The Feast of St. Friend eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 52 pages of information about The Feast of St. Friend.

The Feast of St. Friend eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 52 pages of information about The Feast of St. Friend.
he will have the conviction, always delightfully flattering to a donee, that he has been the object of a particular attention and insight. * * * And when the cards of greeting are despatched, formal phrases will go forth charged, in the consciousness of the sender, with a genuine meaning, with the force of a climax, as though the sender had written thereon, in invisible ink:  “I have had you well in mind during the last twelve months; I think I understand your difficulties and appreciate your efforts better than I did, and so it is with a peculiar sympathetic knowledge that I wish you good luck.  I have guessed what particular kind of good luck you require, and I wish accordingly.  My wish is not vague and perfunctory only.”

* * * * *

And on the day of festival itself one feels that one really has something to celebrate.  The occasion has a basis, if it had no basis for one before; and if a basis previously existed, then it is widened and strengthened.  The festival becomes a public culmination to a private enterprise.  One is not reminded by Christmas of goodwill, because the enterprise of imaginative sympathy has been a daily affair throughout the year; but Christmas provides an excuse for taking satisfaction in the success of the enterprise and new enthusiasm to correct its failures.  The symbolism of the situation of Christmas, at the turn of the year, develops an added impressiveness, and all the Christmas customs, apt to produce annoyance in the breasts of the unsentimental, are accepted with indulgence, even with eagerness, because their symbolism also is shown in a clearer light.  Christmas becomes as personal as a birthday.  One eats and drinks to excess, not because it is the custom to eat and drink to excess, but from sheer effervescent faith in an idea.  And as one sits with one’s friends, possessing them in the privacy of one’s heart, permeated by a sense of the value of sympathetic comprehension in this formidable adventure of existence on a planet that rushes eternally through the night of space; assured indeed that companionship and mutual understanding alone make the adventure agreeable,—­one sees in a flash that Christmas, whatever else it may be, is and must be the Feast of St. Friend, and a day on that account supreme among the days of the year.

* * * * *

The third and greatest consequence of the systematic cultivation of goodwill now grows blindingly apparent.  To state it earlier in all its crudity would have been ill-advised; and I purposely refrained from doing so.  It is the augmentation of one’s own happiness.  The increase of amity, the diminution of resentment and annoyance, the regular maintenance of an attitude mildly benevolent towards mankind,—­these things are the surest way to happiness.  And it is because they are the surest way to happiness, that the most enlightened go after them.  All real motives are selfish motives; were it otherwise humanity

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The Feast of St. Friend from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.