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<p class='c000'><b>Transcriber’s Note:</b></p>
<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
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<div>
<h1 class='c001'>THE<br/> PRIVILEGE OF PAIN</h1></div>
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<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div>BY</div>
<div class='c003'><span class='xlarge'>MRS. LEO EVERETT</span></div>
<div class='c002'><span class='small'>INTRODUCTION</span></div>
<div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
<div>KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN</div>
</div></div>
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<div><span class='large'>BOSTON</span></div>
<div><span class='xlarge'>SMALL, MAYNARD & COMPANY</span></div>
<div><span class='large'>PUBLISHERS</span></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div>Copyright, 1920,</div>
<div><span class='sc'>By</span> SMALL, MAYNARD & COMPANY</div>
<div>(INCORPORATED)</div>
</div></div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div>TO MY COUSIN</div>
<div class='c003'>BELLE HUNNEWELL</div>
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<div>THE PRIVILEGE OF PAIN</div>
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</div>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>
<h2 class='c005'>INTRODUCTION</h2></div>
<p class='c006'>A very suggestive and intriguing title
is “<cite>The Privilege of Pain</cite>.” Those who
know a good deal about the subject will
doubtless raise the eyebrow of incredulity,
while those who have lived in blissful
ignorance will be curious if not wholly
sympathetic. When I first heard the essay
(since developed into this book) read
before an audience of very thoughtful and
discriminating women, I fancied, although
it awakened the liveliest interest in all
present, that there was not entire unanimity
as to the essayist’s point of view.
Several invalids and semi-invalids wore an
expression of modest pride in the eloquent
plea that physical limitations had not succeeded
in stemming the tide of mental and
spiritual achievement in the long history
of the world’s progress. Robust ladies,
equal to eight hours’ work, and if advisable,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>eight hours’ play, out of the twenty-four,
looked a trifle aggrieved, as if the
gift of perfect health had been underrated,
and the laurels that had always surmounted
their shining hair and glowing
faces might be wrested from them and
placed on paler brows. They had no wish
to shorten the list of the essayist’s heroes,
(Heaven forbid!) but they evidently
wished to retire to their private libraries
and compile a roll of honor from the
merely healthy.</p>
<p class='c007'>However there was no acrimony in the
discussion that followed the reading of the
paper nor any desire to withhold honor
where honor was so gloriously due.</p>
<p class='c007'>Those who disbelieved in the validity
of pain; those who were convinced that
mind is not only superior to, but able to
win complete triumph over matter; those
who felt that laying hold of the Great
Source of Healing and Power would enable
them not only to deny but to defy
pain, these naturally were not completely
in accord with the writer.</p>
<p class='c007'>Myself, I have always thought that the
happy waking after dreamless sleep; the
exultation in the new day and its appointed
task; the sense of vigor and ability to do
<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>whatever opportunity offered; the feeling
that one could “run and not be weary,
could walk and not faint”—that these
were the most precious things that the
gods could vouchsafe to mankind,—and
yet!—What of the latent powers that
wake into life when we look into “the
bright face of danger”? Our bodies are
not commonly the temples that God intended
them to be, and yet often an unquenchable
fire burns within; an inner flame
that incites to effort and achievement,
turns the timid slave into the happy warrior.
What if the strength born of overcoming
should rescue dormant powers
equal to those that exist where there is no
effort save that engendered by abounding
vitality? After all life is an obstacle race
to most of us. Who knows whether the
horse could make a spectacular jump had
he not often been confronted by bar, gate,
hurdle and hedge? I wonder how many
great things have been carved, painted,
written, conceived, invented, where the
creative human being has never suffered,
but has been sheltered, lapped in ease, the
burden lifted from his shoulders? I wonder
if the eye that is seldom wet with tears
is ever truly capable of the highest vision?</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>I think that my own unregenerate
watchword would be: “All for health and
the world well lost!” so I am by no means
a special pleader, even yet, for the “privilege
of pain”; but Mrs. Everett’s enthusiasm
and the ardor of her conviction compels
a new and more sympathetic understanding
of her thesis.</p>
<p class='c007'>I have more often seen spiritual than
intellectual exaltation follow pain, but both
were present in one woman, half-poet,
half-saint, whose verses were written in
intense suffering, as indeed were most of
W. E. Henley’s.</p>
<p class='c007'>With closed eyes and pale lips she once
quoted to me:</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>“Angel of Pain! I think thy face</div>
<div class='line'>Will be in all the Heavenly Place</div>
<div class='line'>The earliest face that I shall see</div>
<div class='line'>And swiftest face to smile on me!”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>“How is it possible for you to say it?”
I asked brokenly.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Because,” she answered, “all dreams
and all visions have come to me, as well as
all that I know of earth and heaven,
through pain. It opens windows in what
would otherwise be blank walls!”</p>
<p class='c007'>The blind, deaf, dumb, maimed, crippled
<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>(if so be it the soul is strong) seem
to develop a splendid fighting spirit unknown
to those who, apparently, have complete
command of all their powers. Take
one sense away and the others spring, full-armored,
into more active service. Rob
them of a right hand and the underrated
left becomes doubly skilful. These are
soldiers in the “army with banners,” and
should be led and followed by acclaiming
hosts.</p>
<p class='c007'>I have known hundreds of invalids more
or less saintly, but I have had personal
friendship with only two completely joyous,
triumphant ones,—Robert Louis
Stevenson and Helen Keller. If “one
with God is a majority,” then two such
conquering human creatures as these furnish
inspiration for our generation, and
Mrs. Everett in her eager search has
found hundreds of similar examples. For
that reason I call this a unique, gallant,
courageous, helpful little book, likely to
give pluck and spirit to many readers
handicapped by various ills! There is
nothing patient, meek, or resigned in its
pages; no air of being crushed-but-still-smiling;
it simply radiates a plucky, chin-in-the-air
atmosphere calculated to make
<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>an aching hand pick up its pen, brush,
lump of clay or shovel and go to work; not
grimly and doggedly, with lips set, but
glowing in triumph over the secret adversary.</p>
<p class='c007'>The magnificent company marshalled
by Mrs. Everett has an exhilarating effect
upon the hearer or reader. As I listened
to instance after instance of weakness
gloriously transmuted into strength; of
personal grief and sorrow turned into joy
for the whole world; of vast knowledge,
spiritual and intellectual, amassed bit by
bit in the very grip of physical suffering, I
remembered the poetic pronouncement in
Revelation.</p>
<p class='c007'>“He that hath an ear let him hear what
the Spirit saith unto the churches; To him
that overcometh will I give to eat of the
tree of life which is in the midst of the
paradise of God.”</p>
<div class='c009'><span class='sc'>Kate Douglas Wiggin</span></div>
<div class='lg-container-l'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>New York, May, 1920.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>
<h2 class='c005'>I<br/> <span class='large'>HEALTH AND STRENGTH</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Several years ago one of the New
York papers published an interview with
a well-known physician, on the advisability
of women being drafted for war. He expressed
himself in favor of their receiving
military training, although, he casually remarked,
“a good many would undoubtedly
perish. But,” he argued, “if we blot out
the individual equation and judge from the
standpoint of race, would their perishing
be regrettable?” He thinks not. “For,
objectors must remember,” he continues,
“that mental and moral man gets his
strength and efficiency only from the physical man.
A sick man, just as a sick race,
is the one that goes to the wall.”</p>
<p class='c007'>This outrageous statement was published
at the very height of the world war,
when men without arms, legs, eyes, men
permanently shattered in health, men who
will hide all their lives behind masks, were
<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>crawling home in hordes. And the
worst of it is, that practically everybody
agrees with his verdict.</p>
<p class='c007'>We offer these heroes, who have sacrificed
their splendid young bodies on the
altar of humanity, a few fine phrases about
glory and honor, yet are smugly content
to allow them to be crushed by our degrading
conviction that the heights of achievement
are no longer for them.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now if a sick race could exist at all, it
might go to the wall as the doctor prophesies;
but when he narrows his contention to
the individual, when he declares that “a
sick man goes to the wall,” he is venturing
a statement which only a surprising ignorance
can excuse.</p>
<p class='c007'>For what is more surprising than for
an educated man, a physician, to put forward
a claim which can be refuted by anyone
who has even a superficial knowledge
of the past? Every one I have questioned
has been able to recall at least one
invalid who has attained celebrity. For
instance, all but the unlettered are familiar
with the fact that both Keats and Robert
Louis Stevenson were diseased.</p>
<p class='c007'>The vast majority, however, even of
cultivated people, do not seem to realize
<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>what an extraordinarily large percentage
of the greatest men and women have been
physically handicapped. It is the joyous
mission of this book to prove to all invalids,
but more especially to those living
victims of the Great War, that Keats and
Stevenson, far from representing isolated
instances of achievement despite bodily infirmities,
are but members of a gallant
army, some of whom have reached even
greater heights in spite of more painful
disabilities.</p>
<p class='c007'>The relation of insanity to genius has
not escaped the notice of scholars, who
have already exhaustively dealt with it. I
intend therefore to confine myself to those
giants of the past who have suffered either
from disease, mutilation or constitutional
debility. If I have cited a few who have
been afflicted with attacks of insanity, I
have selected only those whose best work
was done after recovering from such
seizures, and have carefully excluded all
who have had to pay with their intellects
the price of a too stupendous vision. I
wish furthermore to impress upon you that
of all the illustrious men and women I shall
enumerate there is not one whose fullest
development was not coincident with ill-health,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>or reached after joining the ranks
of the physically unfit.</p>
<p class='c007'>If we scrutinize more closely this heterogeneous
assemblage, we shall discover
that it is composed of representatives of
the most varied forms of human endeavor,—Saint
and philosopher, poet and scientist,
author and statesman, musician and
artist, and, what is really astonishing, some
of the greatest soldiers and one, at least,
of the greatest sailors are among them.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>
<h2 class='c005'>II<br/> <span class='large'>SOLDIERS AND A SAILOR</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Of all vocations, the profession of arms
is the one for which it might be supposed
that a perfect physique is the most essential.</p>
<p class='c007'>Yet Alexander, Cæsar, Alfred the
Great, John of Bohemia, Torstensson, Le
Grand Condé and his great rival Turenne,
Luxembourg, Napoleon, General
Wolfe and finally Lord Nelson are proofs
to die contrary.</p>
<p class='c007'>Alexander the Great, singular even
among men of action for the splendor of
his imagination, was an epileptic. So also
was Julius Cæsar. The latter was often
attacked by his malady on the very field
of battle.</p>
<p class='c007'>Alfred, so justly called “the Great,”
was stricken in his twentieth year by a
mysterious disease which caused him intense
pain and from which he was never
afterwards free. The extent and diversity
<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>of his activities are, however, almost
incredible. He excelled as a soldier, politician
and administrator. He was also a
scholar, and the revival of learning which
took place under his reign was due solely
to his efforts.</p>
<p class='c007'>King John of Bohemia stands out
as the most romantic and chivalrous
figure of the Middle Ages. He dazzled
his contemporaries by his exploits
and his reputation for valor
has never been exceeded. He was overtaken
by blindness at the age of forty-three,
but, strapped to his horse, continued
to lead his armies to battle. For six years
this blind hero successfully resisted all the
attacks of the Emperor Louis and his
allies. His heroic death at the battle of
Creçy was a fitting conclusion to a gallant
life. According to Camden, the ostrich
feathers and the motto “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Ich dien</span>,” borne
ever since by the Prince of Wales, originally
formed the crest of King John, and
were first assumed by the Black Prince as
a token of the admiration with which his
antagonist inspired him.</p>
<p class='c007'>Condé, known to history as “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Grand
Condé</span>,” was so delicate in childhood that
he was not expected to reach maturity, and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>his nervous system was “at no time to be
trifled with.” During his innumerable
campaigns he was a constant martyr to
fevers and other maladies, but these seldom
interfered with his untiring energy or
his capacity for work. He had also the
power of arousing the enthusiasm of his
followers. They said of him: “In the
midst of misfortune Condé always maintains
the character of a hero.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Turenne is one of the captains whose
campaigns Napoleon recommended all
soldiers to “read and re-read.” Physical
infirmities and an impediment in his
speech hampered his career in youth.
However, by devoting himself to bodily
exercises, he succeeded in a measure in
overcoming his weaknesses, but to the end
he never possessed a normal physique.</p>
<p class='c007'>Count Torstensson, the brilliant Swedish
field-marshal, celebrated after Gustavus
Adolphus as the hero of the Thirty
Years’ War, and compared to Napoleon
for the rapidity with which he was able to
move his troops, had frequently to lead
his army from a litter, as his infirmities
would not permit him to mount a horse.
He is considered by experts to have been a
greater man than his opponent, Tilly, although
<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>the latter, strangely enough, has a
more widespread reputation.</p>
<p class='c007'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">A propos</span> Luxembourg and William III
(although the latter should be included
among the statesmen), I will quote a passage
from Macaulay. “In such an age
(1694) bodily vigor is the most indispensable
qualification for a warrior. At
the battle of Landon two poor, sickly beings,
who, in a rude state of society, would
have been considered too puny to bear part
in combats, were the souls of two great
armies.” And further on: “It is probable
that the two feeblest in body among
the hundred and twenty thousand soldiers
that fought at Neerwinden were the hunch-backed
dwarf (Luxembourg) who urged
forward the fiery onset of France, and the
asthmatic skeleton (William III) who
covered the slow retreat of England.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Napoleon was an epileptic and Lord
Nelson, at the height of his efficiency, had
lost an arm and an eye and what is even
more remarkable was, so it is said, sick
every time he went to sea or whenever the
weather was exceptionally rough.</p>
<p class='c007'>General Wolfe, although only thirty-two
years old, was already a man of shattered
<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>health when he undertook his famous
expedition against Quebec. In spite of
disheartening failures and the torture of
an internal malady, he finally won the decisive
victory which wrested Quebec from
the French. During the battle he was
twice wounded but refused to leave the
field until a third bullet pierced his lung.
He survived only long enough to give a
final order for cutting off the retreat and
breathed his last murmuring: “Now, God
be praised, I will die in peace.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Let us consider for a moment what
made these men pre-eminent. It was not
courage. Cæsar and Napoleon were no
braver than thousands of their followers.
Nor was it the capacity for endurance.
What then was the secret of their power?
I answer unhesitatingly,—imagination.
No leader has been without it and the
greatest leaders are the men who have had
it to a superlative degree. Napoleon
recognized its mysterious sway, for it was
he who said: “Imagination rules the
world.” Now, imagination is the very
quality we find most frequently allied to
ill-health.</p>
<p class='c007'>I beg to call to your attention that with
<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>the exception of <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">le grand Condé</span> and
possibly Napoleon, not one of these men
would have passed his “medical.”</p>
<p class='c007'>It is certainly curious that the profession
of arms, the most physically exacting of
all professions, is the only one whose
greatest examples have without exception
been tainted with disease.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>
<h2 class='c005'>III<br/> <span class='large'>ILL-HEALTH AND ITS RELATION TO GENIUS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>“The physical conditions which accompany
and affect what we call genius
are obscure, and have hitherto attracted
little but empirical notice. It is impossible
not to see that absolutely normal man
or woman, as we describe normality, is
very rarely indeed an inventor, or a seer,
or even a person of remarkable mental energy.
The bulk of what are called entirely
‘healthy’ people add nothing to the
sum of human achievement, and it is not
the average navvy who makes a Darwin
nor a typical daughter of the plough who
develops into an Elizabeth Barrett Browning....
The more closely we study, with
extremely slender resources of evidence, the
lives of great men of imagination and action
since the beginning of the world, the
more clearly we ought to recognize that a
reduction of all types to one stolid uniformity
<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>of what is called ‘health’ would
have the effect of depriving humanity of
precisely those individuals who have added
most to the beauty and variety of human
existence.... When the physical conditions
of men of the highest celebrity in
the past are touched upon, it is usual to pass
them over with indifference, or else to account
for them as the result of disease.
The peculiarities of Pascal, or of Pope, or
of Michelangelo are either denied, or it
is presumed that they were the result of
purely morbid factors against which their
genius, their rectitude, or their common
sense more or less successfully contended.
It is admitted that Tasso had a hypersensitive
constitution, which cruelty tortured
into melancholia, but it is taken for
granted that he would have been a greater
poet, if he had taken plenty of out-door
exercise.”</p>
<p class='c007'>These are the conclusions of Mr. Edmund
Gosse, and they are even more radical
than mine. It is, however, true that
in sickness the perceptions, physical, mental
and spiritual, become supernormally
acute, and this extreme sensitiveness to
impression is one of the attributes of
genius. It follows, therefore, that imagination
<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>is stimulated by suffering, but not
that suffering creates genius or is even
inseparably allied to it.</p>
<p class='c007'>The most universal concomitant of
genius is the power of concentration and
there is nothing that so fosters that quality
as ill-health. By forcing us to limit our
activities, our human contacts, it automatically
eliminates everything that is not
the basic essential of each individual.</p>
<p class='c007'>We may dream of an absolutely balanced
man, one equally supreme in mind,
body, and spirit, but I do not believe it
possible for such a being to exist. It
seems to be a law that we must purchase
and develop one faculty at the expense of
another. Only by excessive application to
one restricted form of activity can we excel
in it. Genius is not eccentric, it is concentric.
The all-round man is the mediocre
man. To perfect even a rose, you
must mutilate the bush.</p>
<p class='c007'>Of all the great men of imagination
Leonardo da Vinci and Goethe seem to
have been the most superabundantly
healthy. This was certainly true of Leonardo
in his youth, but I cannot help feeling
that when he painted Mona Lisa’s
smile, Pain, the great teacher, was not unknown
<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>to him. However, I may be mistaken,
and if so, he is the most complete
man in the whole history of art, science or
literature, for he enjoyed the advantages
of health without forfeiting the hypersensitiveness
of suffering.</p>
<p class='c007'>There is no doubt, however, about Goethe.
He kept his splendid physique to the
last, and Goethe was unquestionably a very
great man. His gigantic intellect is curiously
stimulating. No one else of whom
I know, with the exception of Leonardo,
has had such a multiple outlook on life.
That amazing eye of his dissected as well
as comprehended all that it rested upon,
and it rested upon almost everything tangible.
But the very universality of Goethe’s
genius is one of its limitations. He gives
so much, and yet—there it is, he knows
no “half-lights.” He never leads one to
those shadowy regions where the soul is in
travail; he knows nothing of that mysterious
tract which lies beyond the last outpost
of the intellect. His imagination
even in its wildest flights is curiously earthbound.
I feel that he was too healthy.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>
<h2 class='c005'>IV<br/> <span class='large'>AMONG THE POETS<br/> “THEY LEARN IN SUFFERING WHAT THEY TEACH IN SONG”</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Horace was a man of feeble health;
Milton was blind; Pope deformed.
George Herbert, to whom we owe so many
of our most beautiful hymns and anthems,
was consumptive. John Donne had an
enormous influence on English literature,
although, according to Mr. Edmund
Gosse, his influence was mostly malign.
He was praised by Dryden, paraphrased
by Pope, and then completely forgotten
for a century. His versification is often
harsh, but “behind that fantastic garb of
language there is an earnest and vigorous
mind, and imagination that harbors fire
within its cloudy folds and an insight into
the mysteries of spiritual life which is often
startling. Donne excels in brief flashes of
wit and beauty, and in sudden, daring
<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>phrases that have the full perfume of poetry
in them.” Izaak Walton was his admiring
friend and first biographer. Donne
was constantly ill during the years of his
greatest creative activity, yet this is what
he once said, speaking of his illnesses:
“The advantage you and my other friends
have by my frequent fevers is that I am so
much the oftener at the gate of heaven;
and, by the solitude and close imprisonment
they reduce me to, I am so much the
oftener at my prayers, in which you and
my other dear friends are not forgotten.”</p>
<p class='c007'>It was owing to ill-health that Coleridge
first took opium under the guise of a
patent medicine.</p>
<p class='c007'>William Cowper early showed a tendency
to melancholia, but it was not until
he was almost thirty that the prospects of
having to appear at the bar of the House
of Lords, preliminary to taking up the
position of clerk—a mere formality—drove
him completely insane. He attempted
suicide and was sent to an asylum
where he spent eighteen months. At the
age of forty-two he had another attack
from which it took him almost three years
to recover completely. Nevertheless we
find him three years later making his first
<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>appearance as an author with “Olney
Hymns,” written in conjunction with a
friend. This was followed by a collection
of poems, which was badly received, one
critic declaring that “Mr. Cowper was
certainly a good, pious man, but without
one spark of poetic fire.” It was not until
1785 when he was already fifty-four years
old and had been twice declared insane
that he published the book that was to
make him famous. It is entitled: “The
Task, Tircinium or a Review of Schools,
and the History of John Gilpin.” Cowper
is among the poets who are epoch-makers.
“He brought a new spirit into
English verse. With him begins the
‘enthusiasm for humanity,’ that was afterwards
to become so marked in the poetry
of Burns, Shelley, Wordsworth and
Byron.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Keats suffered from consumption and it
is interesting to note that the progress of
his disease coincided with the expansion of
his genius.</p>
<p class='c007'>Chatterton is the most astounding and
precocious figure in the whole history of
letters. He was only seventeen years and
nine months old when starvation drove
him to commit suicide, “but the best of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>his numerous productions, both in prose
and verse, require no allowance to be made
for the immaturity of their author.”
Chatterton’s audience has never been a
large one for the reason that with a few
exceptions all his poems are written in
Fifteenth Century English. Among the
discriminating, however, he holds a very
high place. His genius and tragic death
are commemorated by Wordsworth in
“Resolution and Independence,” by Coleridge
in “A Monody on the Death of
Chatterton,” by D. G. Rossetti in “Five
English Poets,” and Keats dedicated
“Endymion” to his memory.</p>
<p class='c007'>I have hesitated as to whether I had a
right to include Chatterton among my
examples, because I can find no record of
his having suffered from actual disease.
On the other hand he was so abnormal that
I feel that I have no right to ignore him.
From his earliest years he was subject to
fits of abstraction during which he would
sit for hours in seeming stupor from which
it was almost impossible to wake him.
For a time he was even considered deficient
in intellect.</p>
<p class='c007'>Thomas Hood was a chronic invalid;
<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>his most famous poem, “The Bridge of
Sighs,” was written on his death-bed.
Byron and Swinburne were also physically
handicapped.</p>
<p class='c007'>W. E. Henley was not only a poet but
a trenchant critic and a successful editor.
A physical infirmity forced him at the age
of twenty-five to become an inmate of an
Edinburgh hospital. While there he
wrote a number of poems in irregular
rhythm describing, with poignant force,
his experiences as a patient. Sent to the
<cite>Cornhill Magazine</cite>, they at once aroused
the interest of Leslie Stephen, the editor,
and induced him to visit the young poet
and to take Robert Louis Stevenson with
him. This meeting in the hospital and
the friendship which ensued between Stevenson
and Henley were famous in the literary
gossip of the last century. Henley’s
reputation will rest on his poetry, and the
best of his poems will retain a permanent
place in English literature. As a literary
editor he displayed a gift for discovering
men of promise, and “Views and Reviews”
is a “volume of notable criticism.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Sidney Lanier, one of the most original
and talented of American poets, was consumptive,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>and Francis Thompson, author
of “The Hound of Heaven,” wrote his
flaming verse under acute pain.</p>
<p class='c007'>The Sixteenth Century was the heyday
of poets. Princes regarded them as the
chief ornament of their courts and disputed
among themselves the honor of their
company. Ronsard’s life, therefore, was
exceptionally fortunate. He enjoyed the
favor of the three sons of Catherine de’
Medici, more especially of Charles IX,
after whose premature death the poet retired
from Paris. Ronsard is celebrated
as the chief glory of an association of poets
who called themselves the “Pléiade.”
His own generation bestowed upon him
the title of “Prince of Poets.” Ronsard
became deaf at eighteen and so he became
a man of letters instead of a diplomatist.
His infirmity is probably responsible for a
“certain premature agedness, a tranquil,
temperate sweetness” which characterizes
the school of poetry he founded.</p>
<p class='c007'>Joachim du Bellay was destined for the
army and his poetry would most probably
have been lost to the world if he had not
been attacked by a serious illness which
seemed likely to prove fatal. It was during
the idle days of his convalescence that
<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>he first read the Greek and Latin poets.
He was also a member of the “Pléiade”
and some of his isolated pieces excel
those of Ronsard in “airy lightness of
touch.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Molière is the greatest name in French
literature. The facts as to his youth and
early manhood are so wrapped in uncertainty,
that it is impossible to say when
the frailty of his health first became manifest.
When he emerges from obscurity
we find him already subject to attacks of
illness and forced to limit himself to a
milk diet. His best work, however, was
still undone. “Tartuffe” was not written
until 1664 when Molière was already
forty-two years old, and “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Misanthrope</span>”
was performed a year later. Although
it had probably long been latent,
he first showed unmistakable symptoms of
consumption in 1667. In spite of the ravages
of disease, and the continual strain of
an impossible domestic situation, he produced
“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Bourgois Gentilhomme</span>” three
years later, followed by “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Fourberies
de Scapin</span>.” “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Malade Imaginaire</span>”
was written shortly before his death, and
it was while acting the title rôle that he
ruptured a blood vessel. He died a few
<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>hours afterwards, alone, except for the casual
presence of two Sisters of Charity.</p>
<p class='c007'>Scarron, poet, dramatist and novelist,
lived twenty years in a state of miserable
deformity and pain. His head and body
were twisted; his legs useless. He bore
his sufferings with invincible courage.
Scarron was a prominent figure in the literary
and fashionable society of his day.
His work, however, is very unequal.
That the “Roman Burlesque” is a novel
of real merit, no competent critic can deny.
It was republished during the nineteenth
century, not only in the original French
but in an English translation. Scarron is
also of interest as the first husband of the
lady who as Mme. de Maintenon became
the wife of Louis XIV.</p>
<p class='c007'>Boileau was the youngest of fifteen children.
He is said to have had but one passion,
the hatred of stupid books. He was
the first critic to demonstrate the poetical
possibilities of the French language. His
two masterpieces are “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’Art Poétique</span>”
and “Lutrin.” “After much depreciation
Boileau’s critical work has been rehabilitated
and his judgments have been substantially
adopted by his successors.” He
<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>suffered all his life from constitutional
debility.</p>
<p class='c007'>Schiller was a leading spirit of his age,
yet from his thirty-second year “every one
of his nerves was an avenue of pain.”
Nevinson, however, considered “it possible
the disease served in some way to increase
Schiller’s eager activity and fan his
intellect into keener flame.” Carlyle also
writes of the poet that “in the midst of his
infirmities he persevered with unabated
zeal in the great business of his life. His
frame might be impaired, but his spirit
retained its fire unextinguished.” Schiller
wrote some of his noblest and greatest
plays during the periods of his most acute
suffering. When he died it was found
that all his vital organs were deranged.</p>
<p class='c007'>Heinrich Heine, another immortal,
spent eight years of his agitated struggling
life on what he called “a mattress-grave.”
“These years of suffering seem to have effected
what might be called a spiritual
purification of Heine’s nature, and to have
brought out all the good side of his character,
whereas adversity in earlier days
had only emphasized his cynicism.”
Though crippled and racked with constant
<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>pain, his intellectual and creative powers
were no whit dimmed. His greatest
poems were written during these years of
suffering from which he found relief only
in death.</p>
<p class='c007'>Petrarch suffered from epilepsy, and
Alfieri, one of the greatest of the Italian
tragic poets, was a martyr to pain. So
likewise was Leopardi, author of some
immortal odes; the latter was, furthermore,
deformed. It was said of him that
“Pain and Love are the two-fold poetry
of his existence.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Camoens, the greatest of Portuguese
poets, lost his right eye attempting to
board an enemy ship. After a life of incredible
hardship, he died in a public almshouse
worn out by disease.</p>
<p class='c007'>There are hardly any women poets,
which is rather curious, as it is almost the
only career that requires neither training
nor paraphernalia, yet among this handful
we find four, three of them being of real
importance, namely: Mrs. Browning,
Christina Rossetti and Emily Dickinson.
Mrs. Browning was a chronic invalid and
wrote her greatest poems, “Sonnets from
the Portuguese,” while actually on her
back. Mr. Edmund Gosse says of Christina
<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>Rossetti, “All we really know about
her, save that she was a great saint, was
that she was a great poet.” She was also
a great sufferer.</p>
<p class='c007'>The most curious event of American
literary history was the sudden rise of
Emily Dickinson into a posthumous fame.
This strange woman, who shunned publicity
with a morbid terror and never left her
“father’s house for any house or town,”
nevertheless bequeathed to the world
poems which for life and fire are unexcelled.
She was an invalid. In 1863
she writes: “I was ill since September,
and since April in Boston for a physician’s
care. He does not let me go, yet I
work in my prison, and make guests for
myself. Carlo (her dog) did not come,
because he would die in jail and the mountains
I could not hold now, so I brought
but the gods!”</p>
<p class='c007'>Frances Ridley Havergal wrote some of
her most beautiful hymns on a sick bed.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>
<h2 class='c005'>V<br/> <span class='large'>NOVELISTS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>The first name I find on my list of novelists
who have been subject to ill health is
that of Cervantes. He did not start life
an invalid,—far from it. He seems to
have been a youth of unusual vigor. But
when only twenty-three years old he was
severely wounded and lost his left hand in
battle—“For the greater glory of the
right,” as he gallantly exclaimed. After
that he spent five years in slavery and he
escaped from the Moors only to languish
at various times in a Spanish prison.
Hardship, and privations doubtless, and
also his old wounds, had completely shattered
his health when he finally sat down
to create his immortal “Don Quixote.”
The first part was published when he was
fifty-eight years old, the last when he was
sixty-nine.</p>
<p class='c007'>When Fielding wrote “Tom Jones,” he
had been for years a martyr to gout and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>other diseases: Gibbon predicted for this
work “a diuturnity exceeding that of the
house of Austria!” It is curious that this
book, which bubbles over with the joy of
life, was written at a time when Fielding
was plunged into the deepest melancholy.</p>
<p class='c007'>Swift suffered from “labyrinthian
vertigo.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Laurence Sterne, creator of “Tristram
Shandy,” was consumptive, as he says of
himself, “from the first hour I drew
breath unto this that I can hardly breathe
at all.” Sterne, no longer young, was increasingly
suffering during the years he
brought forth the numerous volumes of
his unique book.</p>
<p class='c007'>Sir Walter Scott was not only lame
from infancy but is an inspiring example
of what can be accomplished under conditions
of extreme physical suffering. When
he was forty-six years old began a series
of agonizing attacks of cramps of the
stomach which recurred at frequent intervals
for two years. But his activity and
capacity for work remained unbroken.
He made his initial attempt at play-writing
when he was recovering from this first
seizure. Before the year was out he had
completed “Rob Roy.” Within six
<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>months it was followed by “The Heart of
Midlothian,” which filled four volumes of
the second series of “Tales of my Landlord,”
and has remained one of the most
popular among his novels. “The Bride
of Lammermoor” and “The Legend of
Montrose” were dictated to amanuenses,
through fits of suffering so acute that he
could not suppress cries of agony. When
Laidlaw begged him to stop dictating he
only answered, “Nay, Willie, only see that
the doors are fast. I would fain keep all
the cry, as well as all the wool to ourselves,
but to give over work, that can only be
when I am woolen.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Mme. de La Fayette lost her health a
year before her epoch-making novel, “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La
Princess de Cléves</span>,” was published. She
lived fifteen years afterwards, “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">étant de
ceux</span>,” as Sainte-Beuve says, “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">qui traînent
leur miserable vie jusqu’à la dernière
goutte d’huile</span>.” “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Princesse de
Cléves</span>” is not only intrinsically a work of
real merit, which is still read with pleasure,
but is important because it is the first
novel of sentiment, the first novel, in the
sense we moderns use the word, that was
ever written.</p>
<p class='c007'>Le Sage was a handsome, engaging
<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>youth, but it was not until he was thirty-nine
years old that he made his first success
with the “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Diable Boiteux</span>.” Already
his deafness was rapidly increasing; and he
was sixty-seven years old and had long
been completely deaf when the last volume
of the masterpiece, “<span lang="es" xml:lang="es">Gil Blas</span>,” appeared.</p>
<p class='c007'>Vauvenargues was a soldier until he had
both of his legs frozen during a winter
campaign. This injury, from which he
never recovered, forced him to leave the
army. An attack of small-pox completed
the ruin of his health, and thenceforth he
led a secluded life devoted to literary pursuits.
It is mainly as a novelist that Vauvenargues
occupies a place in French literature,
although his other works were held
in high esteem by his contemporaries.</p>
<p class='c007'>Edmond and Jules de Goncourt are
names famous in French literary history.
“Learning something from Flaubert, and
teaching almost everything to Zola, they
invented a new kind of novel, and their
works are the result of a new vision of the
world.... A novel of the Goncourts is
made up of an infinite number of details,
set side by side, every detail equally prominent....
French critics have complained
that the language of the Goncourts is no
<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>longer the French of the past, and this is
true. It is their distinction, the finest of
their inventions, that in order to render
new sensations, a new vision of things, they
invented a new language.” (Mr. Arthur
Symons.) Their journal is a gold mine
from which present-day writers still carry
away unacknowledged nuggets. M. Paul
Bourget said of them: “Life reduced itself
to a series of epileptic attacks, preceded
and followed by a blank.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Dostoievsky is considered by many
critics the greatest of the great Russian
novelists.</p>
<p class='c007'>His health was completely shattered by
his spending four years in a Siberian prison
as a political offender. This terrible
experience, however, served to create
“Recollections of a Dead House” and
“Buried Alive in Siberia.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Anton Chekhov, the Russian novelist
and short story writer, was only a little
over twenty when he began to suffer from
attacks of blood spitting. Although he
believed that these came from his throat
they were undoubtedly due to consumption.
He was also a martyr to digestive trouble
and headaches.</p>
<p class='c007'>Chekhov possessed to an unusual degree
<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>the nervous energy which so frequently
accompanies disease. He was a remarkably
prolific author, so much so that in one
of his letters he prophesies that he will
soon have written enough to fill a library
with his own works. Literature was, however,
not his only pursuit. He also practiced
medicine, although he refused to receive
any remuneration for his services.
He was public spirited and altruistic and
organized an association for the relief of
Siberian prisoners.</p>
<p class='c007'>His books enjoy an immense vogue and
have been translated into every language.</p>
<p class='c007'>Whatever may be the future of English fiction,
Charlotte Brontë’s novels will
always command attention, by reason of
their intensity and individuality. She suffered
from permanent bodily weakness
with various complications.</p>
<p class='c007'>Some critics consider Emily Brontë
superior to her sister. “Wuthering
Heights” is a “thing apart, passionate,
unforgettable.” This remarkable book
was written while its author was dying of
consumption.</p>
<p class='c007'>That super-woman, known to fame as
George Eliot, suffered all her life from
frequent attacks of illness. In spite of her
<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>physical limitations she was capable of the
most prolonged and intense application.
Her numerous novels, dating from her
thirty-sixth year, are only a part of her
widespread intellectual activities.</p>
<p class='c007'>Jacobsen, the great Danish novelist, unfortunately
too little known in this country,
was, like so many others, cut off from
his chosen or destined profession and
driven into literature by ill health. During
the worst phases of his sufferings he
produced books that in their way have
never been surpassed.</p>
<p class='c007'>I must mention here, though she belongs
to no category, that extraordinary child,
Marie Bashkirtseff, who, dying of consumption
at twenty-four, left behind her
several pictures of great promise (two of
them are in the Luxembourg Gallery, I
believe) and her “Journal,” a remarkable
production which created a sensation thirty
years ago and which has lately been republished.</p>
<p class='c007'>Robert Louis Stevenson’s life is so well-known
that I need only to recall him to
your memory.</p>
<p class='c007'>Henry James was so delicate that he
was forced to remain a spectator of the
Civil War, in which his younger brothers
<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>fought. Mr. Edmund Gosse writes the
following description of a visit to Henry
James when the latter was already thirty-two
years old. “Stretched on a sofa and
apologizing for not rising to greet me, his
appearance gave me a little shock, for I
had not thought of him as an invalid. He
hurriedly and rather evasively declared
that he was not that, but that a muscular
weakness of the spine obliged him, as he
said, ‘to assume a horizontal posture during
some hours of every day in order to
bear an almost unbroken routine of evening
engagements.’” It is recorded that in
one winter he dined out one hundred and
seven times. What amazing assiduity!
His health gradually grew stronger, but
for many years it seriously handicapped
his activity.</p>
<p class='c007'>I should like to linger a moment with
Lafcadio Hearn. He is known to the
world at large as the foremost interpreter
of the old and new Japan. He married a
Japanese wife and this gave him a peculiar
insight into the customs as well as the
psychology of his adopted countrymen.
His books show a unique understanding
of the Oriental mind and their literary
art is exquisite. He not only suffered
<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>from ill health, but in addition lost the
sight of one eye in early youth and ever
after went in fear of total blindness. Yet,
far from regretting his afflictions, this is
what he said about them: “The owner of
pure horse-health never purchased the
power of discerning the half-lights. In its
separation of the spiritual from the physical
portion of existence, severe sickness is
often invaluable to the sufferer, in the revelation
it bestows of the psychological undercurrents
of human existence. From
the intuitive recognition of the terrible but
at the same time glorious fact, that the
highest life can only be reached by subordinating
physical to spiritual influences, separating
the immaterial from the material
self,—therein lies all the history of asceticism
and self-suppression as the most efficacious
measure of developing religious
and intellectual power.” That is what experience
had taught one who was certainly
not a religionist.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>
<h2 class='c005'>VI<br/> <span class='large'>PHYSICAL PERFECTION AND ITS RELATION TO CIVILIZATION</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>I am persuaded that it is impossible to
banish suffering from the world. All we
have so far accomplished is to exchange
one form of suffering for another.</p>
<p class='c007'>Take the case of women, for example,
and the ailments to which they are subject.
Primitive woman was virtually free from
these. She suffered little at childbirth.
To-day the operation of even the normal
female functions has become a serious
matter. Science with all its strides has not
been able to cope successfully with the increasing
burden which the conditions of
modern life impose on woman’s physique.</p>
<p class='c007'>I have chosen women as an illustration
because they themselves would be the first
to insist that they had profited more than
men from the advance of thought and the
perfecting of a social system that is largely
their own creation. Well, compare this
<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>Flower of the Ages, as we see her in shops,
offices, ball-rooms or even colleges, with
an Australian bush-woman, and we will
find that neither in health, strength nor
endurance can she rival her savage sister.
The woman of the bush is capable of following
her master all day with a baby on
her back; of stopping for a brief period
to produce another and of resuming her
progress, unimpeded by her additional
burden.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is well to realize that civilization,
which has bestowed such incalculable benefits
upon mankind, has done so largely at
the expense of its physical welfare.
Moreover, as men, and more particularly
women, rise in the intellectual scale, they
risk the sacrifice not only of a robust, but
of a normal, body. But what of it?
“Wisdom is better than strength; and a
wise man is better than a strong man.”
Nor must we forget that while civilization
has undoubtedly undermined our physique,
it has also abolished the circumstances
which made strength and endurance the
supreme necessities of the battle of life.
To be able to follow her male with a child
on her back—to say nothing of the interesting
interlude—is not a quality that
<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>would add either to the allurement or efficiency
of the woman of to-day.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let me here cite four celebrated women
who, differing from each other in every
other particular, suffered in common from
ill health.</p>
<p class='c007'>The first in order of time is Madame
du Deffand who was for many years the
center of one of the most brilliant of
the Eighteenth Century salons. Her correspondence
with Voltaire, La Duchesse
Choiseul and Horace Walpole is immortal
and has been frequently republished.
Many of her letters to Voltaire and all
of those to Mme. de Choiseul and Horace
Walpole were dictated when she was over
sixty-seven years of age, broken in health
and totally blind.</p>
<p class='c007'>Rachel was the daughter of a poor Jew
pedlar, and from the age of four she
roamed the streets singing patriotic songs.
A famous singing teacher heard her and,
impressed by the crude power of the little
creature, offered to teach her gratuitously.
It is almost unbelievable to read of the
excitement this small, plain Jewess created.
She still lives in hundreds of books and is
an integral part of the history of her
period. If we can judge from contemporary
<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>praises, Rachel is the greatest actress
of whom there is any record. She suffered
from continual ill health and died of consumption
in her thirty-seventh year.</p>
<p class='c007'>Grace Darling was the daughter of a
lighthouse keeper, and with her father
braved almost certain death in attempting
to save the survivors of the wreck of the
<i>Forfarshire</i>. By well-nigh superhuman
efforts they succeeded in rescuing a great
number. This gallant exploit made them
both famous. Grace Darling had always
been delicate and died of consumption
four years later.</p>
<p class='c007'>Florence Nightingale, immortal nurse
and one of the most influential women in
history, had at the time of her greatest
activity a body so weak that it was a wonder
how a woman in such delicate health
was able to perform so much of what Sidney
Herbert called “a man’s work.”
During many years of important achievement
she was altogether bed-ridden.
Working incessantly, writing, organizing,
she was a power throughout the British
Empire. Her influence has spread over
the world; to her we owe the first idea of
training nurses.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is really curious that physical fitness
<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>should have become an ideal only after it
had ceased to be the indispensable requirement
of our environment. Piano-moving
is perhaps the sole occupation to-day where
strength is the only qualification, and intelligence
of no account whatsoever; yet
few of us aspire to become piano-movers!</p>
<p class='c007'>The body is a most delicate machine and
only in exceptional cases can it be kept
through life in perfect condition, without
an immense expenditure of time and trouble.
Now, a perfect body should only be
considered desirable, if it enables us to
rise to greater heights of achievement.
Countless people, however, regard health
and vigor not merely as the means but as
the goal itself. They tend and exercise
their bodies at the expense of every other
form of activity. The disproportionate
amount of time, energy and aspiration that
is wasted in attempting to perfect and preserve
that which is inevitably doomed to
destruction is incredible. A child building
a castle on the sand is engaged in a
more durable occupation. For the child,
while erecting its tunnelled and turreted
fortress, is at least attempting to realize
some haunting dream of the heights, the
depths, the mystery and magnificence of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>life. What matter the tide?—the vision
is indestructible.</p>
<p class='c007'>The Greeks regarded a beautiful body
as an end in itself, because their civilization,
by permitting its unveiling, allowed
it to act as an inspiration to others. The
nude, however, has no recognized place
among us, and although it still serves to
create beauty, it does so under restricted
and abnormal conditions. To be a model
is not a title to fame, nor the ideal of our
most enlightened contemporaries.</p>
<p class='c007'>I hope that I have proved conclusively
that a splendid body is no longer a necessary
means of enabling us to rise to the
greatest heights either of ambition or of
service. Why, therefore, should we so
morbidly covet physical perfection?</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>
<h2 class='c005'>VII<br/> <span class='large'>THE PHYSICALLY HANDICAPPED PHILOSOPHERS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'><span lang="grc" xml:lang="grc">Τὸν φρονεῖν βροτοὺς ὁδώσαντα τὸν πάθει μάθος
θέντα κυρίως ἔχειν.</span></p>
<div class='lg-container-r'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>—<i>Aeschylus, Agememnon, line 186.</i></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c006'>Among the British philosophers who
were physical sufferers we find the great
Francis Bacon, who from childhood was
always weak and delicate.</p>
<p class='c007'>John Locke became world-famous by
reason of his still celebrated “Essay concerning
Human Understanding.” He
was also of political importance, having occupied
for years the position of confidential
adviser to the great Earl of Shaftesbury.
Professor Campbell says of him:
“Locke is apt to be forgotten now, because
in his own generation he so well
discharged the intellectual mission of initiating
criticism of human knowledge,
and of diffusing the spirit of free enquiry
and universal toleration which has since
<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>profoundly affected the civilized world.
He has not bequeathed an imposing system,
hardly even a striking discovery in
metaphysics, but he is a signal example
in the Anglo-Saxon world of the love of
attainable truth for the sake of truth
and goodness. If Locke made few discoveries,
Socrates made none. But both
are memorable in the record of human
progress.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Robert Boyle, the natural philosopher,
was the seventh son and fourteenth child
of the great Earl of Cork. His scientific
work procured him extraordinary reputation
among his contemporaries. It was
he who “first enunciated the law that the
volume of gas varies inversely as the
pressure, which among English-speaking
people is still called by his name.” Great
as were his attainments they were almost
over-shadowed by the saintliness of his
character, the liveliness of his wit and
the incomparable charm of his manner.
Boyle was a man of the most feeble health.
This is what Evelyn says of him: “The
contexture of his body seemed to me so
delicate that I have frequently compared
him to Venice glass, ... [which] though
wrought never so fine, being carefully set
<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>up, would outlast harder metals of daily
use.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Robert Hooke, the experimental philosopher,
was both deformed and diseased.
He was not a great man and his scientific
achievements would have been “more
striking if they had been less varied.”
Nevertheless he was renowned in his day,
and his contribution of real importance
for, although “he perfected little he originated
much.” I mention him, and shall
mention several others, who have been forgotten
by all but scholars, because I wish
to show how large an army stands behind
its illustrious chiefs. Besides, if we contemplate
only the giant luminaries of the
firmament of fame, we shall become discouraged.
They paralyze us by the very
intensity of the admiration they evoke.
Lesser men, on the contrary, for the reason
that they are nearer our own orbit,
are more likely to stir us into emulation.</p>
<p class='c007'>Herbert Spencer’s achievements are too
well known to necessitate further comment.
He was exceedingly delicate and
at his best only able to work three hours
a day.</p>
<p class='c007'>Descartes, the foremost French philosopher,
had a feeble and somewhat abnormal
<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>body. “Yet he considered it” (I am
quoting Mr. Edmund Gosse) “well suited
to his own purposes, and was convinced
that the Cartesian philosophy would not
have been improved, though the philosopher’s
digestion might, by developing the
thews of a plough-boy.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Nicholas Malebranche, the great French
Cartesian philosopher, was the tenth child
of his parents. Although deformed and
constitutionally feeble he was one of the
most sought after men of his day. From
all countries of the world, but more especially
from England (be it said in her
honour) scholars, writers and philosophers
flocked to his door. The German princes
voyaged to Paris expressly to see him.
The philosopher Berkeley was probably
the cause of his death by forcing himself
on Malebranche when the latter had been
ordered absolute quiet. His influence has
been variously estimated. Spinoza is undoubtedly
one of his disciples. Mons.
Emile Faguet says of him: “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Malebranche
est un des plus beaux (metaphysiciens)
que j’aie rencontrés. Si l’on veut
ma pensée, je trouve Descartes plus grand
savant et plus vaste ésprit; mais je trouve
Malebranche plus grand philosophe, d’un
<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>degré au moins que Descartes lui-Même.</span>”
Speaking of his character he writes: “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Il
n’y eut jamais homme de plus d’ésprit, ni
plus homme de bien, ni plus seduisant</span>.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Blaise Pascal, the great French religious
philosopher, still holds a position of immense
importance in the history of literature
as well as philosophy. His “Provincial
Letters” are the “first example of
polite controversial irony since Lucian
and they have continued to be the best example
of it during more than two centuries
in which style has been sedulously practised
and in which they have furnished a
model to generation after generation.”
His “Pensées,” published after his death,
is “still a favorite exploring ground ...
to persons who take an interest in their
problems.” In philosophy his position is
this: “He seized firmly and fully the central
idea of the difference between reason
and religion, but unlike most men since
his day who, not contented with a mere
concordat, have let religion go and contented
themselves with reason,” Pascal,
though equally dissatisfied, “held fast to
religion and continued to fight out the questions
of difference with reason.” From
the age of eighteen, Pascal never passed a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>single day without pain. Nevertheless,
in the worst of his sufferings he was wont
to say: “Do not pity me; sickness is the
natural condition of Christians. In sickness
we are as we ought always to be ...
in the suffering of pains, in the privation
of goods and of all the pleasures of the
senses, exempt from all passions which
work in us during the whole course of our
life, without ambition, without avarice, in
the continual expectation of death.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Voltaire suffered frequent attacks of
illness. It was said of him that “he was
born dying.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Comte, the French Positive philosopher,
accomplished the bulk of his work after
recovering from an attack of insanity during
which he threw himself into the Seine.
Perhaps it is too soon to judge of the ultimate
value of his system of philosophy.
It has had impassioned adherents as well
as scornful critics. His main thesis seems
to be “that the improvement of social
conditions can only be effected by moral
development and never by any political
mechanism, or any violence in the way of
an artificial redistribution of wealth.” In
other words, he preached that a moral
transformation must precede any real advance.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>Yet he was not a Christian. An
enemy defined Comtism as “Catholicism
without Christianity.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Henri Frederic Amiel, Swiss philosopher
and critic, whose chief work, the
“Journal Intime,” published after his
death, obtained for him European reputation,
was a valetudinarian. Amiel wrote
but little, but all he accomplished has the
quality of exquisite sensitiveness.</p>
<p class='c007'>The great Kant was a wretched little
creature barely five feet high with a concave
chest and a deformed right shoulder;
his constitution was of the frailest, though
by taking extraordinary precautions he escaped
serious illness.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>
<h2 class='c005'>VIII<br/> <span class='large'>ASTRONOMERS AND MATHEMATICIANS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Johann Kepler, the great German
astronomer, was a contemporary of Tycho
Brahe and Galileo with both of whom
he was in correspondence. Kepler’s contributions
to science were of the utmost
importance. It was he who established
the two cardinal principles of modern astronomy—the
laws of elliptical orbits and
of equal areas. He also enunciated important
truths relating to gravity. In
spite of the backward condition of mechanical
knowledge, he attempted to explain
the planetary evolutions by a theory
of vortices closely resembling that afterwards
adopted by Descartes. He also
prepared the way for the discovery of the
infinitesimal calculus. His literary remains
were purchased by Catherine the
Second of Russia and were only published
during the latter half of the Nineteenth
Century. It is impossible to consider
<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>without astonishment the colossal amount
of work accomplished by Kepler, despite
his great physical disabilities. When only
four years old an attack of small-pox had
left him with crippled hands and eyesight
permanently impaired. His constitution,
already enfeebled by premature birth, had
to withstand successive shocks of illness.</p>
<p class='c007'>Flamstead, the great British astronomer,
was obliged to leave school in consequence
of a rheumatic affection of the
joints. It was to solace his enforced idleness
that he took up the study of astronomy.
The extent and quality of his performance
is almost unbelievable when one
considers his severe physical suffering.</p>
<p class='c007'>Nicholas Saunderson lost his sight before
he was twelve months old, yet he became
professor of mathematics at Cambridge.
He was an eminent authority in
his day, an original and efficient teacher
and the author of a book on algebra. His
knowledge of optics was remarkable.
“He had distinct ideas of perspective, of
the projection of the sphere, and of the
forms assumed by plane or solid figures.”</p>
<p class='c007'>D’Alembert was not only a mathematician
but also a philosopher of the highest
order. He was made a member of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>French Academy at the age of twenty-four.
He was so frail that his life was
continually despaired of and he remained
a valetudinarian to the end.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>
<h2 class='c005'>IX<br/> <span class='large'>STATESMEN AND POLITICIANS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>We now come to the statesmen and politicians.
Robert Cecil, first Earl of Salisbury,
Secretary of State under Queen Elizabeth
and Lord Treasurer under James I,
was a statesman who all his life wielded
immense power to the undoubted benefit
of his country. Yet in person he was in
strange contrast to his rivals at court,
being deformed and sickly. Elizabeth
styled him her pigmy; his enemies vilified
him as “wry-neck,” “crooked-back” and
“splay-foot.” In Bacon’s essay “Of Deformity”
he paints his cousin to the life.</p>
<p class='c007'>John Somers, Lord Keeper under William
and Mary, “was in some respects” (I
am quoting Macaulay) “the greatest man
of his age. He was equally eminent as
a jurist, as a politician and as a writer....
His humanity was the more remarkable
because he received from nature a
body such as is generally found united to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>a peevish and irritable mind. His life was
one long malady; his nerves were weak;
his complexion livid; his face prematurely
wrinkled.”</p>
<p class='c007'>William III, I have already mentioned,
and now comes a name to conjure with,
the great Lord Clive, founder of the British
Empire. At eighteen he went out to
India and shortly afterwards the effect of
the climate on his health began to show
itself in those fits of depression during one
of which he ended his life. We see in his
end the result of physical suffering, of
chronic disease which opium failed to
abate.</p>
<p class='c007'>William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, one of
the greatest statesmen England ever had,
suffered from hereditary gout. The attacks
continued from boyhood with increasing
intensity to the close of his life.
He was for two years mentally unbalanced,
yet after that he returned to Parliament
and directed for eight years all the power
of his eloquence in favor of the American
Colonies. Dr. Johnson said: “Walpole
was a minister given by the King to the
people, but Pitt was a minister given by
the people to the King.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Whatever we may think of Marat as a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>man, we cannot deny that he occupies a
large place in the history of his time. Yet
he was always delicate, so much so that
after the completion of one of his books
he lay in a stupor during thirteen days.
In 1788 he was attacked by a terrible
malady, from which he suffered during the
whole of his revolutionary career.</p>
<p class='c007'>Pitt, the younger, was a sickly child and
although he grew into a healthy youth, his
constitution was early broken by gout.</p>
<p class='c007'>Owing to an accident in early childhood
Talleyrand was lamed for life. At the
time this seemed a great misfortune, for
owing to his disability he forfeited his
right of primogeniture and the profession
of arms was closed to him. “No Frenchman
of his age did so much to repair the
ravages wrought by fanatics and autocrats.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Henry Fawcett, the English politician
and economist, was accidentally blinded
at the age of twenty-five. The effect of
his blindness was, as the event proved, the
reverse of calamitous. By concentrating
his energies, it brought his powers to
earlier maturity than would otherwise
have been possible, and “it had a mellowing
influence on his character, which in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>youth had been rough and canny, and inclined
to harshness.” Gladstone appointed
him Postmaster-General in 1880 and
not England alone, but the world as well,
is deeply indebted to him for the reforms
he inaugurated. He instituted the parcel
post, postal orders, sixpenny telegrams,
the banking of small savings by means of
stamps and increased facilities for life insurance
and annuities.</p>
<p class='c007'>Kavanaugh was an Irish politician and
member of the privy council of Ireland.
He had only the rudiments of legs and
arms but in spite of these physical defects
he had a remarkable career. He learned
to ride in the most fearless fashion,
strapped to a special saddle and managing
his horse with the stumps of his arms; he
also fished, shot, drew and wrote, various
mechanical devices supplementing his limited
physical capacities.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>
<h2 class='c005'>X<br/> <span class='large'>THE FREEDOM OF ILL-HEALTH</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>One of the greatest advantages of invalidism
is that it frees us from petty obligations,
unworthy pleasures, and meaningless
conventions. The blessed freedom of
ill-health is something few people appreciate;
neither have they learned to make
full use of its unearned leisure. Yet we
are always clamoring for time; in America,
apparently, it can be found only in the
sick-room.</p>
<p class='c007'>How many people do we not know, who
are so busy making, what they are pleased
to call a living, that they never find time
to live! As a matter of fact, only the
small minority of the inefficient are obliged
to sacrifice all possibility of leisure to the
exigency of obtaining a livelihood; the
majority, which include men and women of
every class and of every vocation—plumbers
and captains of industry, stenographers
as well as débutantes—are occupied in
accumulating superfluities. By
<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>superfluities I do not mean everything
which is not normally necessary for the existence
of the body, but everything that is
not essential to the perfect expansion of
separate individuality.</p>
<p class='c007'>The tendency of the day is to pour all
mankind into the same mould; to fetter
great and small to the one ideal of obvious
achievement. We have degraded
success by popularizing it; we are suppressing
individuality instead of fostering
it; and unless a change comes before long,
and the individual is again able to liberate
himself and to germinate, we shall perish
as other civilizations have perished without
leaving more than a scratch on the
page of history. For nations are ultimately
judged, not by their numbers, their
riches or their power, but solely by the
glory of the individuals they have produced.
Think of the empires which have
so completely vanished that but for a few
broken stones we could not even guess the
sites of their vast cities, and compare these
nations either to the Jews or Greeks who
during their flowering gave birth to men
who have conferred immortality on their
respective races.</p>
<p class='c007'>Suffering quickens individuality by removing
<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>the pressure of circumstance, custom
and occupation. Moreover, in the
sick-room the intellect as well as the soul
has not only the liberty but the time to
mature.</p>
<p class='c007'>It always surprises me to hear people
complain of insomnia. Why should they
consider it a misfortune to live precious
hours instead of spending them in unconsciousness?
By sleeping even as much as
five hours instead of nine, we gain twenty-one
hours a week. Think of it! Almost
three working days!</p>
<p class='c007'>The reason the average person is so
exhausted by lying awake a few hours
longer that he is accustomed to do, is because
he turns and twists in his bed bemoaning
his sad fate, until he has worked
himself into a fever. Stay awake; enjoy
the night,—it is quite as wonderful as the
day. Taste the charm of the silence as it
steals by degrees over your weary spirit.
Be grateful for these hours; they are a
gift from fate. Read, write, think, meditate,
and when morning comes you will
wake more refreshed after two hours’
sleep than you used to after nine. Napoleon
and other great men never slept
more.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>
<h2 class='c005'>XI<br/> <span class='large'>ARTISTS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>The great painters and sculptors seem
to have been strangely healthy and normal.
I say that they seem to have been so, because
of the extreme difficulty of getting
any accurate information on the subject.
It sounds incredible, but I read a long life
of Petrarch in which everything was mentioned
but his health and only discovered
quite accidentally that he had been an
epileptic.</p>
<p class='c007'>I am, therefore, convinced that there
are many examples I might cite if I could
only unearth the truth, yet even so, I have
been able to ferret out four artists who
were physically handicapped. Navarette,
called the Spanish Titian and celebrated
under the name of “<span lang="es" xml:lang="es">El Mudo</span>,” was dumb.
They say that Guercino squinted so badly
that he could focus only one eye.</p>
<p class='c007'>Antoine Watteau suffered all his life
from tuberculosis, which no doubt accounts
for a certain “wistful gaiety” which characterizes
<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>his work. Watteau’s position in
French art is of unique importance. He
became the founder—as the culmination—of
a new school which marked a revolt
against the pompous classicism of the preceding
period. “The vitality of his art
was due to the rare combination of a
poet’s imagination with a power of seizing
reality. In his treatment of landscape
background and the atmospheric conditions
surrounding his figures we find the
germ of Impressionism.” From the middle
of the Eighteenth Century until about
1875 Watteau’s work fell into disrepute.
It was chiefly owing to the efforts of the
brothers de Goncourt that a reaction set
in which has slowly carried Watteau to the
summit of fame. He died in his thirty-seventh
year.</p>
<p class='c007'>Aubrey Beardsley flashed into fame
with black and white drawings of extraordinary
originality and beauty. His peculiar
technique has been widely imitated
but never approached. After twenty
years his reputation has not yet reached its
zenith. Aubrey Beardsley during the
whole of his meteoric career suffered from
consumption. He died at the age of
twenty-six.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>
<h2 class='c005'>XII<br/> <span class='large'>MUSICIANS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>One would expect deafness to be an insuperable
obstacle to a musician, yet
Beethoven produced a large part of his
work while handicapped by it, and some of
his greatest compositions when his deafness
had become complete. Mozart was
delicate and subject to fevers; his last
work and his best was written just before
his death. It was said of Händel: “He
was never greater than when, warned by
palsy of the approach of death, and
struggling with distress and suffering, he
sat down to compose the great works
which have made his name immortal in
music.” Schubert was barely five feet one
and walked with a strange shuffling gait;
his eyesight was so defective that he slept
in his spectacles. He suffered from
digestive trouble and died young. So
also did Chopin, having been an invalid
the greater part of his short life. Mendelssohn
<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>was very frail and delicate.
Carl Maria von Weber was not only ravaged
by disease but also deformed and
lame. Paganini, the most extraordinary
violinist the world has ever heard, suffered
from phthisis of the larynx and was constantly
ill.</p>
<p class='c007'>The case of Robert Schumann is very
curious. He was studying to be a pianist,
when, in attempting to strengthen his fingers,
he accidentally paralyzed his right
hand. To this apparent misfortune we
owe one of the greatest composers.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>
<h2 class='c005'>XIII<br/> <span class='large'>THREE PHYSICIANS, A NATURALIST AND A CHEMIST</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>“Physician, heal thyself,” might have
been said to Sir William Harvey, the famous
discoverer of the circulation of the
blood; and to Albert von Haller, the great
Swiss doctor, who is considered the father
of modern physiology.</p>
<p class='c007'>To Louis Pasteur the world is indebted
for the introductions of methods which
have already worked wonders and bid fair
to render possible the preventive treatment
of all infectious disease. His most
sensational discovery was the cure of hydrophobia,
which he accomplished despite
the fact that the special microbe causing
this dread disease had not yet been isolated.
Pasteur’s motto was, “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Travaillez,
travaillez toujours</span>.” On his death-bed he
turned to his devoted pupils and exclaimed:
“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Oú en êtes-vous? Que faîtes-vous?</span>”
and ended by repeating: “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Il faut
<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>travailler</span>.” He once said: “In the field
of observation, chance only favors those
who are prepared.” This great benefactor
of the human race, though loaded
with honors, remained to the last simple
and affectionate as a child. Pasteur was
subject to fits of apoplexy and it is curious
that some of his most important discoveries
were made immediately after such
attacks.</p>
<p class='c007'>Darwin, from the age of thirty, was a
great sufferer. His daughter writes:
“No one indeed, except my mother,
knows the full amount of suffering he
endured, or the full amount of his wonderful
patience.” Dr. Darwin, however,
once said to a friend: “If I had not been
so great an invalid, I should not have done
nearly so much work as I have accomplished.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Dr. Trudeau, who worked such miracles
for the cure of consumption, was himself
consumptive.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>
<h2 class='c005'>XIV<br/> <span class='large'>INVENTORS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Sir Richard Arkwright, the inventor
of the spinning jenny, though a man of
great personal strength, suffered from
wretched health.</p>
<p class='c007'>James Watt, the inventor of the steam
engine, was continually ailing until he approached
old age. He had a prodigious
memory and as an inventive genius he has
never been surpassed.</p>
<p class='c007'>Ill health and failing eyesight forced
Joseph Niepce to retire from the army at
the age of twenty-eight. It was during
this opportune leisure that the idea of
obtaining sun-pictures first suggested itself
to him. In 1826 he learnt that Daguerre
was working on the same lines and three
years later they cooperated in order to
perfect what was, however, Niepce’s discovery.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>
<h2 class='c005'>XV<br/> <span class='large'>HISTORIANS AND MEN OF LETTERS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Aristides, surnamed Theodosius, was a
Greek rhetorician and sophist. He was
so celebrated that in many places statues
were erected during his lifetime to commemorate
his talents. He suffered for
many years from a mysterious disease,
which was, however, a positive benefit to
his studies as they were prescribed as part
of his cure.</p>
<p class='c007'>Pliny, the Younger, was far from robust.
He suffered from weakness of the
eyes, throat and chest. He himself
speaks of his delicate frame.</p>
<p class='c007'>It has been said of Erasmus that he was
the first man of letters since the fall of
the Roman Empire. He occupied during
his lifetime the position of supreme pontiff
to an elect public which the ardors of
the Renaissance had called into being.
His admirers were to be found in every
country and among all ranks. Presents
<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>were continually sent to him by great and
small. We hear of a donation of two
hundred florins from Pope Clement XII
and of a contribution of comfits and sweetmeats
from the nuns of Cologne. From
England in particular, he obtained constant
supplies of money. “I receive
daily,” he writes, “letters from the most
remote parts, from kings and princes, prelates
and men of learning, and even from
persons of whose existence I have never
heard.”</p>
<p class='c007'>His position as regards the Reformation
has been for centuries a subject of
passionate contention. It was said of him,
“Erasmus laid an egg, and Luther
hatched it.” This, however, is only
partly true. As a matter of fact, Erasmus
had but one passion, the passion for
learning. When he found that Luther’s
revolt aroused a new fanaticism—that of
evangelism, he recoiled from the violence
of the new preachers. “Is it for this,”
he exclaimed, “that we have shaken off
bishops and popes that we may come under
the yoke of such madmen as Otto and
Farel?”</p>
<p class='c007'>Erasmus’ works are too numerous to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>enumerate separately. His greatest contribution
is undoubtedly his Greek Testament.</p>
<p class='c007'>Erasmus spent the greater part of his
life in agony. For twenty years he was
unable to sit down either to read, write or
even to take his meals. He could eat but
little and only of the most delicate meats.
He could neither eat nor bear the smell
of fish. “My heart,” he said, “is Catholic,
but my stomach is Lutheran.” Nevertheless,
his various biographers exclaim
at the amount of work he accomplished.
One of them writes, “Through the winter
of 1514–1515 Erasmus worked with the
strength of ten. In Venice ... he did
the work of two men.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Montaigne was never strong but, after
a few years at the court of Paris, his
health gave way completely and he retired
to his castle, resolved to devote the
rest of his life to study and contemplation.
We undoubtedly owe his immortal essays
to his invalidism.</p>
<p class='c007'>The same is true of Brantôme. He
was a soldier until a fall from his horse
compelled him to retire into private life.
This fortunate accident is directly responsible
<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>for his “Memoirs,” which are not
only delightful reading but of the greatest
historical value.</p>
<p class='c007'>Fénelon, the famous tutor to the duke
of Burgundy, had an enormous influence,
not only on his own but on the succeeding
generations. His “Treatise on the Education
of Girls” guided French opinion on
the subject for almost two centuries.
This book brought him literary glory together
with the position of tutor to the
grandson and heir of Louis XIV. During
the eight years at court he published
the “Fables,” the “Dialogues of the
Dead” and finally “Télemaque.” These
books were intended primarily for the instruction
of his pupils; they became, however,
universally popular. Fénelon was
banished from Paris as a result of a doctrinal
difference with Bossuet. Pope Innocent
XIII, while upholding the latter,
gave this verdict: “Fénelon errs by loving
God too much and Bossuet by loving his
neighbor too little.” Excessively delicate
from childhood, Fénelon’s health grew
more and more feeble. While Archbishop
of Cambrai, to which city he had
retired after his disgrace, we read that he
was forced to make his bed his retreat
<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>from whence to say his offices and administer
his diocese.</p>
<p class='c007'>Jean Jacques Rousseau, French “philosopher,”
occupied during three years of
his youth the position of footman in various
houses. From his own account, he
made an uncommonly bad one, impertinent,
mean, untruthful and dishonest!
Rousseau had a most despicable character,
and although he never lacked patrons,
quarrelled with each in turn. Rousseau
leapt into fame in 1749, when he was
thirty-seven years old, by reason of an
article extolling the savage over the civilized
state. His two most celebrated
books are “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Contrat Social</span>” and “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La
nouvelle Heloise</span>.” Only the indulgence
of his contemporaries would have granted
him the title of “philosopher,” but as a
“man of letters” he occupies “a place unrivalled
in literary history.” His fame,
great as it was during his lifetime, reached
to vertiginous heights after his death.
Rousseau’s health was execrable and like
Voltaire it was said of him that he “was
born dying.”</p>
<p class='c007'>It might have been better for Lord
Chesterfield if he had not dabbled with
medicine; he would perhaps not have
<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>“been so often his own patient, or entrusted
his health to the care of empirics.”
Even before reaching middle age, his debilitated
constitution had given him repeated
warning of what he had to expect.
When he wrote the renowned letters to
his son, he was a deaf, solitary, sick man,
who had to resort almost habitually to
drugs to help him to endure his sufferings.</p>
<p class='c007'>Boswell’s “Life of Samuel Johnson”
is so universally familiar that I need only
remind you that Dr. Johnson was scrofulous
and half-blind.</p>
<p class='c007'>Horace Walpole occupied a curiously
large place in the literary as well as the
social life of the eighteenth century. Despite
his prolific pen the only one of his
books which achieved popular success during
his lifetime was “The Castle of
Otranto.” It was translated into both
French and Italian and has been frequently
republished. It is a strange book, and
I doubt if it will ever again be read with
pleasure. Whatever significance it has
for us lies in the fact that it forms the
starting point of the great romantic revival.
Walpole’s diary, published after
his death, is of the utmost historical importance.
It is, however, chiefly by his
<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>letters that he will be remembered, for he
is undoubtedly the greatest of the English
letter-writers. Walpole suffered all his
life from frequent attacks of gout which
at times completely crippled him.</p>
<p class='c007'>Winckelmann, the famous German
archæologist, was the son of a poor shoemaker.
He became librarian to Cardinal
Passioni in 1754, and while occupying this
position he gave to the world a succession
of admirable books. It was from him
that scholars first obtained accurate information
as to the treasures excavated
at Pompeii. His greatest contribution to
European literature is the “History of
Ancient Art.” It is a delightful book,
written with a free and impassioned pen
and marked an epoch by “indicating the
spirit in which the study of Greek art
should be approached and the methods by
which investigators might hope to obtain
solid results.” He was a great friend of
Goethe and many, if not all, of their letters
have been preserved. Winckelmann
was so delicate that he could never partake
of anything but a little bread and
wine. His gentle, blameless life was cut
short by the hand of a murderer, who
killed him for the sake of a few ancient
<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>coins, the gift of the Empress Maria
Theresa.</p>
<p class='c007'>Herder, one of the most influential writers
Germany has produced, was exceedingly delicate;
so also was our own Washington
Irving, which perhaps accounts for
the extreme sensitiveness of the latter’s
impressions.</p>
<p class='c007'>Thierry, the eminent French historian,
ransacked the archives with such unremitting
zeal that on the eve of beginning to
write his history, he became totally blind.
“But he never lost heart and in making
friends with darkness,” as he puts it, he
returned to his work, and by means of
dictation was able to finish the masterpiece
that was to prove the foundation of a
new school of history!... Thierry said:
“If, as I believe, the progress of science
is to be numbered among the glories of
our land, I should again take the road that
brought me to this pass. Blind and suffering,
without any respite or hope of recovery,
I can still witness to one point,
that, coming from me, admits of no doubt;
that there is something in the world of
higher value than material enjoyment, nay,
even than bodily health, and that is—devotion
to science.” Thus was the road
<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>discovered which was to be followed by
Prescott, Sismondi, Macaulay and many
others, including Professor Ranke.</p>
<p class='c007'>Charles Lamb had a mental breakdown
at the age of nineteen, and Mary Lamb
suffered from frequent attacks of insanity.</p>
<p class='c007'>Sir W. F. P. Napier’s health was permanently
injured during a campaign which
carried hostilities into Spain. This
obliged him to retire from the army at the
age of thirty-four. This unwelcome
leisure was an inestimable benefit not only
to himself but to the world, as it permitted
him to become the greatest military
historian that England has ever produced.</p>
<p class='c007'>Carlyle became a chronic invalid in his
twenty-fourth year. The precise nature
of his ailment it is impossible to ascertain,
but he declared that a rat was continually
gnawing at the pit of his stomach.</p>
<p class='c007'>A most remarkable example of achievement
in the face of terrible physical disabilities
is presented by the historian,
Francis Parkman. He was unable to open
his eyes except in the dark, so that all his
information had to be read aloud to him
while he made notes with his eyes shut, by
means of a machine he had invented as a
guide to his hand. For years he suffered
<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>so intensely that half an hour’s application
exhausted him. The superb works he left
behind, composed despite such incredible
physical obstacles, have been a splendid
legacy to his country.</p>
<p class='c007'>Prescott, the eminent American historian,
suffered, while at Harvard, an accident
which changed the course of his life. A
hard piece of bread, thrown at random in
the commons hall, struck his left eye and
destroyed the sight. Nevertheless he
graduated honourably, but when he entered
his father’s office as a student of law
the uninjured eye showed dangerous symptoms
of inflammation. He was urged,
therefore, to travel and it was at the
Azores where he had to spend much of
his time in a darkened room, that he “began
the mental discipline which enabled
him to compose and retain in memory long
passages for subsequent dictation.” His
secretary gives this picture of him, while
writing the “History of the Reign of
Ferdinand and Isabella”—“seated in a
study lined on two sides with books and
darkened by screens of blue muslin, which
required readjustment with every cloud
that passed across the sky.” Prescott
trained his memory until he was able to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>retain sixty pages of printed matter,
“turning and returning them as he walked
or drove.” After fifty his remaining eye
showed serious symptoms of enfeeblement
and his general health also gave cause for
alarm. Nevertheless he gallantly set to
work on his “History of Philip II.”
The third volume was, however, not
through the press, before an attack of
apoplexy put an end to his life.</p>
<p class='c007'>Alfred Ainger, English divine and man
of letters, chiefly remembered for his
sympathetic writings on Charles Lamb
and Thomas Hood, was often speechless
with prostration from headaches and
sickness. Ainger was no more than a
charming writer. I only insert him because
his handicap is one of the most difficult
to overcome.</p>
<p class='c007'>Synge, the remarkable Irish dramatist,
was delicate and died young.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>
<h2 class='c005'>XVI<br/> <span class='large'>PROTESTANT REFORMERS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Luther stands out as the most powerful
figure of the Reformation. Protestant
churches of every denomination owe
to him their inception, not so much on
points of dogma, as because the success of
his revolt made theirs possible. Luther
was afflicted with epilepsy and at times
from other disabilities, the exact nature of
which I have been unable to ascertain.
Like so many other renowned invalids, we
are struck with the amount of work he accomplished.
During the last ten years of
his life he suffered from continuous ill
health, yet he spent them in incessant
labor. He was preaching with vehemence
and fervor on February 19, 1546, when
suddenly he said, quietly, “This and much
more is to be said about the Gospel; but
I am too weak and will close here.” Four
days later he was dead.</p>
<p class='c007'>Calvin suffered constant bodily pain,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>yet he was a man of incessant activity and
of supreme courage. At one time, not
only the council but the people of Geneva
revolted against his authority; a riot was
imminent. Calvin at once set out alone
for the council-chamber where he was
greeted with yells and threats of death.
Advancing slowly into their midst he
bared his breast, saying: “If you will have
blood, strike here!” Not an arm moved
and, turning his back on his enemies, he
slowly mounted the stairs to the tribune.</p>
<p class='c007'>John Knox began his career as a Catholic
priest and we have so little knowledge
of his early life that we are ignorant as
to what occasioned the startling change in
his views. After his accession to the
ranks of Protestantism he had at first no
idea of preaching but confined himself to
instructing his friends’ children. His
friends, however, recognized his capacity
and on his refusing “to run where God
had not called him,” they planned a solemn
appeal to Knox from the pulpit to accept
“the public office and charge of preaching.”
At the close of this exhortation
Knox burst into tears and shut himself in
his chamber, “in heaviness, for many
days.” The call had at last found a leader
<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>of men. Yet it was an invitation to
danger and to death. Shortly afterwards
St. Andrews was attacked by the French
fleet and Knox was among the prisoners
taken. He was thrown into a galley and
for nineteen months remained in irons and
subject to the lash. When he was finally
released, he was a man almost forty-five
years old and completely broken in health,
by reason of the hardships and cruelty to
which he had been subjected. Yet his
career was only just beginning. “To
Knox more than to any other man Scotland
owes her religion and individuality.”
He was of great political importance and
one of the most powerful enemies of
Maria Stuart. As an historian he occupies
an important place. His “History
of the Reformation in Scotland” is a remarkable
book. It was said of him “he
neither flattered nor feared any flesh.”
He was an inspired preacher. Elizabeth’s
very critical ambassador wrote from Edinburgh
that “this one man was able in one
hour to put more life in us than five hundred
trumpets.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Richard Baxter was diseased from head
to foot; nevertheless, he became celebrated
as the most eminent of the English
<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>Protestant schoolmen. He was also of
political importance and instrumental in
bringing about the Restoration of Charles
II.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>
<h2 class='c005'>XVII<br/> <span class='large'>THE SAINTS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>“When we look into God’s Face we do not feel
His Hand.”</p>
<p class='c006'>Health is a form of capital, and like
any other capital may be either well or ill
invested. Moreover, we can squander it
foolishly or convert it into the supreme
oblation, and to most of us life itself is a
less difficult sacrifice. The tragedy of
war is not so much the toll of the dead as
the lists of the disabled.</p>
<p class='c007'>Few of us are given the chance of dying
for others, but to all of us is offered the
privilege of spending ourselves for humanity,
either individually or collectively.
Countless parents, fathers as well as
mothers, purchase with their own lives
and health, life, vigor and opportunity for
their children. The instinct of sacrifice
is to a greater or less degree universal to
parenthood, and although I do not wish to
belittle their offering, I think it even more
<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>admirable when placed on a less obvious
altar. Numberless people are daily overspending
their physical resources in the
service of mankind, by the furtherance of
knowledge, the improvement of material
conditions, by widening the door of opportunity
or carrying the message of the spirit
into teeming slum and arid desert.
Others give themselves with equal prodigality
in the more limited and less glorious
field of their personal contacts; not merely
to their homes, their dependents and
friends but to all who come even casually
within the radius of their fellowship.</p>
<p class='c007'>It seems to me difficult to live at the
height of our possibilities more especially
if our activities are purely selfless, without
being at times tempted to overdraw
our health account. The soldier is only
one of a great host whose bodies have been
sacrificed in the performance of an imperative
duty. Health is often purchased at
the price of ignominious refusal.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is therefore not surprising that a
large proportion of the saints were men
and women with ruined bodies,—bodies
that had been rapturously spent in the
service of God and man. I will mention
only a few of the most renowned.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>St. Jerome, one of the greatest of the
early Christian Fathers, lived an unregenerate
life until a severe illness induced a
complete change in him and he resolved to
renounce everything that kept him back
from God. His greatest temptation was
the study of the literature of Greece and
pagan Rome, and he determined from
thenceforth to devote all his vast scholarship
to the Holy Scriptures and to Christianity.
To him we owe the first translation
of the Bible into Latin, commonly
known as the “Vulgate.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Very few men have ever wielded greater
power over the minds of men than St.
Augustine. He is to-day a living force,
yet he struggled all his life against consumption.
He lived, however, to be seventy-six.</p>
<p class='c007'>St. Bernard of Clairvaux, the most famous
monk and preacher of the Middle
Ages, was a martyr to so many physical
infirmities that at first sight he appeared
“like one near unto death.” All this
suffering, however, never quelled his ardent
spirit or his overmastering zeal for
purging the world of sin. It was St.
Bernard who said, “Nothing can work me
damage but myself; the harm I sustain I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>carry about with me, and I am never a
real sufferer but by my own fault.”</p>
<p class='c007'>St. Francis of Assisi was a gay, dissipated
youth when a severe illness put a
stop to his pleasures, and gave him time
to reflect, so that he became dissatisfied
with his mode of life. On his recovery he
set out on a military expedition, but at the
end of the first day’s march he fell ill and
had to return to Assisi. This disappointment
brought on another spiritual crisis
and shortly afterwards he went on a pilgrimage
to Rome. Before everything he
was an ascetic and a mystic,—an ascetic
who though gentle to others wore out his
body in self-denial, so much so that when
he came to die, he begged pardon of
“brother Ass, the body,” for having unduly
ill-treated it.</p>
<p class='c007'>St. Catherine of Siena was not only a
very great saint, but one of the greatest
women that ever lived. The daughter of
a poor dyer who learned to read when she
was twenty and to write when she was
twenty-seven or eight, she dictated books
and letters celebrated not only for their
spiritual fragrance and literary value, but
also for their great historical importance.
No empress ever wielded greater power
<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>than this extraordinary woman. Towards
the end of her life her court consisted
of pilgrims who flocked daily by the
thousands to visit her. The miracle of
her personality had its effect on all who
approached her. A young libertine, belonging
to one of the most aristocratic
families of Siena, after one interview with
this dyer’s daughter, abandoned his former
life and became her humble follower
until the day of her death. She converted
a notorious robber, who for years
terrorized the vicinity of Siena and had
almost paralyzed its commerce. As a
proof of the sincerity of his repentance he
gave her his stronghold, together with all
the spoils he had accumulated. The
abandonment of Avignon as the seat of
the Papal court undoubtedly changed not
only the map, but also the history of
Europe, and it was solely owing to St.
Catherine’s passionate insistence that Pope
Gregory XI returned to Rome, despite his
own reluctance and the opposition of his
cardinals. During her short life she was
continually ill and during the period of her
greatest activity she was dying.</p>
<p class='c007'>St. Ignatius Loyola, one of the most
remarkable and influential personages in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>the history of the Catholic Church, led
the adventurous life of a courtier and a
soldier until he received a wound at the
siege of Pamplona. According to an old
chronicler this “was the occasion of his
conversion to God.” A cannon-ball hit
his legs, shattering one. Serious illness
followed the most painful operation, and
for weeks his life was despaired of. It
was on the bed of torment which he eventually
left, lame for life and constitutionally
enfeebled, that grace came to him.
The saint himself said, when he returned
from the Valley of the Shadow: “I have
seen God face to face and my soul has
been saved.” From that time onward he
devoted himself to a spiritual life, wandering
far and accomplishing much.
Chief among his achievements was the
founding of the Order of Jesuits. I must
mention here a very remarkable fact that
has, however, nothing to do with my
thesis. In his will he bequeathed to the
order he founded this legacy: “that all
men should speak ill of it.” It is also
curious that he who had benefited by illness
should have said: “A sound mind in
a sound body is the most useful instrument
with which to serve God.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>St. Theresa of Jesus, the great Spanish
saint, whose personality and writings have
never lost their influence, was always extremely
delicate, and during the period of
her greatest accomplishments not only ill
but old.</p>
<p class='c007'>With St. Theresa closes my list of those
gallant souls who, apparently unfit for the
battle of life, have nevertheless left their
mark on history and civilization. And I
wish to remind you again that I have mentioned
no one whose height of achievement
has not been coincident with ill-health, or
reached after the suffering of some serious
physical disability. Neither have I
thought it proper to cite any of the numerous
instances of handicapped genius
among our living contemporaries.</p>
<p class='c007'>I am certain that many other names
might be presented to your consideration,
if it were not for my own ignorance as
well as the extreme difficulty of getting
any reliable data on the subject.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>
<h2 class='c005'>XVIII<br/> <span class='large'>PAIN, THE GREAT TEACHER</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>“What does he know,” said a sage, “who has
not suffered?”</p>
<p class='c006'>That we may be benefited by physical
suffering is no new idea,—it is not even a
forgotten idea. From the time when civilization
first expressed itself in terms of
Christianity until the Reformation, the
spiritual value of pain has been an undisputed
axiom. The Catholic Church has
never ceased to preach the mortification
of the flesh, and all religious communities,
heathen as well as Christian, consider a
certain degree of asceticism necessary for
the perfect manifestation of a spiritual
life.</p>
<p class='c007'>As to the merits of voluntary suffering
inflicted for the purpose of subjugating
the appetites of the body, Christendom
differs fundamentally, but until recently,
it has been united in regarding illness as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>one of the means by which Providence
purifies as well as punishes its children.</p>
<p class='c007'>The discovery of the germ, even more
than the preaching of Mrs. Eddy, dealt a
terrific blow to this ancient belief, with the
result that the masses no longer regard
physical suffering as a remedial agency but
as something not only unprofitable but
purely destructive. For more than thirty
years the final abolition of pain has been
the Mecca towards which doctors and
Christian Scientists have passionately
journeyed; moreover, their ranks have
been swelled by numerous sects, schools or
religious bodies that have been called into
existence by the rallying cry of this New
Hope. They pointed to the declining
death rate as an irrefutable testimony of
battles already won, and as disease after
disease disappeared before the advance of
sanitation, of serums or of Right Thought;
as surgery developed unheard-of possibilities,
the most limitless expectations seemed
not unjustified. The natural infirmities
of age must eventually yield before the
onslaught of knowledge. Bolder spirits
even dreamed of conquest over death.</p>
<p class='c007'>And then the World War came.</p>
<p class='c007'>Their boasted death-rate mounted to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>unheard-of heights. The maimed and
blind overflowed from the hospitals unto
the farthest corners of the earth. Still
the havoc was not complete. Infantile
paralysis came from the north, killing and
crippling our children by thousands. Finally,
influenza mowed down old and young
in such numbers that even here in America
it was impossible to care for all the victims.</p>
<p class='c007'>One would have expected these facts to
be a staggering blow to our theorists.
Could they not have realized—if only
dimly—that they were battling against
some fundamental law? Evidently not,
for according to them war is to be abolished.
Not only that, but Dr. Voronoff
now offers an infallible cure for old age!</p>
<p class='c007'>Now, as I said before, I neither believe
that physical suffering will ever be abolished
nor do I even hope it. For pain is
one of the great human and humanizing
experiences and, since the beginning of
time, each generation has learned in its
school the same fundamental lessons.</p>
<p class='c007'>“When a man is laboring under the
pain of any distemper it is then that he
recollects there is a God and that he is
but a man. No mortal is then the object
<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>of his envy, his admiration or his contempt;
and, having no malice to gratify,
the tales of slander excite him not.”
This is the testimony of a heathen, Pliny,
who was himself an invalid. Sixteen centuries
later an Anglican divine, Jeremy
Taylor, voiced a similar conviction. “In
sickness the soul begins to dress herself
for immortality. At first she unties the
strings of vanity that made her upper garments
cleave to the world and sit uneasy.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Even during the materialistic nineteenth
century we find Dr. Samuel Smiles
declaring: “Suffering is doubtless as
divinely appointed as joy, while it is much
more influential as a discipline of character.
It chastens and sweetens the nature,
teaches patience and resignation and promotes
the deepest as well as the most
exalted thoughts.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Latterly there have been indications
that this time-honored conception is again
becoming more universally recognized.
For instance, during the darkest days of
the war the Bishop of London writes that
he had “come to believe that a painless
world is a world not regenerate but degenerate.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Who shall say that the revival of religious
<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>feeling which is now taking place
is not due to the physical and mental suffering
entailed by the war?</p>
<p class='c007'>I should like to linger on the spiritual
value of suffering, yet I feel I am on very
delicate ground. For the spirit is so
gloriously independent of the flesh, that it
can expand under any circumstances and in
any habitation. St. Hildegarde believed
“God could not dwell in a healthy body,”
and St. Ignatius Loyola that “a healthy
mind in a healthy body is the best instrument
with which to serve God.” Yet he
himself had a shattered body.</p>
<p class='c007'>The efficacy of suffering in promoting
the growth of the spirit seems to me to lie
chiefly in the fact that it does for us what
we so seldom have the courage to do for
ourselves. It sweeps away all the rubbish
and dust of life. In the blessed emptiness
induced by this mental house-cleaning we
are able, often for the first time, to separate
clearly the essential from the unessential.
In sickness soul and body demand
instinctively only that which is for
each its most imperative necessity.</p>
<p class='c007'>In the crucible of suffering the true essence
of our character becomes manifest.
All our pitiable pretences are torn from
<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>us, leaving our inherent self face to face
with reality. It is a tremendous experience;
it must either break us or make us.
It is for us to choose which it shall be.
Suffering is the ultimate test of character.</p>
<p class='c007'>Yet as I write these words I find myself
wondering if there is any one ultimate
test. As no two crystals react to the same
solvent, so it may be that no two hearts
respond to the same probe. Of one thing,
nevertheless, I am certain: to each of us
is applied at some time in our lives that
which constitutes for that individual soul
the supreme trial of its mettle.</p>
<p class='c007'>I am frequently reminded, however,
that there are countless people who, instead
of being purified and sensitized by
physical pain, have been destroyed or at
least rendered sterile by it. This is undoubtedly
true. Whether we are to profit
by suffering or not depends entirely on
ourselves. How then are we to transmute
pain into privilege? Certainly not
through resignation, for there is no virtue
without action. It may only be the interior
travail of the spirit, but to attain
even the initial step to spiritual, intellectual
or material advancement necessitates
labor. So it is with the benefits of suffering.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>They are there within the reach of
all, but can only be obtained as the wage
of persistent endeavor.</p>
<p class='c007'>Resignation is not merely inactive, it is
positively harmful inasmuch as it is a tacit
acknowledgment that pain is in itself an
evil, and to believe that is to stultify its
possibilities. For what we believe to be
evil, no matter how innocent in itself, becomes
so by the corrosive power of that
belief.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is a dogma of Christianity that disease
is one of the punitive consequences
of original sin. Now punishment implies
correction. Therefore, if disease represents
a fall from perfection, it also
holds within it the germs of a future perfection.
Although theology teaches sin
as the inception of disease, yet if we
consider only the immediate cause of our
physical disabilities we will find that although
they are frequently the result of
breaking a moral law, they are quite as
frequently to be attributed to no fault of
our own, and may even be the emblem of
sacrifice.</p>
<p class='c007'>If so many fail to benefit through suffering,
we must remember that only a
few of us are able to sustain the daily test
<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>of life. Every experience, especially any
great and unusual experience, is a fire
through which few pass unscathed.
Beauty, charm, riches, personality, even
intellect, have each their separate temptation,
their different limitations.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is so easy for the spirit to sleep contented
within the soft prison of a perfect
body. Superabundant health and vitality,
unless guided by infinite wisdom, are as
likely to cast us into the abyss of life as
to raise us to the summit. Power fosters
pride, and charm is the twin-sister of vanity.
Life is a continuous trial of our
strength, but disease is not necessarily the
supreme trial.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was George Eliot who said: “There
is nothing the body suffers the soul may
not profit by.”</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>
<h2 class='c005'>XIX<br/> <span class='large'>CONCLUSION</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Who best can suffer, best can do.</p>
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<div class='line'>—<i>Milton.</i></div>
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<p class='c006'>We have seen that as mankind rises in
the scale of civilization the body becomes
increasingly less important. Nevertheless,
I wish it to be clearly understood, that
I do not maintain that it is preferable
to be ill than well, but only that each
state has its own peculiar privileges, which
are rarely interchangeable.</p>
<p class='c007'>Health and sickness are merely different
roads to achievement. The earth requires
rain as well as sunshine; we need
both tears and laughter; navvies are necessary
and so are philosophers.</p>
<p class='c007'>You may therefore reasonably ask why,
if suffering is indispensable to humanity,
doctors and sociologists should spend
themselves and their lives in attempting
to banish it from the world?</p>
<p class='c007'>Because, if pain is the gate through
<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>which we must pass to attain certain experiences
and realizations, to battle
against it is undoubtedly the road to
others. To endure pain and to relieve
pain are both instrumental in freeing us
from the prison of ourselves, and freedom
from self is the only real freedom.
Moreover, whatever ameliorates human
conditions, whether serums or sanitation,
free concerts or fireless cookers, results in
loosing us from the thraldom of the body.</p>
<p class='c007'>The race reaches toward an ideal of
ultimate perfection, just as a plant
stretches upward towards the sun. Both
are unattainable, yet all activity would
cease, if we demanded nothing less than
absolute and indestructible achievement.
The tide flows only to ebb, the field must
be sown anew year after year; we build
cities knowing that time will eventually
destroy them; we bear children doomed to
death.</p>
<p class='c007'>But after the ebb comes the tide, bringing
ever new treasures to our shores; the
germ of spring lies hidden in the barren
breast of autumn; out of the ashes of vast
cities still greater cities will arise, and
Death is but the portal of Life.</p>
<p class='c007'>No physical disablement is a barrier to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>achievement. This is the glorious fact
which the illustrious men and women I
have enumerated have proved beyond the
possibility of dispute. To cripple and
hunchback, to blind, deaf and dumb, to
those chained to “a mattress-grave,” and
to those who have been mentally unbalanced,
they have bequeathed this precious
legacy of Hope.</p>
<p class='c007'>On the other hand we can no longer
plead our infirmities as an excuse for our
weakness, our sterility or failure. For
whatever may be our disablement we can
find in history a parallel debility triumphantly
transmuted into strength.</p>
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<div>THE END</div>
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<h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2></div>
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<li>Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
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<li>Retained anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
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