Humanly Speaking by Samuel McChord Crothers
page 22 of 158 (13%)
page 22 of 158 (13%)
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"happy as kings"--that is, as kings in the fairy books. Perhaps "sure
enough" kings are not as happy as the fairy-book royalties, and perhaps the modern man is only experiencing the anxieties that belong to his new sovereignty over the world. There are tribes which become confused when they try to keep in mind more than three or four numbers. It is the same kind of confusion which comes when we try to look out for more than Number One. We mean well, but we have not the facilities for doing it easily. In fact, we are not so civilized as we sometimes think. For example, we have never carried out to its full extent the most important invention that mankind has ever made--money. Money is a device for simplifying life by providing a means of measuring our desires, and gratifying a number of them without confusion. Money is a measure, not of commodities, but of states of mind. The man in the street expresses a profound philosophy when he says, "I feel like thirty cents." That is all that "thirty cents" means. It is a certain amount of feeling. You see an article marked "$1.50." You pass by unmoved. The next day you see it on the bargain counter marked "98 cents," and you say, "Come to my arms," and carry it home. You did not feel like a dollar and a half toward it, but you did feel exactly like ninety-eight cents. It is because of this wonderful measure of value that we are able to deal with a multitude of diverse articles without mental confusion. I am asked to stop at the department store and discover in that vast |
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