Mince Pie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 192 pages of information about Mince Pie.

Mince Pie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 192 pages of information about Mince Pie.

Be hospitable to rumors, for however grotesque they are, they always have some reason for existence.  The Sixth Sense is the sense of news, the sense that something is going to happen.  And just as every orchestra utters queer and discordant sounds while it is tuning up its instruments, so does the great orchestra of Human Events (in other words, The News) offer shrill and perhaps misleading notes before the conductor waves his baton and leads off the concerted crash of Truth.  Keep your senses alert to examine the odd scraps of hearsay that you will often see in the news, for it is in just those eavesdroppings at the heart of humanity that the press often fulfills its highest function.

OUR MOTHERS

[Illustration]

When one becomes a father, then first one becomes a son.  Standing by the crib of one’s own baby, with that world-old pang of compassion and protectiveness toward this so little creature that has all its course to run, the heart flies back in yearning and gratitude to those who felt just so toward one’s self.  Then for the first time one understands the homely succession of sacrifices and pains by which life is transmitted and fostered down the stumbling generations of men.

Every man is privileged to believe all his life that his own mother is the best and dearest that a child ever had.  By some strange racial instinct of taciturnity and repression most of us lack utterance to say our thoughts in this close matter.  A man’s mother is so tissued and woven into his life and brain that he can no more describe her than describe the air and sunlight that bless his days.  It is only when some Barrie comes along that he can say for all of us what fills the eye with instant tears of gentleness.  Is there a mother, is there a son, who has not read Barrie’s “Margaret Ogilvy?” Turn to that first chapter, “How My Mother Got Her Soft Face,” and draw aside the veils that years and perplexity weave over the inner sanctuaries of our hearts.

Our mothers understand us so well!  Speech and companionship with them are so easy, so unobstructed by the thousand teasing barriers that bar soul from eager soul!  To walk and talk with them is like slipping on an old coat.  To hear their voices is like the shake of music in a sober evening hush.

There is a harmony and beauty in the life of mother and son that brims the mind’s cup of satisfaction.  So well we remember when she was all in all; strength, tenderness, law and life itself.  Her arms were the world:  her soft cheek our sun and stars.  And now it is we who are strong and self-sufficing; it is she who leans on us.  Is there anything so precious, so complete, so that return of life’s pendulum?

And it is as grandmothers that our mothers come into the fullness of their grace.  When a man’s mother holds his child in her gladdened arms he is aware (with some instinctive sense of propriety) of the roundness of life’s cycle; of the mystic harmony of life’s ways.  There speaks humanity in its chord of three notes:  its little capture of completeness and joy, sounding for a moment against the silent flux of time.  Then the perfect span is shredded away and is but a holy memory.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Mince Pie from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.