<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>III</h2>
<h3>THE HAND OF THE RACE</h3>
<div class='cap'>LOOK in your "Century Dictionary," or
if you are blind, ask your teacher
to do it for you, and learn how many
idioms are made on the idea of hand,
and how many words are formed from
the Latin root <i>manus</i>—enough words to
name all the essential affairs of life.
"Hand," with quotations and compounds,
occupies twenty-four columns,
eight pages of this dictionary. The
hand is defined as "the organ of apprehension."
How perfectly the definition
fits my case in both senses of the word
"apprehend"! With my hand I seize<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></SPAN></span>
and hold all that I find in the three
worlds—physical, intellectual, and spiritual.</div>
<p>Think how man has regarded the
world in terms of the hand. All life is
divided between what lies <i>on one hand</i>
and on the other. The products of skill
are <i>manu</i>factures. The conduct of affairs
is <i>man</i>agement. History seems to
be the record—alas for our chronicles of
war!—of the <i>man</i>œuvres of armies.
But the history of peace, too, the narrative
of labour in the field, the forest, and
the vineyard, is written in the victorious
sign <i>manual</i>—the sign of the hand that
has conquered the wilderness. The
labourer himself is called a <i>hand</i>. In
<i>man</i>acle and <i>manu</i>mission we read the
story of human slavery and freedom.</p>
<p>The minor idioms are myriad; but I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></SPAN></span>
will not recall too many, lest you cry,
"Hands off!" I cannot desist, however,
from this word-game until I have set
down a few. Whatever is not one's own
by first possession is <i>second-hand</i>. That
is what I am told my knowledge is. But
my well-meaning friends come to my
defence, and, not content with endowing
me with natural <i>first-hand</i> knowledge
which is rightfully mine, ascribe to me
a preternatural sixth sense and credit to
miracles and heaven-sent compensations
all that I have won and discovered with
my good right hand. And with my left
hand too; for with that I read, and it is
as true and honourable as the other. By
what half-development of human power
has the left hand been neglected?
When we arrive at the acme of civilization
shall we not all be ambidextrous,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></SPAN></span>
and in our <i>hand-to-hand</i> contests against
difficulties shall we not be doubly triumphant?
It occurs to me, by the way,
that when my teacher was training my
unreclaimed spirit, her struggle against
the powers of darkness, with the stout
arm of discipline and the light of the
manual alphabet, was in two senses a
hand-to-hand conflict.</p>
<p>No essay would be complete without
quotations from Shakspere. In the
field which, in the presumption of my
youth, I thought was my own he has
reaped before me. In almost every
play there are passages where the hand
plays a part. Lady Macbeth's heart-broken
soliloquy over her little hand,
from which all the perfumes of Arabia
will not wash the stain, is the most pitiful
moment in the tragedy. Mark Antony<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></SPAN></span>
rewards Scarus, the bravest of his soldiers,
by asking Cleopatra to give him her hand:
"Commend unto his lips thy favouring
hand." In a different mood he
is enraged because Thyreus, whom he
despises, has presumed to kiss the
hand of the queen, "my playfellow,
the kingly seal of high hearts."
When Cleopatra is threatened with the
humiliation of gracing Cæsar's triumph,
she snatches a dagger, exclaiming,
"I will trust my resolution and my
good hands." With the same swift instinct,
Cassius trusts to his hands when
he stabs Cæsar: "Speak, hands, for me!"
"Let me kiss your hand," says the blind
Gloster to Lear. "Let me wipe it first,"
replies the broken old king; "it smells of
mortality." How charged is this single
touch with sad meaning! How it opens<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></SPAN></span>
our eyes to the fearful purging Lear
has undergone, to learn that royalty is
no defence against ingratitude and
cruelty! Gloster's exclamation about
his son, "Did I but live to see thee in my
touch, I'd say I had eyes again," is as
true to a pulse within me as the grief he
feels. The ghost in "Hamlet" recites the
wrongs from which springs the tragedy:</p>
<div class='poem'>
Thus was I, sleeping, by a brother's hand.<br/>
At once of life, of crown, of queen dispatch'd.<br/></div>
<p>How that passage in "Othello" stops
your breath—that passage full of bitter
double intention in which Othello's suspicion
tips with evil what he says about
Desdemona's hand; and she in innocence
answers only the innocent meaning of
his words: "For 'twas that hand that
gave away my heart."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Not all Shakspere's great passages
about the hand are tragic. Remember
the light play of words in "Romeo and
Juliet" where the dialogue, flying nimbly
back and forth, weaves a pretty
sonnet about the hand. And who knows
the hand, if not the lover?</p>
<p>The touch of the hand is in every
chapter of the Bible. Why, you could
almost rewrite Exodus as the story of
the hand. Everything is done by the
hand of the Lord and of Moses. The
oppression of the Hebrews is translated
thus: "The hand of Pharaoh was heavy
upon the Hebrews." Their departure
out of the land is told in these vivid
words: "The Lord brought the children
of Israel out of the house of bondage
with a strong hand and a stretched-out
arm." At the stretching out of the hand<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></SPAN></span>
of Moses the waters of the Red Sea part
and stand all on a heap. When the
Lord lifts his hand in anger, thousands
perish in the wilderness. Every act,
every decree in the history of Israel, as
indeed in the history of the human race,
is sanctioned by the hand. Is it not used
in the great moments of swearing, blessing,
cursing, smiting, agreeing, marrying,
building, destroying? Its sacredness
is in the law that no sacrifice is valid
unless the sacrificer lay his hand upon
the head of the victim. The congregation
lay their hands on the heads of those
who are sentenced to death. How
terrible the dumb condemnation of their
hands must be to the condemned!
When Moses builds the altar on Mount
Sinai, he is commanded to use no tool,
but rear it with his own hands. Earth,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></SPAN></span>
sea, sky, man, and all lower animals are
holy unto the Lord because he has
formed them with his hand. When the
Psalmist considers the heavens and the
earth, he exclaims: "What is man, O
Lord, that thou art mindful of him?
For thou hast made him to have dominion
over the works of thy hands." The supplicating
gesture of the hand always accompanies
the spoken prayer, and with
clean hands goes the pure heart.</p>
<p>Christ comforted and blessed and
healed and wrought many miracles with
his hands. He touched the eyes of the
blind, and they were opened. When
Jairus sought him, overwhelmed with
grief, Jesus went and laid his hands on
the ruler's daughter, and she awoke
from the sleep of death to her father's
love. You also remember how he healed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></SPAN></span>
the crooked woman. He said to her,
"Woman, thou art loosed from thine infirmity,"
and he laid his hands on her,
and immediately she was made straight,
and she glorified God.</p>
<p>Look where we will, we find the hand
in time and history, working, building,
inventing, bringing civilization out of
barbarism. The hand symbolizes power
and the excellence of work. The mechanic's
hand, that minister of elemental
forces, the hand that hews, saws, cuts,
builds, is useful in the world equally
with the delicate hand that paints a wild
flower or moulds a Grecian urn, or the
hand of a statesman that writes a law.
The eye cannot say to the hand, "I have
no need of thee." Blessed be the hand!
Thrice blessed be the hands that work!</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>THE POWER OF TOUCH</h2>
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