Around The Tea-Table eBook

Thomas De Witt Talmage
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about Around The Tea-Table.

Around The Tea-Table eBook

Thomas De Witt Talmage
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about Around The Tea-Table.

In such depressed state no one can afford to sit for an hour.  First of all let him get up and go out of doors.  Fresh air, and the faces of cheerful men, and pleasant women, and frolicsome children, will in fifteen minutes kill moping.  The first moment your friend strikes the keyboard of your soul it will ring music.  A hen might as well try on populous Broadway to hatch out a feathery group as for a man to successfully brood over his ills in lively society.  Do not go for relief among those who feel as badly as you do.  Let not toothache, and rheumatism, and hypochondria go to see toothache, rheumatism and hypochondria.  On one block in Brooklyn live a doctor, an undertaker and a clergyman.  That is not the row for a nervous man to walk on, lest he soon need all three.  Throw back all the shutters of your soul and let the sunlight of genial faces shine in.

Besides that, why sit ye here with the blues, ye favored sons and daughters of men?  Shone upon by such stars, and breathed on by such air, and sung to by so many pleasant sounds, you ought not to be seen moping.  Especially if light from the better world strikes its aurora through your night sky, ought you be cheerful.  You can afford to have a rough luncheon by the way if it is soon to end amid the banqueters in white.  Sailing toward such a blessed port, do not have your flag at half mast.  Leave to those who take too much wine “the gloomy raven tapping at the chamber door, on the night’s Plutonian shore,” and give us the robin red-breast and the chaffinch.  Let some one with a strong voice give out the long-metre doxology, and the whole world “Praise God, from whom all blessings flow.”

“But do you not suppose, Governor Wiseman, that every man has his irritated days?”

Yes, yes, responded the governor.  There are times when everything seems to go wrong.  From seven o’clock a.m. till ten p.m. affairs are in a twist.  You rise in the morning, and the room is cold, and a button is off, and the breakfast is tough, and the stove smokes, and the pipes burst, and you start down the street nettled from head to foot.  All day long things are adverse.  Insinuations, petty losses, meanness on the part of customers.  The ink bottle upsets and spoils the carpet.  Some one gives a wrong turn to the damper, and the gas escapes.  An agent comes in determined to insure your life, when it is already insured for more than it is worth, and you are afraid some one will knock you on the head to get the price of your policy; but he sticks to you, showing you pictures of old Time and the hour-glass, and Death’s scythe and a skeleton, making it quite certain that you will die before your time unless you take out papers in his company.  Besides this, you have a cold in your head, and a grain of dirt in your eye, and you are a walking uneasiness.  The day is out of joint, and no surgeon can set it.

The probability is that if you would look at the weather-vane you would find that the wind is northeast, and you might remember that you have lost much sleep lately.  It might happen to be that you are out of joint instead of the day.  Be careful and not write many letters while you are in that irritated mood.  You will pen some things that you will be sorry for afterward.

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Project Gutenberg
Around The Tea-Table from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.