Winning His "W" - A Story of Freshman Year at College by Everett Titsworth Tomlinson
page 101 of 259 (38%)
page 101 of 259 (38%)
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their ability to solve these very things. I think it is Emerson who
says, 'It is as easy for a large man to do large things as it is for a small man to do small things.' And that is what I want for you, my boy, the ability to do the greater things." "But I'll never use Greek any. I wish I could take some other study in its place." "Just now it is not a question of Greek or something in its place. It is a question of facing and overcoming a difficulty or permitting it to overcome you. You must decide whether you will be a victor or a victim. There are just three things a man can do when he finds himself compelled to meet one of these difficult things that in one form or another come to everybody. He can turn and run from it, but that's the part of a coward. He can get around it, evade it somehow, but that's the part of the timid and palterer, and sooner or later the superficial man is found out. Then there is the best way, which is to meet and master it. Everybody has to decide which he will do, but do one of the three he must, and there is no escape." "You think I ought to hit it between the eyes?" "Yes, though I should not put it in quite that way," said his father with a smile. "I'd like to smash it! I don't like it! I'll never make a Greek scholar, and I detest Splinter. He's as dry as a bone or a Greek root! He hasn't any more juice than a piece of boiled basswood!" "That does not alter the matter. It won't change, and you've got to |
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