A Woman of the World - Her Counsel to Other People's Sons and Daughters by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
page 64 of 195 (32%)
page 64 of 195 (32%)
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Live up to your divine inheritance, my dear girl. Make the world better for your presence in it, and bear your sorrow with that resignation and philosophy which all human beings must cultivate if they do not wish to become weak repiners when they face the sorrows of life. Look the world squarely in the eyes, and feel no shame. Your mother's marriage to the man she detested, and the birth of children conceived in loathing, were acts which in my mind called for more shame on her part than your own birth. Both were misfortunes for her, since only by living an orderly, controlled, and lawful life can any human being find happiness or self-respect in the world. But when we come to the close analysis of motives and impulses, many an act the world condemns is far less reprehensible than other acts which meet its loud acclaim. You have received from the vast spiritual realms about us your rarely beautiful qualities. Go forth and give them to humanity. Be strong, be good, be brave, be happy. No one and nothing can harm you but your own mind. The world, as we encounter it, is but an echo of our own strong convictions. Respect yourself absolutely, believe in yourself absolutely, and the world will respect you and believe in you. Say to yourself every hour, "I am God's divine creature," and no one |
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