Quit Your Worrying! by George Wharton James
page 78 of 181 (43%)
page 78 of 181 (43%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
And it was, and they both laughed and shook hands and clapped each
other on the back and shook hands again. "What's your hurry?" said the man on the corner again. "I dun-no," said the man who was so cross because he'd lost his car. "Nothing much, I guess," and he laughed and the other man laughed and they shook hands again. And the last I saw of them they had started down the street right In the opposite direction from which the man in the hurry had started to go, and they weren't in a hurry at all. Do you know what I wished right then and there? I wished that every time I get into the senseless habit of rushing everywhere and tearing through everything as if it was my last day on earth and there wasn't a minute left to lose, somebody would stop me on the corner of whatever street of circumstance I may be starting to cross and say to me in friendly fashion: "What's the hurry?" What is the hurry, after all? Where are we all going? What for? What difference does it make whether I read my paper at 8 o'clock in the morning or at half-past 9? Will the world stop swinging in its orbit if I don't meet just so many people a day, write so many letters, hear so many lectures, skim through so many books? Of course if I'm earning my living I must work for it and work not only honestly but hard. But it seems to me that most of the terrific hurrying we do hasn't much to do with really |
|