Pushing to the Front
s world whose work is n
this world until somebod
; force and persistence in crowding opportunity to its utmost of possible achi
nd a way o
portunity for doing good that never could have been
rnest? Seize t
, or dream you
ain Berry in delight, when Nelson had explained his
." Then, as his captains rose from the council to go to their respective ships, he added: "Before this time to-morrow I shall have gained a
ho had been sent to explore the dreaded pass of St. Bernard. "Perhaps
ps, where "no wheel had ever rolled, or by any possibility could roll," an army of sixty thousand men, with ponderous artillery, tons of cannon balls and baggage, and all the bulky munitions of
igantic obstacles by calling them insuperable. Many a commander had possessed the necessary supplies, tools, and rugged soldiers, but lacked the gr
beset by the Confederates that its surrender seemed only a question of a few days; for the hills around were all aglow by night with the camp-f
lders of four men, he was taken to Chattanooga. Things assumed a different aspect immediately. A master had arrived who was equal to the situation. The army felt the grip of hi
or were they compelled by the indomina
anized his men, and snatched victory from defeat?-when Winkelried gathered to his heart a sheaf of Austrian spears, thus opening a path through which his comrades pressed to freedom?-when for years Napoleon did not lose a single battle in which he was personally engaged?-when Wellington fought in many climes without ever being conquered?-when Ney, on a hundred fields, changed appare
ions to accomplish results deemed impossible by those less resolute.
Alps that oppose the progress of the average American youth are not
opportunities. Seize common o
m Darling, the light-keeper. "Ah, yes, we must go to the rescue," exclaimed his daughter, pleading tearfully with both father and mother, until the former replied: "Very well, Grace, I will let you persuade me, though it is against my better judgment." Like a feather in a whirlwind the little boat was tossed on the tumultuous sea, but, borne on the blast that swept the cruel surge, the shrieks of those shipwrecked sailors seemed
y Eggleston. A large company had been invited to a banquet, and just before the hour the confectioner, who had been making a large ornament for the table, sent word that he had spoiled
f you'll let me try." The servant was at his wits' end, so he told Antonio to go ahead and see what he could do. Calling
es fell upon the butter lion, they forgot the purpose for which they had come in their wonder at such a work of genius. They looked at the lion long and carefully, and asked Signer Fali
expenses under the best masters, and he kept his word. Antonio was not spoiled by his good fortune, but remained at heart the same simple, earnest, faithful boy who had tried so hard to become a go
opportunities, str
waited for chances but who have taken them; besieged the
receive unusual aid; but opportunities are often presented w
ty. Every business transaction is an opportunity,-an opportunity to be polite,-an opportunity to be manly,-an opportunity to be honest,-an opportunity to make friends. Every proof of confidence in you is a great opportunity. Every responsibility thrust upon your strength and your honor is priceless. Existence is the privilege of effort, and
he odds and ends of opportunities which many carelessly throw away than other will get out of a whole life-time. Like bees, they extract honey
e," says a cardinal; "but when she finds he is not ready to
ed, at a salary of one thousand dollars a year. Livingston and Fulton had acquired the sole right to navigate New York waters by steam, but Vanderbilt thought the law unconstitutional, and defied it until it was repealed. He soon became a steam
rs, he plunged into railroad enterprises with all his might,
unity in Grant's order, "On to Richmond." One morning in 1864 he knocked at the door of Plankinton, partner in his venture as a pork packer. "I am going to take the next train to New York," said he, "to sell pork 'short.' Grant and Sherman have the rebellion by the throat, and pork will go down to twelve dollars a barrel." This was his opportunity. He went to New York and offered pork i
rted a single barrel "still" in 1870, using an improved process discovered by his partner. They made a superior grade of oil and prospered rapidly. They admitted a third partner, Mr. Flagler, but Andrews soon became dissatisfied. "What will you take for your interest?" asked Rockefeller. Andrews wrote carelessly on a piece of paper, "One million dollars." Within twenty-f
s, of engineers, of scholars, of artists, of authors, and of poets, who find opportunities, thick as thistles, for doing something noble
to care for them, and the Government merely furnished food to keep them alive. Mrs. Fry visited Newgate, calmed the howling mob, and told them she wished to establish a school for the young women and the girls, and asked them to select a schoolmistress from their own number. They were amazed, but chose a young woman who had been committed for stealing a wat
hat to do until another boy, Astley Cooper, took his handkerchief and stopped the bleeding by pressure above the wound.
surgeon is away. Time is pressing. Life and death hang in the balance. Is he equal to the emergency? Can he fill the great surgeon's place, and do his work? If he can, he is the one of
red for a gre
the Acadians, was separated from her lover, and passed her life in waiting and seeking for him, and only found him dying in a hospital when both were old.' Longfellow wondered that the legend did not strike the fancy of Hawthorne, and he said to him, 'If you have really made up your mind not to use
cries of those who are perishing for assistance; open hearts will never want for worthy
made use of his knowledge that the body displaces its exact bulk of liquid; but when Archimedes observed the fa
ical importance; but the boy Galileo, as he watched a lamp left swinging by accident in the cathedral at Pisa, saw in the regularity of those oscillations the useful principle of the pendulum. Even the iro
netary formation; but Laplace saw that, instead of being exceptions, they are the sole remaining visible evidences of certain stages in th
t lie beyond the Western Ocean, but it remained for Columbus to
but Newton was the first to realize that they fall to the earth by the same law which holds the planets in th
l-pervading and tremendous energy of electricity; but the discharges of Heaven's artillery were seen and heard only by the eye and ear of terror unt
of any successful man and mark its moral, told thousands of years ago by Solomon: "Seest thou a man diligent in his business? he shall stand
for himself and others. Every one who has labored honestly in the past has aided
ted youth, to the office boy and to the clerk-avenues through which they can reap greater successes than ever before within the reach of these classes in the his
which had wings on its feet. "Opportunity," replied the sculptor. "Why is its face hidden?" "Because men seldom know h
is bald; if you seize her by the forelock, you may hold her, but
portunity to him who ca
asked if they needed help. 'I am in a sinking condition,' cried Captain Herndon. 'Had you not better send your passengers on board directly?' I asked. 'Will you not lay by me unt
I never saw the steamer again. In an hour and a half after he said, 'Lay by me till morning,' his vessel, wi
h when his last moments came? How many lives were sacrificed to his unintelligent hopefulness and indecision! Like him the feeble, the sluggish, and the purpose
unctual in their home duties. That is the way the habit is acquired; and now, when responsibility claims them, they think that if they had only gone yesterday they would have obtained the situation, or they can probably get one to-morrow. T
eady to answer questions. But he did not realize the full responsibility of his position. He "took the world easy," and occasionally tippled; and if any one remonstrated, he woul
uties because of the storm, and slyly sipped occasional draughts from a flat bottle. Soon he
er head, and an express was due in a few minutes upon the same track. The conductor hurr
y. Wait till I g
vely, "Don't stop a minute
ingly. The conductor then h
en he took another sip from the flat bottle to keep the cold out. Then he
e, but it was too late. In a horrible minute the engine of the express had telescoped the stan
ext day he was found in a barn, delirious, swinging an empty lan
that sad place than the unceasing moan, "Oh, that I had! Oh, that I had!" of the
t cry of many a man who would give life itself for the
no proportion between spaces of time in importance nor in value. A stray, unthought-of five minutes
sums up and brings to a result previous training. Accidental circumstances
fame, or worth. We are dazzled by what Emerson calls the "shallow Americanism" of the day. W
our country fully developed? Are the secrets of nature all mastered? Is there no way in which you can utilize these passing moments to improve yourself or benefit others? Is the competition of modern existence so fierce that you must be content
for which He has already given you the necessary faculties and strength? Even when the Chosen People supposed their progress checked by the Red Se
de of disaster for some fellow man, or clear his path to success; with our own faculties so arranged that in honest, earnest, persistent endeavor we fi
e Stephenson made his when he mastered the rules of mathematics with a bit of chalk on the grimy sides of the coal wagons in the mines. Make it, as Napoleon made his in a hundred "impossible" s
ide in the af
the flood, lea
the voyage
shallows and
ke the current
our ve
red twice; seize
iles, and duty
de to 'scape t
h pleasure becko
ar thee onward