登陆注册
26263400000035

第35章 CHAPTER X(1)

Going Up Life's Mountain

The Defeats that are Victories

HOW often we say, "I wish I had a million!" Perhaps it is a blessing that we have not the million. Perhaps it would make us lazy, selfish and unhappy. Perhaps we would go around giving it to other people to make them lazy, selfish and unhappy.

O, the problem is not how to get money, but how to get rid of money with the least injury to the race!

Perhaps getting the million would completely spoil us. Look at the wild cat and then look at the tabby cat. The wild cat supports itself and the tabby cat has its million. So the tabby cat has to be doctored by specialists.

If the burden were lifted from most of us we would go to wreck.

Necessity is the ballast in our life voyage.

When you hear the orator speak and you note the ease and power of his work, do you think of the years of struggle he spent in preparing? Do you ever think of the times that orator tried to speak when he failed and went back to his room in disgrace, mortified and broken-hearted? Thru it all there came the discipline, experience and grim resolve that made him succeed.

When you hear the musician and note the ease and grace of the performance, do you think of the years of struggle and overcoming necessary to produce that finish and grace? That is the story of the actor, the author and every other one of attainment.

Do you note that the tropics, the countries with the balmiest climates, produce the weakest peoples? Do you note that the conquering races are those that struggle with both heat and cold?

The tropics are the geographical Gussielands.

Do you note that people grow more in lean years than in fat years?

Crop failures and business stringencies are not calamities, but blessings in disguise. People go to the devil with full pockets; they turn to God when hunger hits them. "Is not this Babylon that I have builded?" says the Belshazzar of material prosperity as he drinks to his gods. Then must come the Needful and Needless Knocks handwriting upon the wall to save him.

You have to shoot many men's eyes out before they can see. You have to crack their heads before they can think, knock them down before they can stand, break their hearts before they can sing, and bankrupt them before they can be rich.

Do you remember that they had to lock John Bunyan in Bedford jail before he would write his immortal "Pilgrim's Progress"? It may be that some of us will have to go to jail to do our best work.

Do you remember that one musician became deaf before he wrote music the world will always hear? Do you remember that one author became blind before writing "Paradise Lost" the world will always read?

Do you remember that Saul of Tarsus would have never been remembered had he lived the life of luxury planned for him? He had to be blinded before he could see the way to real success. He had to be scourged and fettered to become the Apostle to the Gentiles.

He, too, had to be sent to prison to write his immortal messages to humanity. What throne-rooms are some prisons! And what prisons are some throne-rooms!

Do you not see all around you that success is ever the phoenix rising from the ashes of defeat?

Then, children, when you stand in the row of graduates on commencement day with your diplomas in your hands, and when your relatives and friends say, "Success to you!" I shall take your hand and say, "Defeat to you! And struggles to you! And bumps to you!"

For that is the only way to say, "Success to you!"

Go Up the Mountain O UNIVERSITY OF HARD KNOCKS, we learn to love you more with each passing year. We learn that you are cruel only to be kind. We learn that you are saving us from ourselves. But O, how most of us must be bumped to see this!

I know no better way to close this lecture than to tell you of a great bump that struck me one morning in Los Angeles. It seemed as tho twelve years of my life had dropped out of it, and had been lost.

Were you ever bumped so hard you were numb? I was numb. I wondered why I was living. I thought I had nothing more to live for. When a dog is wounded he crawls away alone to lick his wounds. I felt like the wounded dog. I wanted to crawl away to lick my wounds.

That is why I climbed Mount Lowe that day. I wanted to get alone.

It is a wonderful experience to climb Mount Lowe. The tourists go up half a mile into Rubio Canyon, to the engineering miracle, the triangular car that hoists them out of the hungry chasm thirty-five hundred feet up the side of a granite cliff, to the top of Echo Mountain.

Here they find that Echo Mountain is but a shelf on the side of Mount Lowe. Here they take an electric car that winds five miles on towards the sky. There is hardly a straight rail in the track.

Every minute a new thrill, and no two thrills alike. Five miles of winding and squirming, twisting and ducking, dodging and summersaulting.

There are places where the tourist wants to grasp his seat and lift. There is a wooden shelf nailed to the side of the perpendicular rockwall where his life depends upon the honesty of the man who drove the nails. He may wonder if the man was working by the day or by the job!

He looks over the edge of the shelf downward, and then turns to the other side to look at the face of the cliff they are hugging, and discovers there is no place to resign!

The car is five thousand feet high where it stops on that last shelf, Alpine Tavern. One cannot ride farther upward. This is not the summit, but just where science surrenders. There is a little trail that winds upward from Alpine Tavern to the summit. It is three miles long and rises eleven hundred feet.

To go up that last eleven hundred feet and stand upon the flat rock at the summit of Mount Lowe is to get a picture so wonderful it cannot be described with this poor human vocabulary. It must be lived. On a pure, clear day one looks down this sixty-one hundred feet, more than a mile, into the orange belt of Southern California.

It spreads out below in one great mosaic of turquoise and amber and emerald, where the miles seem like inches, and where his field-glass sweeps one panoramic picture of a hundred miles or more.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 不良天师

    不良天师

    袁布衣,一个长相平凡的十八岁少年,生情小气,睚眦必报,爱财如命,最大的嗜好抢劫妖怪,贪生怕死,信奉死道友不死贫道,生平名言“宁做小人,不做君子。”其为人之卑鄙被世人称之为不良天师,其行为之无耻,被妖怪称之为比妖怪还邪恶的人类。
  • 秦殿

    秦殿

    吾自一身玄袍,看得锦色无双。任他人嬉笑怒骂,踏尘逍遥人间上!
  • 兵临城下

    兵临城下

    在珍珠港事件之后,中国远征军展开反攻之前,正面战场上,中国军队都是采取守势。这时期,具有影响的保卫战,有石牌保卫战、常德保卫战、衡阳保卫战、桂林保卫战。每一场保卫战都打得惨烈悲壮,除了石牌保卫战外,其余的保卫战都失败了。石牌保卫战,是鄂西会战的一部分,日军的企图是沿着长江水路,溯流而上,从宜昌进入重庆。石牌村位于宜昌市夷陵区,此处是长江大拐弯,地势异常险要。中国军队坚守石牌村,硬生生地斩断了日军伸向重庆的一只脚爪,保证了重庆的安全。此后,日军彻底放弃了沿着水路深入大西南的梦想。常德保卫战,是常德会战的一部分,日军的目的……
  • 妃王

    妃王

    她龙黑戒星未来妃后,却穿到这个鸟不生蛋的人间。虽然她长得美了点,身材好了点,各方面都优秀了一点。可是这男人是怎么回事,凭着长得帅了点,家里富了点,竟不许她回黑戒星!丫的就算你是极品男人,再敢拦着本妃后,杀无赦!
  • 栖凤传之舞刀御世

    栖凤传之舞刀御世

    从小身负封印,受尽嘲讽,但他隐忍苟活,隐藏实力,只为有朝一日一鸣惊人,不料错过良机却是一个崭新的开始,凭借封印的和自身修为励志开创一片新天地。他做了他从未做过的事情——争霸天下,得到了从未得到的力量——君临天下。五把刀,四种人,一种鬼,一段神话,演绎一段史实之歌。
  • 绝色狂妃:凤傲九天

    绝色狂妃:凤傲九天

    21世纪杀手之王穿越到废柴小姐身上,呵,笑话,这苍天让我再来一次便是为了让我掀起另一场腥风血雨;从我今日来到你身体中,我就是你,你就是我,欺负你便是欺负我夜南蕴,欺负我夜南蕴我便置那人于万劫不复之地。“本王不想管什么天下、什么皇位,本王只想要她一人,她若是真的殒命,本王定要杀了今日所有害她之人,本王不介意将人间化作血池,用所有人的命来祭奠她。”
  • 仙道本源

    仙道本源

    仙道乃情道。情至深处,无畏生死。无畏生死,生便是死,死即是生。且看仙道本源,带你走进万象缤纷的修仙世界。
  • 旧爱难回

    旧爱难回

    五年前,、他出国,她被无端的抛弃。五年后,闺蜜挽着他,他抱着女儿,从她眼前一笑而过。
  • 腹黑皇上来逼婚:女人我只想宠你

    腹黑皇上来逼婚:女人我只想宠你

    【全文完】“忠心于朕,朕许你六宫无妃!”高位上的他眼眸里隐匿的是霸道的邪魅。“天堂地狱,本王也要与你同在!”堂堂一国的王爷,竟然霸道的将已为皇妃的她揉进怀里。“主人,我活着,你活着;我死了,你也得活着!”有着琥珀色眼眸的温柔男子深情款款的望着她。当绝情冷血的杀手掉入一群美男的陷阱里,究竟是她成为了别人的棋子,还是别人臣服于她的石榴裙下?
  • 司马天下

    司马天下

    古代中国改朝换代的根本性内幕、情由,也许可以被浓缩到晋朝这一百多年里。从公元260年司马昭弑杀魏主“受禅”,到420年刘裕逼东晋恭帝“禅位”,从曹魏到两晋,从司马到刘宋,160年的弑篡轮回,折射了封建中国2000余年的踽踽蚁行。王族与皇族、奸佞与贤良、权谋与血腥、诡异与清朗,司马家族统御天下的历史遗痕及其文化逻辑,被这部精彩纷呈的小说生动可感、淋漓尽致地展现出来……