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Tiger and Tom and Other Stories for Boys Part 23

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"Found it easy enough, didn't you?"

"Yes."

"Did you give him enough to stop him?"

"I guess so; he is pretty still this morning, you see."

Upon the strength of this conversation, George circulated a report that Isaac had flogged Jim. This created a good deal of surprise, as it was not in keeping with Isaac's character. The report at length reached the ears of the teacher.

He inquired about the matter, of Isaac, and learned that George had been deceived, or rather had deceived himself. He warmly commended Isaac for his new mode of taking his enemies "in hand," and advised him to continue to practice it. A few days afterward, as Isaac was on his way to school, he met Jim driving some cattle to a distant field. The cattle were very unruly, and Jim made little headway with them. First one would run back, and then another, till he began to despair of being able to drive them to pasture.

[Ill.u.s.tration: "_The cattle were very unruly_."]

He burst out crying, and said, "Oh dear, I can't make them go, and father will kill me if I don't."

Isaac pitied his distress, and volunteered to a.s.sist him. It cost him a good deal of running, and kept him from school nearly all the morning.

But when the cattle were safe in the pasture, Jim said, "I shan't stone you any more."

When Isaac reached the schoolhouse he showed signs of the violent exercise he had been taking.

"What has Isaac been about?" was the whispered question which went round. When put to him he replied, "I have been chasing cattle to pasture." He was understood to mean his father's cattle.

After school, he waited till all the pupils had left the schoolroom, before he went up to the teacher to give his excuse for being late at school.

"What made you so late?" asked the teacher.

"I was taking Jim in hand again, sir;" and he gave him an account of his proceeding, adding at the close, "I thought you would excuse me, sir."

"Very well, you are excused."

Reader, if you have enemies who annoy you, _take them in hand_ in the same way that Isaac did, and you will be certain, if you persevere to conquer them.

[Ill.u.s.tration: _Learning the Printer's Trade_]

OVERWORKED BOYS

The boys of our time are too much afraid of work. They act as if the honest sweat of the brow was something to be ashamed of. Would that they were all equally afraid of a staggering gait and bloated face! This spirit of laziness builds the gambling houses, fills the jails, supplies the saloons and gaming places with loiterers, and keeps the alms houses and charitable inst.i.tutions doing a brisk business.

It doesn't build mammoth stores and factories, nor buildings like the Astor Library and Cooper Inst.i.tute. The men who built such monuments of their industry and benevolence were not afraid of work.

All the boys have heard of the great publis.h.i.+ng house of the Harpers.

They know of their finely ill.u.s.trated papers and books of all kinds, and perhaps have seen their great publis.h.i.+ng house in New York City. But if I should ask the boys how the eldest of the brothers came to found such an ill.u.s.trious house, I should perhaps be told that he was a "wonderfully lucky man."

He was lucky, and an old friend and fellow-workman, a leading editor, has revealed the secret of his luck. He and the elder Harper learned their trade together, many years ago, in John Street, New York. They began life with no fortune but willing hands and active brains;--fortune enough for any young man in this free country.

[Ill.u.s.tration: "_Let's break the back of another token_."]

"Sometimes after we had done a good day's work, James Harper would say, 'Thurlow, let's break the back of another _token_ (a quarter of a ream of paper),--just break its back.' I would generally reluctantly consent just to _break the back_ of the _token_; but James would beguile me, or laugh at my complaints, and never let me off until the _token_ was _completed_, fair and square!

"It was our custom in summer to do a fair half-day's work before the other boys and men got their breakfast. We would meet by appointment in the gray of the morning, and go down to John Street. We got the key of the office by tapping on the window, and Mr. Seymour would take it from under his pillow, and hand it to one of us through the blind.

"It kept us out of mischief, and put money into our pockets."

The key handed through the window tells the secret of the _luck_ that enabled these two men to rise to eminence, while so many boys that lay soundly sleeping in those busy morning hours are unknown.

No wonder that James Harper became mayor of the city, and head of one of the largest publis.h.i.+ng houses in the world. When his great printing house burned down, the giant perseverance which he had learned in those hours of _overwork_, made him able to raise, from the ashes, a larger and finer one.

Instead of watching till his employer's back was turned, and saying, "Come, boys, let's go home; we've done enough for one day," and sauntering off with a cigar in his mouth, his cry was, "Let's do a little _overwork_."

That _overwork_ which frightens boys nowadays out of good places, and sends them out West, on s.h.i.+pboard, anywhere, eating husks, in search of a spot where money can be had without work, laid the foundation of the apprentice boy's future greatness.

Such busy boys were only too glad to go to bed and sleep soundly. They had no time nor spare strength for dissipation, and idle thoughts, and vulgar conversation.

Almost the last words that James Harper uttered were appropriate to the end of such a life, and ought to be engraven upon the mind of every boy who expects to make anything of himself: "_It is not best to be studying how little we can work, but how much_."

[Ill.u.s.tration: It is not best to study how little we can work, but how much.]

Boys, make up your minds to one thing,--the future great men of this country are doing just what those boys did. If you are dodging work, angry at your employer or teacher for trying to make you faithful; if you are getting up late, cross, and sleepy, after a night of pleasure-seeking, longing for the time when you can exchange honest work for speculation, you will be a victim to your own folly.

The plainly-dressed boys whom you meet carrying packages, going of errands, working at trades, following the plow, are laying up stores of what you call _good luck_. Overwork has no terrors for them. They are preparing to take the places of the great leaders of our country's affairs. They have learned James Harper's _secret_. The key handed out to him in the "gray of the morning"--_that_ tells the story!

"The heights by great men reached and kept Were not attained by sudden flight But they, while their companions slept, Were toiling upward in the night."

[Ill.u.s.tration]

[Ill.u.s.tration: _Bring Your Wood Saws and Axes_]

THE BEST FUN

"Now, boys, I'll tell you how we can have some fun," said Fred Blake to his companions, who had a.s.sembled on a beautiful, moonlight evening for sliding, s...o...b..lling, and fun generally.

"How?" "Where?" "What is it?" asked several eager voices together.

"I heard Widow More tell a man a little while ago," replied Fred, "that she would go to sit up with a sick child to-night. She said she would be there about eight o'clock. Now, as soon as she is gone, let's make a big snow man on her doorstep so that when she comes home, she cannot get in without first knocking him down."

"Capital!" shouted several of the boys.

"See here," said Charlie Neal, "I'll tell you the best fun."

"What is it?" again inquired several at once.

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Tiger and Tom and Other Stories for Boys Part 23 summary

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