Economy of Time.
"Full many a gem, of purest ray
serene,
The dark unfathomed caves of ocean
bear;
Full many a flower is born to blush
unseen,
And waste its sweetness on the desert
air."
How many young men for whom nature has done so much, "blush unseen," and
waste their ability. Franklin said, "Dost thou love life? Then do not squander
time, for that is the stuff life is made of." We have seen how Franklin used his
time. Born the son of a soap-boiler, lived to become one of our most noted
philosophers, died worth thousands. Advice from such[494] men carries conviction, for we
cannot but feel that our chances are fully equal to what theirs were.
Gladstone, England's most noted Premier, once said, "Believe me when I tell
you that thrift of time will repay you in after-life with usury, but the waste
of it will make you dwindle away until you fairly sink out of existence,
unknown, unmourned." Thurlow Weed was so poor in boyhood that he was of
necessity glad to use pieces of carpet to cover his all but freezing feet; thus
shod he walked two miles to borrow a history of the French revolution, which he
mastered stretched prone before the sap-fire, while watching the kettles of sap
transformed to maple sugar. Thus was it that he laid the foundation of his
education, which in after years enabled him to sway such mighty power at Albany;
known as the "king maker."
Elihu Burritt, a child of poverty, the son of a poor farmer, the youngest of
ten children. He was apprenticed at eighteen to a blacksmith. He wanted to
become a scholar and bought some Greek and Latin works, carrying them in his
pocket and studying as he worked at the anvil. From these he went to Spanish,
Italian and French. He always had his book near him and improved every spare
moment. He studied seven languages in one single year. Then he taught school one
year, but his health failing, he went into the grocery business. Soon what money
he had was swept away by losses.
Here we see him at twenty-seven, life seemingly a failure. Alas! how many
would have given up. He left New Britain, his native town, walked to Boston, and
from there to Worcester, where he once more engaged himself at his trade. His
failure in business turns his[495]
attention once more to study. He now is convinced as to the proper course to
pursue, his aim is fixed, and he now sets himself strenuously about the
accomplishment of his purpose. At thirty years of age he is master of every
language of Europe, and is turning his attention to those of Asia, such as
Hebrew, Syriac, Chaldaic. He is offered by a wealthy gentleman a course in
Harvard University, but prefers to work with his hands while he studies.
He now begins to lecture, and everybody is eager to hear the learned
blacksmith. After a very successful tour he returns to the anvil. After this he
visits Europe, becomes the warm friend of John Bright and other eminent men;
writes books, lectures, edits newspapers, builds a church and holds meetings
himself. He said: "It is not genius that wins, but hard work and a pure life."
He chose the best associates only, believing that a boy's companions have much
to do with his success in life. At sixty-eight he died, honored by two
hemispheres.
If our readers want further proof as to the result of improving spare
moments, let them study the lives of such men as [Stephen Arnold] Douglass, Lincoln, Grant,
Garfield, Blaine, Cleveland, and others too numerous to mention, and they will
find that they were reared in the lower walks of life, but by using every
available minute they have been enabled to rise to influence and usefulness. By
this means they have worked the very odds and ends of time, into results of the
greatest value. An hour every day, for ten years, will transform any one of ordinary ability from ignorance to learning.
Think of it. One hour could be easily improved each evening, counting three
hundred week days to a year; in ten years you have spent three thousand
golden[496]
hours. If directed toward some specific end, think what it would accomplish.
Then there are the Sundays devoted to religious knowledge. One of the first
things to be learned by him who would succeed, is Economy of
time. Lost wealth can be replaced by industry; lost health by hygiene;
but lost time is gone forever.
The most frequent excuse one hears is: "I have no time." They cheat
themselves with the delusion that they would like to do this or that, but
cannot as they have no leisure. Dear reader, did you ever think that the more a
person has to do, the more they feel they can do? Look at the men in our own
community who have done the most for mankind; are they the wealthy, whose only
duty seems to be to kill time? No. Almost universally they are the over-worked
class who seem already burdened with cares. These are the men who find time to
preside at public meetings, and to serve on committees.
It is easier for an over-worked man to do a little more than for a lazy one
to get up steam. A light stroke will keep a hoop in motion, but it takes a smart
blow to start it. The busy man succeeds: While others are yawning and
stretching, getting their eyes open, he will see the opportunity and improve it.
Complain not that you have no leisure. Rather be thankful that you are not
cursed with it. Yes, curse it is nine times out of ten. Think of the young man
going to some vile place of amusement to kill time, then think of that young man
utilizing that hour every night in the acquisition of knowledge which will fit
him for life's journey. Think also of the money he will save. Leisure is too
often like a two-edged sword; it cuts both ways.[497]