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Page 59 text:
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38 SOUTHS IDE ECHOES We must go ever onward. The world has no place for the sluggard, and no place for the one who will take a backward step, or even for the one who will be contented to stand still. We rise to higher things by things that are beneath our feet. We are lifted up by difficulties which we successfully over- come. Difficulties may seem to thwart us, but they give us great power to resist and push on. An old motto says, “Ad astra per aspera,” — “To the stars through difficulties.” On- ward and upward should be our aim without even looking back. In our daily life the little things count. A deed of kind- ness, however small it may be, may help some poor weary traveler. Even a few kind words may cheer some aching heart. A cup of cool water to the thirsty, a crumb of bread to the perishing, and a penny to the poor ! Let us always carry a bright sunny smile on our face, and have a kind word to greet our friends. W e must take time to be pleasant. The small courtesies which we often omit because they are small, will some day look larger to us than the wealth which we covet, or the fame for which we struggle. The poet says : “Heaven is not gained at a single bound, But we build a ladder by which we rise, From the lowly earth, to the vaulted skies And mount to it’s summit round by round.” Thus the greatest success is achieved. Be successful. The world always admires success, which means advance- ment and no step backward. Everyone admires the successful man. Why? Because he is ever advancing. We achieve success in various ways. But we must first know how to meet every circumstance of life without taking any backward steps. Let us consider the Christian life. A Christian has many temptations. They have more, it seems, than one who is not a Christian, for the Christian tries to resist many temptations,
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Page 58 text:
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Jgulla Uestigia Bctrorsum Progress is the keynote of our age. Nature and man cry out to us on every side, “No steps backward.” This is our motto. Advancement is being made rapidly in every condition and circumstance of life. Science in its knowledge has in- creased more than a hundred-fold. The nineteenth century was ushered in by the candle light, and the twentieth century by the electric light. Art and literature have progressed rapidly. While the old masters — geniuses who, here and there, dot the world’s history in art and literature — may be lacking, still we can note its progress ever onward, and that to-day con- ditions are in advance of what they were in previous periods. Railroads are a good sign of our progress. The sailing vessel of the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries has given way to the palatial steamer of to-day. Small huts and hovels have given way to larger and more commodious houses. In- stances of continued progress might be multiplied. The world seemed at a standstill in the Dark Ages, but it became awak- ened. New impulses and ideas arose to go ever onward, in- creasing our knowledge and promoting progress. The world since then has taken no backward steps. It is ever on the alert for better and higher things. Nowhere is this progress better shown than in the realm of physics and chemistry. Galileo suffered almost bodily harm for performing some ex- periments in physics, which the ignorant people of his day be- lieved to be connected with evil arts. In chemistry wonderful steps have been made, until we look upon the alchemist and his works as a fairy story of the far distant past. The alchemist tried to turn the baser metals into gold; the modern chemist tries to discover the laws of nature and her elements.
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Page 60 text:
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SOUTHS IDE ECHOES 39 when the one who is not a Christian would never stop to think about it. We need always be up and doing something for the ad- vancement of some good cause. “To reach the port of heaven, we must sail sometimes with the wind, and sometimes against it, but we must sail and not drift nor lie at anchor.” We have some men and women in our community who have made it their life’s aim to take no backward steps. They have always taken an active part in all Christian work, and are always ready to do a deed of kindness. They have always tried to help those around them to obtain better and higher things. Take, for example, Lawrence and Columbus. After Lawrence was mortally wounded, as he was borne below, he exclaimed : “Don’t give up the ship.” Columbus’s greatest desire was to discover the new country, or a passage to India. He took no backward steps. He went to sea at the age of fourteen years. He was continually engaged in voyages. He had many diffi- culties in setting out, but by the aid of Queen Isabella he finally obtained three vessels and ninety men. He sailed from Palos August 3rd, 1492. The weeks passed so drearily by, that the sailors became very much discouraged and wanted to turn back, but Columbus said, “No steps backwards,” so they still pressed on. After many weeks of hardships and discourage- ment, Columbus began to notice green branches floating about on the water, and birds flying about in the air. At two o’clock in the morning of October nth a shout from the Pinta an- nounced the discovery of land. They were all very glad to think they had resisted all temptations to give up, and had gained great success. We can almost see Columbus now as he stood on the deck with his pale face turned toward the west, and longing for the sight of land. Joaquin Miller has written a beautiful poem concerning this part of the admiral’s life. He says in part :
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