER AND CHILD. My child is lying on my knees The signs of Heaven she reads. My face is all the Heaven she sees, Is all the heaven she needs. I also am a child and I Am ignorant and weak I gaze upon the starry sky And then I must not speak. For all behind the starry sky Behind the world so broad Behind men's hearts and souls, doth lie The Infinite of God. Lo, Lord, I sit in the wide space My child upon my knee, She looketh up into my face And I look up to thee. — George MacDonald. 74 For Thy Good Cheer The dispute about religion and the practice of it sel- dom go together. — Young. "The unhappy are always wrong : wrong in being so, wrong in saying so, wrong in needing help of others." You will succeed best when you put the restless, anxious side of affairs out of mind, and allow the rest- ful side to live in your thoughts. — Margaret Stone. Be not anxious about to-morrow. Do to-day's duty, fight to-day's temptation, and do not weaken and dis- tract yourself by looking forward to things which you cannot see, and could not understand if you saw them. — Charles Kingsley. The first duty for a man is still that of subduing Fear. A man's acts are slavish, not true, but spacious ; his very thoughts are false, — till he have got Fear under his feet. — Carlyle. "Much of our dissension is due to misunderstanding, which could be put right by a few honest words and a little open dealing." For Thy Good Cheer 75 A SHRINE. She sits and sews in the window there, The sunshine round her lingers, Just touching her braids of bright brown hair And slender busy fingers. And she fashions garments fair and fine For the dear little Baby — hers and mine. Her swift, white fingers can scarce keep pace As down the years she glances, And sews into folds of mull and lace Her own sweet thoughts and fancies. And her eyes are bright with light divine As she croons to the baby — hers and mine. She drops her work when the daylight dies — I see them rocking, rocking — There are dimpled arms, two dear, dark eyes, A wee blue shoe and stocking ; And my heart bends low before the shrine Of my wife and the Baby — hers and mine. — Alice E. Allen. 76 For Thy Good Cheer If you would be loved as a companion, avoid un- necessary criticism upon those with whom you live. — Sir "Arthur Helps. If you are worth your salt — though you have leisure and are relieved of earning your bread — unless you work in some non-remunerative capacity, and put some- thing into the common stock of society in return for what you take out, you are as really parasites as tramps or paupers. — Theodore Roosevelt. Life is large. We cannot possibly grasp the whole of it. What may we profitably let go? We may let go all things which we cannot carry into the eternal. Pretense, eternity is not good for shams, nor for worry ; nor for self-seeking. But let us take loyal hold of time, work, present happiness, love, friendship and duty. — Anna Robertson Brown. May I reach That purest heaven, be to other souls The cup of strength in some great agony, Enkindle generous ardor, feed pure love, Beget the smiles that have no cruelty, Be the sweet presence of a good diffused, And in diffusion even more intense, So shall I join the choir invisible, Whose music is the gladness of the world. — George Eliot. For Thy Good Cheer 77 COURAGE. Be not discouraged with thy doubt, O soul : Perchance the hand of God it is that leads Thy faith to nobler creeds and broader trust. Part of thy manhood is to doubt and solve And rise to higher things. For cobwebs hang About the intellect as in a court But little used, and we must let the sun Pour in, and conquer mirk and mist and night. The creed thy father built, wherein his soul Did live and move and find its vital joy, May be but small to thee ; then, without fear, Build o'er again the atrium of the soul So broad that all mankind may feast with thee. — William Ordway Partridge, 78 For Thy Good Cheer The day is coming when no one will be called a Christian unless he lives for humanity as Jesus lived. A new life is stirring in the hearts and minds of men and women to-day. It is a new vision of the Christ. — Horatio W. Dresser. For Thy Good Cheer 79 THE ARTISAN. O God, my master God, look down and see If I am making what Thou wouldst of me. Fain might I lift my hands up in the air From the defiant passion of my prayer ; Yet here they grope on this cold altar stone, Graving the words I think I should make known. Mine eyes are Thine. Yea, let me not forget, Lest with unstaunched tears I leave them wet, Dimming their faithful power, till they can not see Some small, plain task that can be done for Thee. My feet, that ache for paths of flowery bloom, Halt steadfast in the straitness of this room. Though they may never be on errands sent, Here shall they stay, and wait Thy full content. And my poor heart, that doth so crave for peace, Shall beat until Thou bid its beating cease, So thou, dear master God, look down and see Whether I do Thy bidding needfully. — Alice Brown. 8o For Thy Good Cheer THE JOY OF THE HILLS. I ride on the mountain tops, I ride; I have found my life and am satisfied. Onward I ride in the blowing oats, Checking the field lark's rippling notes — Lightly I sweep From steep to steep. I ride on the hills, I forgive, I forget Life's hoard of regret — All the terror and pain Of the chafing chain. Grind on, O cities, grind; I leave you a blur behind. I am lifted elate, the skies expand ; Here, the world's heaped gold is a pile of sand ; Let them weary and work in their narrow walls ; I ride with the voices of waterfalls. I swing as one in a dream — I swing Down the airy hollows, I shout, I sing; The world is gone like an empty word; My body's a bough in the wind, My heart, a bird ! — Edwin Markham. THOMAS STARR KING B E sure of the foundation of your life, knoio why you live as you do. Be ready to give a reason for it. Do not, in such a matter as life, build on opinion or custom, or what you guess is true. Make it a matter of cer- tainty and science. 80 For Thy Good Cheer 81 I ceased to think, to feel ; I had often lain thus under other trees, but never in such a mood as this. I was akin with the vast and silent movement of things which encompassed me. I cannot translate into words the mystery and the thrill of that hour, when for the first time I gave myself wholly into the keeping of Nature, and she received me as her child. Unbroken repose, unlimited growth, inexhaustible life, measure- less force, unsearchable beauty — who shall feel these things and know that there are no words for them ? — Hamilton Wright Mabie. For Thy Good Cheer Days change so many things — yes, hours — We see so differently in suns and showers. — George Klingle. While we sit brooding over our troubles and the hardships of our lot, the great world goes tranquilly on, the infinite sky hangs over us, the everlasting order abides, and "God is where he was." Can we not for- get or endure our pestering "insect miseries" for a little while in the presence of the eternal laws and eternal powers? — Charles G. Ames. "A man owes his first duty to himself, and that duty is to be gentle in his acts, and moderate in his judg- ments. Thus does he conserve his strength over against the time when it is most needed, stands ready to seize opportunity when it comes his way." It is only when people begin to care for each other that the fineness of human nature is seen. As long as you don't love anybody much, your character is like a garden in winter, one virtue is under a glass shade, and another is covered over with straw, and all of them are pinched and sickly. Then love comes by, and it is summer; and your garden rejoices and blossoms like a rose, without your bothering about it. — Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler. For Thy Good Cheer 83 OLD AND NEW FRIENDS. 'Make new friends, but keep the old ; Those who are silver, these are gold. New made friends, like new made wine, Age will mellow and refine. Friendships that have stood the test, Time and change, are surely best. Brow may wrinkle, hair turn gray, Friendship never owns decay; For 'mid old friends kind and true We once more our youth renew. But, alas, old friends must die; New friends must their place supply. Then cherish friendship in your breast; New is good, but old is best. Make new friends, but keep the old ; Those are silver, these are gold." For Thy Good Cheer Let the world have peace for five hundred years, the aristocracy of blood will have gone, the aristocracy of gold will have come and gone, that of talent will also have come and gone, and the aristocracy of goodness, which is the democracy of man, the government of all for all, by all, will be the power that is. — Theodore Parker, in 1846. Let every pulpit which is occupied by an ambassador of the Prince of Peace proclaim anew the very founda- tion principle of Christianity. Let teachers, who are shaping and guiding plastic minds, show the beauty of peace ; let them teach the power of higher ideals, and how to win real victories ; let them exhibit moral hero- ism as manly and honorable when compared with brute force; let them remind their pupils that He that ruleth his own spirit is greater than he that taketh a city. — Henry Wood. For Thy Good Cheer 85 If simplicity of heart is an essential condition of re- spect, simplicity of life is its best school. Whatever may be the state of your fortune, avoid anything which could make your children think themselves more or better than others. — Charles Wagner. It is easy to sit outside and say how the man inside should run the machine, but it is not so easy to go in- side and run the machine yourself. — Theodore Roosevelt. Whoever may Discern true ends, shall grow pure enough To love them, brave enough to strive for them, And strong enough to reach them. — Elizabeth Barrett Browning. A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. Speak what you think now in hard words, and to-mor- row speak what to-morrow thinks in hard words again, though it contradict everything you said to-day. — Emerson. 86 For Thy Good Cheer I III I ■■ lliMi M ill l iinrim i i m i MKlmrmmr^ When our world learns this lesson — when every child is reverenced as a royal heir of heaven because it is a brother of the Christ Child, then a great light will lighten the nations. — Henry van Dyke. "A wise old German said : 'I likes to give villingly ; ven I gives villingly, it enjoys me so much, I gives it again/ " We are encompassed about by the forces that make for righteousness. All power we possess, or seem to possess comes from our accord with these forces. There is no lasting force except the power of God. — David Stair Jordan. The effective appeal to-day is not addressed to the selfish desire for personal advantage as a result of re- ligious effort, but to the sure prospect that a man of God can serve his day and generation more widely, deeply and permanently than a godless man. — Charles R. Brown. "There are some people who turn gray, but who do not grow hoary, whose faces are furrowed, but not wrinkled, whose hearts are sore wounded in many places, but are not dead. There is a youth that bids defiance to age and there is a kindness which laughs at the world's rough usage. These are they who have returned good for evil, not having learned it as a les- son of righteousness, but because they have no evil in them to return upon others." For Thy Good Cheer 87 It is ours to make the unknown future brighter Than the fairest dreams of all the dreamers ; Ours to see the vision and fulfill it. Fairer than we dream of, fairer even Than the shining eyes of hope can see it. — Rhoda Tucker Frick. 'Now is the time ! Ah, friend, no longer wait To scatter loving smiles and words of cheer To those around whose lives may be so drear, They may not need you in the coming year. Now is the time!" ''Whatever the weather may be," says he, "Whatever the weather may be, It's the songs ye sing, an' the smiles ye wear, That's a-makin' the sun shine everywhere." — James Whitcomb Riley. Like tides on a crescent sea-beach, When the moon is new and thin, Into our hearts high yearnings Come welling and surging in; Come from the mystic ocean, Whose rim no foot has trod — Some of us call it longing, And others call it God. — William Herbert Carruth. 88 For Thy Good Cheer THE SOUL OF LIFE. To live for common ends is to be common. The highest faith makes still the highest man ; For we grow like the things cur souls believe. And rise or sink as we aim high or low. No mirror shows such likeness of the face As faith we live by of the heart and mind. We are in very truth that which we love ; And love, like noblest deeds, is born of faith. The lover and the hero reason not, But they believe in what they love and do. All else is accident, — this is the soul Of life, and lifts the whole man to itself, Like a keynote, which, running through all sounds, Upbears them all in perfect harmony. — Bishop Spaulding. BENJ. IDE WHEELER / T is character that counts in nations as in individuals. Only in loyalty to the old can we serve the new; only in understanding of the past can we in- terpret and use the present; for his- tory is not made out unfolded, and the old world entire is ever present in the new. For Thy Good Cheer 89 "That which is good to be done, cannot be done too soon; and if it is neglected to be done early, it will fre- quently happen that it will not be done at all." I have never known a case of undiscovered merit, and I have never known a case where merit failed to achieve success. I have known many men gifted with great ability who failed miserably in life, but in every instance the failure arose from neglect to develop nat- ural talent into trained capacity. — Bourke Cockran. Are you in earnest ? Seize this very minute ; What you can do, or dream you can, begin it ; Boldness has genius, power and magic in it. Only engage, and then the mind grows heated, Begin, and then the work will be completed. — Goethe. We refuse sympathy and intimacy with people, as if we waited for some better sympathy and intimacy to come. But whence and where? To-morrow will be like to-day. Life wastes itself whilst we are preparing to live. — Emerson. There are few things which bless and soothe the life of others more, or do them more good, than the giving of thanks. It makes men feel that they are some use in the world, and that is one of the finest impulses to a better life. It cheers many a wearied heart with pleas- ant hope and bids many a man who is sad in mood take courage. — Stopford A. Brooke. 90 For Thy Good Cheer "Don't tell me you are too old. Age is all imagination. Ignore years and they will ignore you." At sixty-two life has begun; At seventy-three begin once more; Fly swifter as thou nearest the sun, And brighter shine at eighty- four. At ninety-five Shouldst thou arrive, Still wait on God and work and thrive. — Oliver Wendell Holmes. Every success in life comes from sympathy and co- operation and love. — Benjamin Ide Wheeler. Let us devote ourselves anew to the service of good will. Let us resolve for the time to come to be con- siderate of all, the present and the absent; to be just to all ; to be kindly affectionate to all. — N. L. Frothingham. Let fathers seek to guide that youthful exuberance in their sons, which finds expression in militarism, into higher channels and toward more worthy ideals. Let the sovereign people, in the election of members of Congress and Senators choose such men as will not misrepresent them, and longer sustain the reign of brute force in the world in the place of law, reason and right. — Henry Wood. For Thy Good Cheer 91 OPPORTUNITIES. Have we all learned the lesson of grasping opportu- nities the moment they appear? A lady was seated under a large tree reading a very interesting book. Suddenly the wind brought a beautiful many tinted autumn leaf and laid it by her side. She noticed it and said to herself, "What a lovely leaf! I must not for- get to pick it up after I finish this chapter." But when she finished that chapter and looked for the leaf — it was gone. If the wind could have spoken I fancy it would have said, "Madam, I brought the leaf and placed it where you could secure it by merely reaching out your hand. But you chose to leave it until a more convenient time; therefore I have sent it away, where though you search forever, you will never find it again ; and even if, after many days' searching you could find it, it would not be the same, for the beautiful tints would be gone." Compare the story of the leaf with our opportunities. — Flora G. Everest. 92 For Thy Good Cheer God is not dumb, that he should speak no more ; If thou hast wanderings in the wilderness And find'st not Sinai, 'tis thy soul is poor ; There towers the mountain of the Voice no less, Which who so seeks shall find ; but he who bends Intent on manna still, and mortal ends, Sees it not, neither hears its thundered lore. — James Russell Lowell. For Thy Good Cheer 93 How poor are they that have not patience! What wound did ever heal but by degrees? — Shakespeare. Do not spill thy soul, in running hither and yon, grieving over the misfortunes, the mistakes and the vices of others. The one person whom it is most neces- sary to reform is yourself. — Dorothy Quigley. "He who goes down into the battle of life giving a smile for every frown, a cheery word for every cross one, and lending a helping hand to the unfortunate, is, after all, the best of missionaries. ,, Every expansion of civilization makes for peace. In other words, every expansion of a great civilized power makes for law, order and righteousness. — Theodore Roosevelt. I am sure it is a great mistake always to know enough to go in when it rains. One may keep snug and dry by such knowledge, but one misses a world of loveliness. — Adeline Knapp. There is no spectacle so depressing as the ruins of a house that has never been finished. The ruins of houses that have had their day and been lived in are often restful, and beautiful, and picturesque; but the decay of a building that has been begun and not com- pleted, is one of the most ghastly and hideous objects on the face of the earth. So many lives seem to me like that. — Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler. 94 For Thy Good Cheer Let any sculptor hew us out the most ravishing com- bination of tender curves and spheric softness that ever stood for woman ; yet if the lip have the least fulness that hints of the flesh, if the brow be insincere, if in the minutest particular the physical beauty suggests a moral ugliness, that sculptor — unless he be portraying a moral ugliness for a moral purpose — may as well give over his marble for paving stones. Time, whose judg- ments are inexorably moral, will not accept his work. For, indeed, we may say that he who has not yet per- ceived how artistic beauty and moral beauty are con- vergent lines which run back into a common ideal origin, and who therefore is not afire with moral beauty just as with artistic beauty — that he in short, who has not come to that stage of quiet and eternal frenzy in which the beauty of holiness and the holiness of beauty mean one thing, burn as one fire, shine as one light within him ; he is not yet the great artist. — Sidney Lanier. For Thy Good Cheer 95 '■■■'■■ 111 ii—g— 1— mm ■ n a n ■! iimii— g— tm m —aa — ■ ■ n One doth not know How much an ill word may empoison liking. — Shakespeare. The block of granite which was an obstacle in the pathway of the weak, becomes a stepping stone in the pathway of the strong. — Carlyle. I received a letter from a lad asking me for an easy berth. To this I replied: "You cannot be an editor, do not try the law; do not think of the ministry, let alone all ships and merchandise; abhor politics; don't practice medicine; be not a farmer or a soldier or a sailor; don't study, don't think. None of these are easy. O, my son, you have come into a hard world. I know of only one easy place in it, and that is the grave!" — Henry Ward Beecher. It is just as easy to form a good habit as it is a bad one. And it is just as hard to break a good habit as a bad one. So get the good ones and keep them. — William McKinley. The strength of your life is measured by the strength of your will. But the strength of your will is just the strength of the wish that lies behind it. — Henry van Dyke. It is not effort, but fruitless effort, which makes work distasteful ; and when we learn to use our powers rightly, we will go to our tasks as gladly as bees to their honey making. — Bishop Spaulding. 96 For Thy Good Cheer Such was my rule of life ; I worked my best, subject to ultimate judgment, God's not man's. — Browning. I hate a thing done by halves. If it be right, do it boldly ; if it be wrong, leave it undone. — Gilpin. Avoid the personal view, the small view, the critical and fault finding view. Run away from gossip as from a pestilence, and keep in your soul great ideals and ideals to solace your solitude. They will drive out petty worries, conceits and thoughts of carking care. — Ada C. Sweet. God has not given us vast learning to solve all the problems, or unfailing wisdom to direct all the wander- ings of our brothers' lives, but He has given to every one of us the power to be spiritual, and by our spiritu- ality to lift and enlarge and enlighten the lives we touch. — Phillips Brooks. "Grief sharper sting doth borrow From regret : But yesterday is gone, and shall its sorrow Unfit us for the present and the morrow ? Nay; bide a wee, an dinna fret." So much love, so much life, — strong, healthy, rich, exulting, and abounding life. — Ralph Waldo Trine. EDWIN MARKHAM c OME, let us live the poetry we sing. 96 For Thy Good Cheer 97 ^— — ■ — — — — — ■ ——————— 1 i. m -i. N i ■ 11 ■ PROSPICE. Fear death ? — to feel the fog in my throat, The mist in my face, When the snows begin, and the blasts denote I am nearing the place, The power of the night, the press of the storm, The post of the foe : Where he stands, the Arch Fear in a visible form, Yet the strong man must go ; For the journey is done and the summit attained, And the barriers fall, Though a battle's to fight ere the guerdon be gained, The reward of it all. I was ever a fighter, so — one fight more, The best and the last ! I would hate that death bandaged my eyes, and forbore, And bade me creep past. No ! let me taste the whole of it, fare like my peers, The heroes of old, Bear the brunt, in a minute pay glad life's arrears Of pain, darkness, and cold. For sudden the worst turns the best to the brave, The black minute's at end, And the elements' rage, the fiend- voices that rave, Shall dwindle, shall blend, Shall change, shall become first a peace out of pain, Then a light, then thy breast, O thou soul of my soul ! I shall clasp thee again, And with God be the rest ! — Browning. 98 For Thy Good Cheer To be well and strong is the rightful portion of every human being, and when principles of psychology are more generally taught and understood, people will be- gin to realize that the time has come for their emanci- pation from the dominion of ill health, sickness and disease. The dawn is breaking; interest in the True Philosophy of life is more manifest every day, and the thoughtful person is enquiring what he can do to shape his life more intelligently and make it conform more to his higher ideals, as well as to secure freedom from the ills which flesh is not heir to. — Edward H. Cowles. For Thy Good Cheer 99 There is but one good fortune to the earnest man. This is opportunity; and sooner or later, opportunity will come to him who can make use of it. — David Starr Jordan. "True greatness never happens. Man can conquer physical forces for succeeding generations, but battles of the soul no man can fight for another. There is no greater victory in life than the victorious old age, but it can be attained only by those who have learned to conquer in the years of strength and power. They and they alone can win the 'consummate triumph.' "Self-distrust is the cause of most of our failures. In the assurance of strength there is strength, and they are weakest, however strong, who have no faith in themselves, or their powers." L.cfC. ioo For Thy Good Cheer Our fathers' God ! from out whose hand The centuries fall like grains of sand, We meet to-day, united, free, And loyal to our land and Thee, To thank Thee for the era done And trust Thee for the opening one. — Wkittier. For Thy Good Cheer 101 AWAY, I cannot say, and I will not say That he is dead. He is just away! With a cheery smile, and a wave of the hand He has wandered into an unknown land And left us dreaming how very fair It needs must be, since he lingers there. And you — oh, you, who the wildest yearn For the old-time step, and the glad return — Think of him faring on, as dear In the love of There, as the love of Here. Think of him still as the same, I say, He is not dead — he is just away. — James Whitcomb Riley. 102 For Thy Good Cheer A CHRISTMAS CAROL. God rest ye, merry gentlemen ; let nothing you dismay, For Jesus Christ, our Savior, was born on Christmas day. The dawn rose red o'er Bethlehem, the stars shone through the gray, When Jesus Christ, our Savior, was born on Christmas day. God rest ye, little children ; let nothing you afright, For Jesus Christ, your Savior, was born this happy night; Along the hills of Galilee the white flocks sleeping lay, When Christ, the child of Nazareth, was born on Christmas day. God rest ye, all good Christians; upon this blessed morn The Lord of all Good Christians was of a woman born ; Now all your sorrows he doth heal ; your sins He takes away, For Jesus Christ, our Savior, was born on Christmas day. — Dinah Mulock Craik. For Thy Good Cheer 103 The individuals whose lives are really valuable never ask any one how to make them so. — Marie Corelli. All history bears witness that when God means to make a great man, He puts the circumstances of the world and the lives of lesser men under tribute. . . . All earnest, pure, unselfish, faithful men who have lived their obscure lives well, have helped to make him. — Phillips Brooks. "Counting the days till Christmas ! Sweet days of tender care That loved ones may on the blessed morn Find longed for treasures fair. Thus dreaming, hoping and waiting, That holiest day draws near When ' Peace on earth, good will to men/ Ring out the joy-bells clear. ,, c 'Tis not the weight of jewel or plate Or the fondle of silk or fur ; 'Tis the spirit in which the gift is rich, As the gifts of the wise ones were ; And we are not told whose gift was gold, Or whose was the gift of myrrh." 104 For Thy Good Cheer rMTnlili iM i n i CTar^n i i iiiiii um ■■! ■ i ■ » ■■■■■ I 1 1 ■ i mm i i li m — a— — ■— « « n ■■■■ n i iia m i n II "Be pleasant until ten o'clock in the morning, and the rest of the day will take care of itself."" The only road to advancement is to do your work so well that you are always ahead of the demands of your position. Our employers do not decide whether we shall stay where we are or go on and up; we decide that matter ourselves. Success or failure are not chosen for us ; we choose them for ourselves. — Hamilton Wright Mabie. Nothing can work me damage but myself ; the harm that I sustain I carry about with me, and I am never a real sufferer but by my own fault. — St. Bernard. People are nearly always nice when one gets to know them, and pierces through the outer husks of artifi- ciality which they wear before the world. I detest heaps of people that I have only met at dinner ; but I think I like everybody that I have ever had breakfast with. — Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler. Let us learn to be content with what we have. Let us get rid of our false estimates, set up higher ideals — a quiet home ; vines of our own planting ; a few books full of inspiration ; a few friends worthy of being loved ; innocent pleasures that bring no pain or sorrow. — David Swing. For Thy Good Cheer 105 MY HARVESTS. I thought to have gathered many a bloom From a rose tree I planted one sweet spring day; Ah me ! I forgot And watered it not, And the soft buds withered away. I thought as I looked at my heaped up corn, "I will sow it broadcast — this rich golden grain I" Ah me ! I let it lay, And it withered away, And harvest time reaps me no gain. I thought that my friend would be mine always ; That his hand to my hand would cling close and fast, Ah me ! I loosed hold On our friendship old, And his ringers slipped at last. I still wish for roses — my rose tree is dead ; I wish still for harvest — and hunger for bread; I cry for the old love — the old love is fled ; I sowed not — I reaped not — God's judgment is said. — L. Hereward. io6 For Thy Good Cheer A VALENTINE. If only I might sing Like birds in spring — Robin, or thrush, or wren, In grove or glen ; If only I might suit To harp or lute, To chime in tender time Some touching rhyme, — Then I'd hope in vain Thine ear to gain ; But now — I halt — I quail — Ah ! must I fail ? So small my skill to plead My earnest need, Love — love is all the plea I bring to thee. — Clinton Scollard. For Thy Good Cheer 107 AS THE BUDDHA DEVOUT DECLARES. I sometimes wish it were really so, As the Buddha devout declares, That the soul at will could easily go, From its fleshly sheath unawares, Fleetly as we wander in a dream, Softly as from buds the roses bloom, Or lightly as a golden beam Flits in and out a darkened room, Then float above the earth world, As the clouds in the blue o'er head, With the Spirits' wings unfurled, Wandering as the impulse led. If this fancy quaint were really so, As the Buddha devout declares, Couldn't you tell where first I would go, And steal upon whom unawares ? Swiftly as moonlight creeps on the tide, Lightly as perfume floats through the air, I'd waft myself, dear love, to your side, Chasing afar all spectres of care. -—Dorothy Quigley. io8 For Thy Good Cheer Our destiny is our own and it must be worked out — perhaps in fear and trembling — in our own way. If there be a cherished American doctrine the controlling question must be: Is it right? If yea, then let us stand by it like men; if nay, have done with it and move forward to other issues. — William McKinley. For Thy Good Cheer 109 However the battle is ended, Though proudly the victor comes With fluttering flags and prancing nags And echoing roll of drums, Still truth proclaims this motto In letters of living light — No question is ever settled Until it is settled right. Let those who have failed take courage, Though the enemy seem to have won, Though his rank be strong, if he be in the wrong, The battle is not yet done. For sure as the morning follows The darkest hour of the night, No question is ever settled Until it is settled right. O man bowed down with labor, O woman young, yet old, O heart oppressed in the toiler's breast And crushed by the power of gold, Keep on with your weary battle Against triumphant might ; No question is ever settled Until it is settled right. — Ella Wheeler Wilcox. no For Thy Good Cheer MY WIFE. Trusty, dusky, vivid, true, With eyes of gold and bramble-dew Steel-true and blade-straight The great artificer Made my mate. Honour, anger, valour, fire, A life that love could never tire, Death quench or evil stir, The mighty Maker Gave to her. Teacher, tender, comrade, wife A fellow-farer true through life — Heart-whole and soul-free The August Father Gave to me. — Robert Louis Stevenson. For Thy Good Cheer in m i . ■ " ' ————— — — i Whatever makes men good Christians, makes them good citizens. - — Daniel Webster. When a man wrongs another, he wrongs himself most, and so really is an object of pity, not revenge. — Elbert Hubbard, Still o'er the earth hastes Opportunity, Seeking the hafdy' soul that seeks for her. Swift willed is thrice-willed ; late means never more ; Impatient is her foot, nor turns again. — James Russell Lowell. And so God's miracles go on unseen because of their very nearness. It is to the remote we look for a revela- tion while all the time it would speak to us from the eyes of those who are near us and would voice itself through the commonplace world in which we live. — Edward Howard Griggs. Earth and probably heaven, has nothing better to offer us than that thrill, which runs through us when we catch fleeting glimpses of the Beautiful and the True, and rise superior for the time being to all that is sordid and cowardly and mean. For the moment we are "pure in heart and see God." — Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler. The deeper the feeling the less demonstrative will be the expression of it. — Balzac. ii2 For Thy Good Cheer There is a ship named Sometime ; Men dream of it, and wait; One on the shore, impatient, One at the household gate, Thinking : "If it come not in the morn, Then in the evening it may." But one I knew, not thinking of ships, Worked till the close of day, Lifting his eyes at evening time, There his ship at anchor lay. — Irene Hardy. THOMAS CARLYLE P IN thy faith to no man's sleece: hast thou not two eyes of thine own? For Thy Good Cheer 113 "Each man contributes his spirit to his town, his community, and his home; every woman contributes her ideals, her convictions, and her nature to the cheer- fulness and courage or the depression and cowardice of her society, be it large as the country or limited as her home. It is therefore the bounden duty of every man and woman to put life, hope, faith into their fel- lows by putting these qualities into the common air." "A right good thing is prudence, And they are useful friends Who never make beginnings Until they see the ends. But give me now and then a man And I will make him king, Just to take the consequences, And just to do the thing." I wish that more of us had the courage to be poor ; that the world had not gone mad after fashion and display ; but so it is, and the blessings we might have are lost in the effort to get those which lie outside the possible. — Alice Carey. I have no answer for myself or thee, Save that I learned beside my mother's knee ; — All is of God that is or is to be, And God is good. — Whittier. 114 For Thy Good Cheer Of Christmas past, let us remember now Only the smiles, forgetting all the tears, Only the hopes, forgetting all the fears ! Life's way is all too long, that we should bow Beneath the ancient burdens of dead years. Of Christmas in the future, let us speak Only with courage, looking for the best ! Only with hope, leaving to faith the rest ! Life's day is all too short, that we should seek To dim its brightness at our own behest. And in the present Christmas, let us give All help, from care the suffering to release — All zeal, to share our happiness and peace ! For life is long enough for love to live, And short enough for bitterness to cease. — C. J elf -Sharp. For Thy Good Cheer 115 THE VOICE OF THE CHRIST-CHILD. The earth has grown old with its burden of care, But at Christmas it always is young, The heart of the jewel burns lustrous and fair, And its soul, full of music, breaks forth on the air When the song of the angels is sung. It is coming, old earth, it is coming to-night ! On the snowflakes which cover thy sod, The feet of the Christ-child fall gentle and white, And the voice of the Christ-child tells out with delight That mankind are the children of God. On the sad and the lonely, the wretched and poor, That voice of the Christ-child shall fall ; And to every blind wanderer opens the door Of a hope which he dared not to dream of before, With a sunshine of welcome for all. The feet of the humblest may walk in the field Where the feet of the holiest have trod ; This, this is the marvel to mortals revealed, When the silvery trumpets of Christmas have pealed ; That mankind are the children of God. — Phillips Brooks. n6 For Thy Good Cheer Since few large pleasures are lent us on a long lease, it is wise to cultivate a large undergrowth of small pleasures. — Mary A. Liver more. Happiness, like mercy, is twice blessed; it blesses those who are most intimately associated in it, and it blesses all those who see it, hear it, feel it, touch it, or breathe the same atmosphere. — Kate Douglas Wlggin. Frank, generous conversation, with ability to be just as pleasant the next moment as if difference of opinion had not been expressed, helps each to see his or her mistakes, to understand whether he or she is acting from love of ambition, from obstinacy or for truth's sake. Homes must learn the impersonal art of discus- sion which makes the intellect grow, and leaves love and belief in others' sincerity untouched. — Kate Gannett Wells, God's poet is silence, his words are unspoken, And yet how profound, how full and how far ! It thrills you, and fills you with measure unbroken, And as soft and as fair and as far as a star. — Joaquin Miller. The desire to look back over the past is a sign of age and weakness; we need to look forward, and develop into what we are capable of becoming. What heights are we striving to occupy now ? — E. J. Dinsmore. For Thy Good Cheer 117 A PRAYER. Dear Lord, kind Lord, Gracious Lord ! I pray Thou wilt look on all I love Tenderly to-day. Weed their hearts of weariness ; Scatter every care Down a wake of angel wings Winnowing the air. Bring unto the sorrowing All release from pain ; Let the lips of laughter Overflow again ! And with all the needy, Oh ! divide, I pray, This vast treasure of content That is mine to-day. — James Whitcomb Riley. n8 For Thy Good Cheer I feel more pity for the people who have waited on the bank and caught cold in their hearts and souls through standing still too long, than with those who have been bruised and buffeted by the full force of the stream. — Ellen Thomeycroft Fowler. For Thy Good Cheer 119 No man can conceal himself from his fellows, for everything he fashions or creates interprets him. — Hamilton Wright Mabie. Do not read newspapers column by column ; remem- ber they are made for everybody, and don't try to get what isn't meant for you. — Emerson. A woman lacking true culture is said to betray by her conversation a mind of narrow compass, bounded on the north by her servants, on the east by her chil- dren, on the south by her ailments and on the west by her clothes. — Burton Kingsland. As I watch men of affairs, I find one set who, as they say, make one hand wash another. They are rushing round at one o'clock to pick up the funds to pay the note which falls due at two. I find another set more thoughtful who know to-day what they are to do next Friday — know, as they would say, where they shall be next Saturday — who are thus prepared in advance for any exigency. — Edward Everett Hale. "If you are feeling sorry for yourself because life is monotonous, you are building the wall higher and higher which shuts you from the things you desire. "Stop it! "Say each morning : 'This is to be an interesting and successful day for me.' If it does not prove to be, then say it the next morning and the next, until it comes true." 120 For Thy Good Cheer One of the commonest and most pardonable of our mistakes is in imagining that life can always be at high- water mark. The ability to feel strongly any emotion depends upon the presence of intervening periods when we do not feel. It is only at rare intervals we stand upon the heights and after each such vision there must be the slow toil- ing over the sand-waste and up the mountain slope. There are times when we are even compelled to wait like Dante during the night, with only the stars of hope, faith and love shining down upon us. — Edward Howard Griggs. For Thy Good Cheer 121 WHEN THE BIRDS GO NORTH AGAIN. Oh, every year hath its winter, And every year hath its rain — But a day is always coming When the birds go north again. When new leaves swell in the forest, And grass springs green on the plain, And the alders' veins turn crimson — And the birds go north again. Oh, every heart hath its sorrows, And every heart hath its pain — But a day is always coming When the birds go north again. 'Tis the sweetest thing to remember If courage be on the wane, When the cold, dark days are over — Why, the birds go north again. — Ella Higginson. 122 For Thy Good Cheer Submit to what is unavoidable, banish the impos- sible from the mind, and look around for some new object of interest in life. — Goethe. Study, and study hard. But never let the thought enter your mind that study alone will lead you to the heights of usefulness and success. — Grover Cleveland. Character is higher than intellect. A great soul will be strong to live, as well as to think. — Emerson. Our opinion of people depends less upon what we see in them, than upon what they make us see in our- selves. — Sarah Grand. The higher the state of civilization, the more com- pletely do the actions of one member of the social body influence all the rest, and the less possible is it for any one man to do a wrong thing without interfering more or less with the freedom of his fellow citizens. — Huxley. Can any summary rule be given more than this: Every day and every hour to frame yourself with a view to getting over a weakness ? How a person does this can only be learned by experience, not, I think, to be intruded on by others. — Jowett. For Thy Good Cheer 123 WHEN MY SHIP COMES IN. Summer and winter are one to me, And the day is bright, be it storm or shine, For far away, o'er a sunny sea, Sails a treasure vessel, and all is mine. I see the ripples that fall away As she cleaves the azure waves before ; And nearer, nearer, day by day, Draws the happy hour when she comes to shore. "But what if she never comes ?" you say, "If you never the honor, the treasure gain?" It has made me happier, day by day, It has eased full many an aching pain ; It has kept the spirit from envy free, Has dulled the ear to the world's rude din. Oh ! best of blessing it's been to me, To look for the hour when my ship comes in. — Whitelaw Reid. 124 For Thy Good Cheer THE CHOICE. Only so much of power each day So much nerve force brought in play ; If it goes for politics or trade, Ends gained or money made, You have it not for the soul and God. The Choice is yours to sow or plod, So much water in the rill ; It may go to turn the miller's wheel, Or sink in the desert, or flow on free To brighten its banks in meadows green 'Till broadening out, fair fields between, It streams to the moon-enchanted sea, Only so little power each day ; Week by week days slide away ; Ere the life goes what shall it be A trade — a game — a mockery Or the gate of a rich eternity? — Edward Rowland Sill. For Thy Good Cheer 125 "What I aspired to be, And was not, comforts me." — Browning. It is only a poor sort of happiness that could ever come by caring very much about our own pleasures. We can only have the highest happiness, such as goes along with being a great man, by having wide thoughts and much feeling for the rest of the world as well as ourselves. — George Eliot. What to us is gibe or frown? What have we to cast us down ? Soul ! Arise ! assume thy crown : Turn thy features from the wall, Make the stature grand and tall, See, the Lord is over all. — Richard Realf. All are not just because they do no wrong; But he who will not wrong me when he may, He is truly just. I praise not them Who in their petty dealings pilfer not, But him whose conscience spurns a secret fraud, When he might plunder and defy surprise ; His be the praise who, looking down with scorn On the false judgments of the partial herd, Consults his own clear heart, and boldly dares To be, not to be thought, an honest man. — Philemon. 126 For Thy Good Cheer The problem of life is not to make life easier, but to make men stronger. — David Starr Jordan. For Thy Good Cheer 127 "Gladness be with the helper of the world." If any man would be sound, let him then look to his life and consider how he lives ; hived in impure build- ings, living chiefly upon animal food, stimulated by in- toxicants, a prey to impulse, a participant in an artificial society, artificial when compared with his higher nature. — Horatio W. Dresser. Be it ours to doubt the gloom, and not the glory of our souls. — James Martineau. We too often forget that not only is there "a soul of goodness in things evil," but very generally, also a soul of truth in things erroneous, while many admit the abstract probability that a falsity has usually a nucleus of reality; few bear this abstract probability in mind when passing judgment on the opinions of others. — Herbert Spencer. I apprehend that there is but one way of putting an end to our present dissensions ; and that is not the tri- umph of any existing system over all others, but the acquisition of something better than the best we now have. — Channing. ia8 For Thy Good Cheer Go often to the house of thy friend, for weeds choke up the unused path. — Scandinavian Edda. Fame without happiness is but a sorry jest at best. What matters it to a thirsty man if his empty cup be of gold, or silver, or of finest glass ? — Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler. In everything that happens is there light; and the greatness of the greatest of men has but consisted in that they had trained their eyes to be open to every ray of this light. — Maurice Maeterlink. Speech is the chief revelation of the mind, the first visible form that it takes. As the thought, so the speech. To better one's life in the way of simplicity, one must set a watch on his lips and his pen. Let the word be as genuine as the thought, as artless, as valid ; think justly, speak frankly. — Charles Wagner. You are either a magnet that attracts all things bright, desirable, healthy and joyous — or one that draws all things disagreeable, gloomy, unhealthy and destructive. — Dorothy Quigley. DAVID STARR JORDAN T HE clinching of good purposes with right actions is what makes the man. This higher heredity does not come from one's father or mother, but is the work of the man on himself. 128 For Thy Good Cheer 129 To-day is your day and mine, the only day we have, the day in which we play our part. What our part may signify in the great whole, we may not understand, but we are here to play it, and now is our time. This we know, it is a cynicism. It is for us to express love in terms of helpfulness. This we know, for we have learned from sad experience that any other source of life leads toward decay and waste. — David Starr Jordan. 13° For Thy Good Cheer "Yea, the earth is generous. The trees Strip nude as birth-time without fear, And their reward is year by year To feel their fullness but increase. The law of nature is to give, To give, to give ! And to rejoice In giving with a generous voice, And so, trust God, and truly live." For Thy Good Cheer 131 Weakness on both sides, is we know, the motto of all quarrels. — Voltaire. Hard may be Duty's hand ; but lo, it leads Out into perfect joy, where pain shall cease! God sees thy striving, and thy patience heeds ; And thou shalt find his peace. — Celia Thaxter. A little thinking shows us that the deeds of kindness we do are effective in proportion to the love we put into them. More depends upon the motive than upon the gift. If the thought be selfish, if we expect compensa- tion, or are guilty of close calculation, the result will be like the attitude of mind which invited it. — Horatio W. Dresser. "If bitterness has crept into the heart in the friction of the busy day's unguarded moments, be sure it steal away with the setting sun. Twilight is God's interval for peacemaking." Good impulses and good intentions do not make action right or safe. In the long run, action is tested not by its motives, but by its results. — David Starr Jordan. 132 For Thy Good Cheer "Pessimism is waste of force — the penalty of one who knows not how to live." The spirit of simplicity is a great magician. It softens asperities, bridges chasms, draws together hands and hearts. The forms which it takes in the world are infinite in number; but never does it seem to us more admirable than when it shows itself across the fatal barriers of position, interest, or prejudice, overcoming the greatest obstacles, permitting those whom everything seems to separate to understand one- another, esteem one-another, love one-another. This is the true social cement that goes into the building of a people. — Charles Wagner. The little I have seen of the world teaches me to look upon the errors of others in sorrow, not in anger. When I take the history of one poor heart that has sinned and suffered, and represent to myself the struggles and temptations it has passed through, the brief pulsation of joy, the feverish inquietude of hope and fear, the pressure of want, the desertion of friends, I would fain leave the erring soul of my fellow man with Him from whose hand it came. — Longfellow. I hold not with the pessimist that all things are ill, nor with the optimist that all things are well. All things are not ill, and all things are not well, but all things shall be well, because this is God's world. — Browning. For Thy Good Cheer 133 Strive constantly to concentrate yourself ; never dis- sipate your powers; incessant activity, of whatever kind, leads finally to bankruptcy. — Goethe. It is in every way creditable to handle the yardstick and to measure tape; the only discredit consists in having a soul whose range of thought is as short as the stick and as narrow as the tape. — Horace Mann. The successful man takes plenty of time for thought. He carefully looks the ground over, searches for weak and strong points, then adjusts himself to the needed conditions. — Horatio W. Dresser. When any one has offended me, I try to raise my soul so high that the offense cannot reach it. — Descartes. Great men are the true men, the men in whom nature has succeeded. They are not extraordinary, they are in the true order. It is the other species of men who are not what they ought to be. — Amiel's Journal. The law of love, upon which all that relates to man is founded, declares that it is easier for man to be well and happy than to be the reverse. Try to see how much easier it is to go with the law than to put yourself in opposition to it. — Margaret Stowe. 134 F° r Thy Good Cheer Every new thought relates itself finally to all thought, and is like the forward step which continually changes the horizon about the traveler. — Hamilton Wright Mabie. For Thy Good Cheer 135 "Remember that there is one thing better than mak- ing a living — making a life." No one is useless in this world who lightens the burden of it to anyone else. — Charles Dickens. Whate'er it is thou dost not use, will be A heavy burden and a load to thee : Only from what the present moment springs, Created in the present, profit brings. — Goethe. And now all the paths are free, wherever there is a mountain pass or a river- ford ; the roads are all blessed, and they are all open and no barriers for those who will. — Mrs. Oliphant. "I resolved that, like the sun, so long as my day lasted, I would look on the bright side of everything." You find yourself refreshed by the presence of cheer- ful people. Why not make earnest effort to confer that pleasure on others? You will find half the battle is gained if you never allow yourself to say anything gloomy. —Lydia Maria Child. Come over on the sunny side of life. There is room there for all and it is a matter of choice. — Barnetta Brown. 136 For Thy Good Cheer «■' — ■ ■ ■■ mo———— — — — a— n wiiMii ■!■■ ■ « — ■ ■■ t 11 Mowaeaaa— n ■■ m i I think the first virtue is to restrain the tongue. He is nearest to the Gods who knows how to be silent even though he is in the right. — Cato. Stand close to all, but lean on none, And if the crowd desert you, Stand just as fearlessly alone As if a throng begirt you, And learn what long the wise have known — Self flight alone can hurt you. — William S. Shurtleff. "Think of yourself as on the threshold of unparal- lelled success. A whole clear, glorious life lies before you. Achieve, achieve." Never esteem anything as of advantage to thee that shall make thee break thy word or lose thy self-respect. — Marcus Aurelius. The secret of the man who is universally interesting, is that he is universally interested. (Said of Dr. Holmes by Howells.) And thus looking within and around me ever anew (With that stoop of the soul which in bending upraises it too) The submission of man's nothing perfect to God's all — complete, As by each new obeisance in spirit, I climb to His feet. — Browning. For Thy Good Cheer 137 Try it for a day, I beseech you, to preserve yourself in an easy and cheerful frame of mind. Compare the day in which you have rooted out the weed of dissatis- faction with that on which you have allowed it to grow up, and you will find your heart open to every good motive, your life strengthened and your breast armed with a panoply against every trick of fate; truly, you will wonder at your own improvement. — Richter. Stay at home in your mind : Don't recite other people's opinions. — Emerson. Who brings sunshine into the life of another has sun- shine in his own. — David Starr Jordan. "What right have you, O passer-by-the-way, to cail any flower a weed? Do you know its merits, its vir- tues, its healing qualities ? Because a thing is common shall you despise it? If so, you might despise the sun- shine for the same reason." A single gentle rain makes the grass many shades greener. So our prospects brighten on the influx of better thoughts. We should be blessed if we lived in the present always and took advantage of every acci- dent that befell us, like the grass which confesses the influence of the slightest dew that falls on it ; and did not spend our time in atoning for neglect of past oppor- tunities, which we call doing our duty. — Thoreau. 138 For Thy Good Cheer "Can a planet wander away even from the power of the sun? How, then, can man fall out of the love of God?" Leisure and solitude are the best effect of riches, be- cause mother of thought. Both are avoided by most rich men, who seek company and business, which are signs of their being weary of themselves. — Sir W. Temple. Lenity will operate with greater force, in some in- stances, than rigour. It is, therefore, my first wish to have my whole conduct distinguished by it. — George Washington. Learn to be pleased with everything ; with wealth so far as it makes us of benefit to others; with poverty, for not having much to care for, and with obscurity, for being unenvied. — Plutarch. "Often our trials act as a thorn hedge to keep us in the good pasture ; but our prosperity is a gap through which we go astray." We ought to acquaint ourselves with the beautiful ; we ought to contemplate it with rapture, and attempt to raise ourselves up to its height. And in order to gain strength for that, we must keep ourselves thor- oughly unselfish — we must not make it our own, but rather seek to communicate it ; indeed, to make a sac- rifice of it to those who are dear and precious to us. — Goethe. For Thy Good Cheer 139 "The stars are in the sky all day ; Each linked coil of Milky Way, And every planet that we know, Behind the sun are circling slow. They sweep, they climb with stately tread, — Venus the fair and Mars the red, Saturn engirdled with clear light, And Jupiter with moons of white. Each knows his path and keeps due tryst; Not even the smallest star is missed From those wide fields of deeper sky Which gleam and flash mysteriously, As if God's outstretched ringers must Have sown them thick with diamond dust. There are they all day long ; but we, Sun-blinded, have no eyes to see. "I wonder if the world is full Of other secrets beautiful, As little guessed, as hard to see, As this sweet starry mystery? Do angels veil themselves in space, And make the sun their hiding-place? Do white wings flash as spirits go On heavenly errands to and fro, While we, down-looking, never guess How near our lives they crowd and press? If so, at life's set we may see Into the dusk steal noiselessly Sweet faces that we used to know, Dear eyes like stars that softly glow, Dear hands stretched out to point the way, And deem the night more fair than day." 140 For Thy Good Cheer Be a life long or short, its completeness depends on what it was lived for. — David Starr Jordan. "Give to the world the best that you have, and the best will come back to you." Be done with saying what you don't believe, and find somewhere or other the truest, divinest thing to your soul that you do believe to-day, and work that out in all the action and consecration of the soul in the doing of your work. — Phillips Brooks. "The way to keep a man out of the mud is to black his boots/' once said Frederick Douglass. "The man with soiled shoes does not care where he walks." There are nettles everywhere, But smooth green grasses are more common still ; The blue of heaven is larger than the cloud. — Elizabeth Barrett Browning. For Thy Good Cheer 141 Find your niche and fill it. If it be ever so little, if it is only to be hewer of wood and drawer of water, do something in this great battle for God and truth. — Spurgeon. Finish every day and be done with it. You have done what you could. Some blunders and absurdities no doubt, crept in ; forget them as soon as you can. —Emerson. Are you happy now? Are you likely to remain so till this evening, or next month, or next year? Then why destroy present happiness by a distant misery which may never come at all ? Every substantial grief has twenty shadows, and most of them shadows of your own making. — Sydney Smith. "Would you have your friend live a better life? Pic- ture only that better life in your thoughts of him and never by word or look emphasize the opposite." What men want is not talent, it is purpose; not the power to achieve, but the will to labor. — Bulwer Lytton. He only is rich who owns the day; and no one owns the day who allows it to be invaded with worry and fret and anxiety. — Emerson. 142 For Thy Good Cheer "The careless use of other people's names is one of the evidences of untrained thought." To him who has an eye to see, there can be no fairer spectacle than that of a man who combines the posses- sion of moral beauty in his soul with outward beauty of form, corresponding and harmonizing with the for- mer because the same great pattern enters into both. —Plato. Things without remedy, Should be without regard : what's done is done. — Shakespeare. "If you are an invalid, do your best to get well ; but, if you must remain an invalid, still strive for the un- selfishness and serenity which are the best possessions of health. There are no sublimer victories than some that are won on sick beds." The twentieth century is going to find the man who can do the thing needed exactly. It will not seek for kings or nobles. It will find the man who can carry the message straight to Garcia. It will not care what a man is. Democracy means equality of opportunity. It means freedom to rise. But that means freedom to fall, socially and otherwise. People cannot be tied up in bunches and put on a level. — David Starr Jordan. For Thy Good Cheer 143 Let us pity these poor rich men, who live barrenly in great bookless houses ! Let us congratulate the poor that, in our day, books are so cheap that a man may every year add a hundred volumes to his library for the price of what his tobacco and beer would cost him. Among the earliest ambitions to be excited in clerks, workmen, journeymen, and, indeed, among all that are struggling up in life from nothing to something, is that of owning and constantly adding to a library of good books. A library is not a luxury, but one of the neces- saries of life. — Henry Ward Beecher. 144 For Thy Good Cheer Most parents attempt to live their children's lives in some particular, causing annoyance and perversion all 'round. —Elbert Hubbard. Law is universal, absolute. Every effect has a cause. As we sow, we reap. Here are the simple facts of life. No striving, no effort of will or thought can escape them. We forget that the law of sowing and reaping applies not merely to putting the hand into the fire, but to the thoughts, the spirit we send out into the world. — Horatio W. Dresser. We marvel that the silence can divide The living from the dead ; yet more apart Are they who all life long dwell side by side, But never heart by heart. — Florence D. Snelling. Let your speech be better than silence, or be silent. — Dionysius. Better make penitents by gentleness than hypocrites by severity. — St. Francis de Sales. One of the best methods of rendering study agree- able is to live with able men, and to suffer all those pangs of inferiority which the want of knowledge always inflicts. — Sydney Smith. "So long as you can contribute to the pleasure, hap- piness, or comfort of any human being, you are of im- portance in the world, and no longer." and thank God that you are able to leave them. —Ephraim Peabody. LYMAN ABBOTT c HRIST comes with JMs message to men: Work — not from fear; not for food or clothing or shelter; these are the mere incidents; work means ser- vice, and service means love, and love is the highest and greatest thing in the world. This puts a new dignity into life. For Thy Good Cheer 145 PRAYER— ANSWER. At first I prayed for Light : — Could I but see the way, How gladly, swiftly, would I walk To everlasting day! And next I prayed for strength : — That I might tread the road With firm, unfaltering feet and win The heavens' serene abode. And then I asked for Faith : — Could I but trust my God, I'd live enfolded in His peace, Though foes were all abroad. But now I pray for Love : — Deep love to God and man ; A living love that will not fail, However dark his plan : — And Light and strength and Faith Are opening everywhere ! God only waited for me till I prayed the larger prayer. — Mrs. E. D. Cheney. 146 For Thy Good Cheer UNSPOKEN WORDS. 'Unspoken words, like treasures in a mine, Are valueless until we give them birth ; Like unfound gold their hidden beauties shine, Which God has made to bless and gild the earth. How sad 'twould be to see the Master's hand Strike glorious notes upon the voiceless lute ! But oh, what pain when, at God's own command, A heart-string thrills with kindness, but is mute! 'Then hide it not, the music of thy soul. Dear sympathy expressed with kindly voice, But let it like a shining river roll To deserts dry — to hearts that would rejoice. Oh, let the symphony of kindly words Sound for the poor, the friendless, and the weak, And He will bless you ! He who struck the chords Will strike another when in turn you seek." For Thy Good Cheer 147 This is eternity now; you are sunk as deep in it, wrapped as close in it as you ever will be. The future is an illusion; it never arrives; it flies before you as you advance. Always it is to-day — and after death and a thousand years it is to-day. You have great deeds to perform and you must do them now. — Charles Ferguson. It matters not how straight the gate, How charged with punishment the scroll : I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul. — Elbert Hubbard. It is a sad weakness in us, after all, that the thought of man's death hallows him anew to us ; as if life were not sacred too — as if it were comparatively a light thing to fail in love and reverence to the brother who has to climb the whole toilsome steep with us, and all our tears and tenderness were due to the one who is spared that hard journey. — George Eliot. Here you stand at the parting of the ways; some road you are to take; and as you stand here, consider and know how it is that you intend to live. Carry no bad habits, no corrupting associations, no enmities arid strifes into this New Year. Leave these behind, and let the Dead Past bury its Dead; leave them behind, and thank God that you are able to leave them. — Ephraim Peabody. 148 For Thy Good Cheer FAITH. Better trust all and be deceived, And weep that trust and that deceiving, Than doubt one heart that if believed Had bless'd one's life with true believing. Oh, in this mocking* world too fast The doubting friend o'ertakes our youth ; Better be cheated to the last Than lose the blessed hope of truth. — Frances Anne Kemble. For Thy Good Cheer 149 It is good to be helpful and kindly, but don't give yourself to be melted into candle grease for the benefit of the tallow trade. — George Eliot. I see not any road of perfect peace which a man can walk, but after the council of his own bosom. Let him quit too much association, let him go home much, and establish himself in those courses he approves. — Emerson. But it may be in a diviner air, Transfigured and made pure, The harvest that we deemed as wholly lost Waits perfect and mature. And the faint heart, that now defeated grieves, May yet stand smiling 'mid abundant sheaves. — Mary L. Ritter. Booker Washington tells of a colored man in Ala- bama who uttered this prayer: "O, Lord, de cotton am so grassy, de work am so hard, and de sun am so hot, dat I b'lieve dat dis here darkey am called to preach." Only weak natures consent to dwell among tomb- stones, and the losses of which they are the symbol ; the strong drink wisdom and courage from the cup of sorrow, and move onward toward light and life. — Bishop Spaulding. 150 For Thy Good Cheer Afraid? Of whom am I afraid? Not Death ; for who is he ? The porter of my father's Lodge As much abasheth me. Of life ? 'Twere odd I fear a thing That comprehendeth me In one or more existences At Deity's decree. Of resurrection? Is the east Afraid to trust the morn With her fastidious forehead? As soon impeach my crown ! — Emily Dickinson. INDEX TO POEMS PAGE Turn Not in Vain Regret Frederick L. Hosmer 15 The Child in the Garden Henry van Dyke 19 Shasta Frederick L. Hosmer 21 The Mountain James G. Clarke 21 Trust 30 The Four-leaf Clover Ella Higginson 34 Lincoln Edwin Markham 36 Waiting John Burroughs 45 Goodbye Harriet McEwcn Kimball 48 Night Blanco White 51 The Flag H. H. Bennett 55 Laborare est Orare Frances S. Osgood 57 Twenty-One Frances Hodgson Burnett 60 A Garden Thomas Edward Brown 64 If I Could Listen Close Enough Elisabeth Ballard Thompson 65 Mother and Child George MacDonald 73 A Shrine Alice E. Allen 75 Courage William Ordway Partridge 77 The Artisan Alice Brown 79 Old and New Friends 83 The Soul of Life Bishop Spaulding 88 Prospice Browning g7 Away James Whitcomb Riley 101 A Christmas Carol Dinah Muloch Craik 102 My Harvests L. Hereward 105 A Valentine Clinton Scollard 106 As the Buddha Devout Declares Dorothy Quigley 107 Until It Is Settled Right Ella Wheeler Wilcox 109 My Wife Robert Louis Stevenson no Christmas C. Jelf-Sharp 114 The Voice of the Christ-Child Phillips Brooks 115 (151) 1 52 Index to Poems PAGE A Prayer James White omb Riley 117 When the Birds Go North Again Ella Higginson 121 When My Ship Comes In Whitelaw Reid 123 The Choice Edward Rowland Sill 124 The Stars Are in the Sky 139 Prayer—Answer Mrs. E. D. Cheney 145 Unspoken Words 146 Faith Frances Anne Kemble 148 Afraid ? Emily Dickinson 150 INDEX TO AUTHORS PAGE Abbott, Lyman 32, 47, 70 Alger, William 72 Allen, Alice E 75 Ames, Charles G 82 Amiel's Journal 133 Aurelius, Marcus 136 Bellamy, Francis 4 Browning 7, 16, 17, 96, 97, 125, 132, 136 Benton, M. A. E 9 Browning, Elizabeth Barrett 11, 85, 140 Barrows, Samuel J 14 Beecher, Henry Ward 22, 39, 95, 143 Brooks, Phillips 28, 32, 38, 49, 53, 96, 103, 115, 140 Balzac 29, 1 1 1 Brown, Anna Robertson 40, 76 Burroughs, John 45 Bennett, H. H 55 Burnett, Mrs. Frances Hodgson 60 Brown, Thomas Edward 64 Brown, Alice 79 Brown, Charles R 86 Brooke, Stopf ord A 89 Bernard, St 104 Brown, Barnetta 135 Carlyle 18, 74, 95 Clarke, James G 21 Chesterfield, Lord 22 Carruth, William Herbert 87 Cockran, Bourke 89 (153) 154 Index to Authors PAGE Cowles, Edward H 98 Craik, Dinah Muloch 102 Corelli, Marie 103 Carey, Alice 113 Cleveland, Grover 122 Channing 127 Child, Lydia Maria 135 Cato ^ 136 Cheney, Mrs. E. D 145 Drummond, Henry 28 Dresser, Horatio W 62, 66, 78, 127, 131, 133, 144 Daniels, E. J 71 Dinsmore, E. J 116 Descartes 133 Dickens, Charles 135 Dionysius 144 Dickinson, Emily 150 Emerson. .6, 16, 22, 43, 47, 49, 53, 59, 85, 89, 119, 122, 137, 141, 149 Eliot, George 27, 76, 125, 147, 149 Epictetus 28, 29 Everest, Flora G 91 Ferguson, Charles 16, 147 Franklin, Benjamin 58 Fiske, John 62, 68 Fowler, Ellen Thorneycroft 82, 93, 104, in, 118, 128 Frick, Rhoda Tucker 87 Frothingham, N. L .90, 104 Gannett, William C. 25 Griggs, Edward Howard 32, 68, in, 120 Goethe 35, 43, 44, 46, 66, 89, 122, 133, 135, 138 Gilpin 96 Grand, Sarah 122 Hosmer, Frederick L 15, 21 Hale, Edward Everett 27, 58, 119 Higginson, Ella 34, 121 Helps, Sir Arthur 47, 76 Haskell, Mabel Percy 61 Index to Authors 155 Hubbard, Elbert. 61, 66, in, 144**47 Holmes, Oliver Wendell 90 Hereward, L I0 ~ Hardy, Irene . 112 Huxley . 122 Howells 1 36 Ingelow, Jean I4 Irving, Washington 53 Jackson, Helen Hunt 24 Jordan, David Starr.43, 58, 68, 86, 99, 126, 129, 131, 137, 140, 142 Jowett 122 Kimball, Harriet McEwen 48 Kingsley, Charles 74 Klingle, George 82 Knapp, Adeline 93 Kingsland, Burton 119 Kemble, Frances Anne 148 Lowell, James Russell 16, 47, 92, in Longfellow 17, 27, 70, 132 Locke 35 Lanier, Sidney 94 Livermore, Mary A 116 Lytton, Bulwer 141 Mabie, Hamilton Wright 14, 17, 18, 24, 68, 81, 104, 119, 134 Milton, John 17 Muir, John 20 Miller, J. R 29 McLean, J. K 32 Markham, Edwin 36, 37, 58, 80 MacDonald, George 73 McKinley, William 95, 108 Miller, Joaquin 116 Martineau, James 127 i56 Index to Authors PAGE Maeterlink, Maurice 128 Mann, Horace 133 Newcomb, Charles B 29, 39 Osgood, Frances S 57 Oliphant, Mrs 135 Parker, Theodore 84 Partridge, Ordway William yy Philemon 125 Plutarch 138 Plato 142 Peabody, Ephraim 144, 147 Quigley, Dorothy 93, 107, 128 Ruskin 32, S3 Rollins, Alice Wellington 35 Roosevelt, Theodore 54, 76, 85, 93 Riley, James Whitcomb 87, 101, 117 Reid, Whitelaw 123 Realf, Richard 125 Richter 137 Ritter, Mary L 149 Spurgeon 141 Smith, Sidney 141, 144 Snelling, Florence D 144 Spencer, Herbert 127 Sharp, C. Jelf- 114 Stevenson. Robert Louis 18, 28, 66, no Scollard, Clinton 106 Sales de, St. Francis 70, 144 Sweet, Ada C 18, 96 Index to Authors 157 PAGE Sherman, Frank Dempster 24 Sill, Edward Rowland 27, 124 Smith, Robert 40 Stowe, Margaret 47, 133 Seneca 49 Savage, Minot J 49, 59, 67 Stebbins, Horatio 63 Story, W. W 68 Stone, Margaret 74 Spaulding, Bishop 88, 95, 149 Shakespeare 93, 95, 142 Swing, David 104 Shurtleff 136 Thoreau 27, 66, 137 Tennyson 28, 53 Thackeray 32 Tenney, E. P 47 Thompson, Elizabeth Ballard 65 Trine, Ralph Waldo 96 Thaxter, Celia 131 Temple, Sir William 138 Van Dyke, Henry 19, 40, 66, 86, 95 Van Ness, Thomas 39 Voltaire 131 Whitney, A. D. T 14, 61 Willard, Frances 24 Wagner, Charles 26, 59, 62, 85, 128, 132 Whitman, Walt 35, 69 Wilcox, Ella Wheeler 40, 58, 62, 70, 109 Wordsworth, William 40, 7® Wendte, Charles W 43 Wilson, R. E 44 Wood, Henry 44, 84, 90 White, Blanco 51 Whittier 61, 100, 113 Wheeler, Benjamin Ide 90 Webster, Daniel 111 158 Index to Authors PAGE Wiggin, Kate Douglas 116 Wells, Kate Gannett 116 Washington, George 138 Young 74 Zimmerman, N. W 42 Deacidified using the Bookkeeper process. 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