Common Sense, How to Exercise It by Mme. Blanchard Yoritomo-Tashi
page 72 of 151 (47%)
page 72 of 151 (47%)
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plantation, preferred to attribute the defect to the site itself, rather
than to their lack of precaution. "Both of them were suffering from a hurtful exaggeration, but each one explained it in a way arbitrarily exclusive. "He of the north made out that the sun never shone on the summit of Yung-Tshi, and the inhabitant of the south affirmed that the health-giving shade was unknown there." This is why it is indispensable to the successful resolution of the thousand and one problems of daily life, both those whose sole importance is derived from their multiplicity and those whose seriousness justly demands our attention, to employ the very simple method which prescribes that we place ourselves mentally in the position and circumstances of the person with whom we are discussing. If each one of the inhabitants of Yung-Tshi had followed this precept, instead of declaring that the hill never received the sun or that shade never fell upon it, they would each one have thought for himself. "At what conclusions should I arrive, if I had planted my trees on the opposite side?" From the reasoning which would have ensued, the following truth would most certainly have been revealed. "If I were in the other man's place, I should certainly think as he does." |
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