<h2 name="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</h2>
<h3>SUGGESTIONS</h3>
<h4>How to Write—What to Write—Correct Speaking and
Speakers</h4></center>
<p>Rules of grammar and rhetoric are good in their own place; their
laws must be observed in order to express thoughts and ideas in the
right way so that they shall convey a determinate sense and meaning
in a pleasing and acceptable manner. Hard and fast rules, however,
can never make a writer or author. That is the business of old
Mother Nature and nothing can take her place. If nature has not
endowed a man with faculties to put his ideas into proper
composition he cannot do so. He may have no ideas worthy the
recording. If a person has not a thought to express, it cannot be
expressed. Something cannot be manufactured out of nothing. The
author must have thoughts and ideas before he can express them on
paper. These come to him by nature and environment and are
developed and strengthened by study. There is an old Latin
quotation in regard to the poet which says "Poeta nascitur non fit"
the translation of which is—the poet is born, not made. To a
great degree the same applies to the author. Some men are great
scholars as far as book learning is concerned, yet they cannot
express themselves in passable composition. Their knowledge is like
gold locked up in a chest where it is of no value to themselves or
the rest of the world.</p>
<p>The best way to learn to write is to sit down and write, just as
the best way how to learn to ride a bicycle is to mount the wheel
and pedal away. Write first about common things, subjects that are
familiar to you. Try for instance an essay on a cat. Say something
original about her. Don't say "she is very playful when young but
becomes grave as she grows old." That has been said more than fifty
thousand times before. Tell what you have seen the family cat
doing, how she caught a mouse in the garret and what she did after
catching it. Familiar themes are always the best for the beginner.
Don't attempt to describe a scene in Australia if you have never
been there and know nothing of the country. Never hunt for
subjects, there are thousands around you. Describe what you saw
yesterday—a fire, a runaway horse, a dog-fight on the street
and be original in your description. Imitate the best writers in
their <i>style</i>, but not in their exact words. Get out of the
beaten path, make a pathway of your own.</p>
<p>Know what you write about, write about what you know; this is a
golden rule to which you must adhere. To know you must study. The
world is an open book in which all who run may read. Nature is one
great volume the pages of which are open to the peasant as well as
to the peer. Study Nature's moods and tenses, for they are vastly
more important than those of the grammar. Book learning is most
desirable, but, after all, it is only theory and not practice. The
grandest allegory in the English, in fact, in any language, was
written by an ignorant, so-called ignorant, tinker named John
Bunyan. Shakespeare was not a scholar in the sense we regard the
term to-day, yet no man ever lived or probably ever will live that
equalled or will equal him in the expression of thought. He simply
read the book of nature and interpreted it from the standpoint of
his own magnificent genius.</p>
<p>Don't imagine that a college education is necessary to success
as a writer. Far from it. Some of our college men are dead-heads,
drones, parasites on the body social, not alone useless to the
world but to themselves. A person may be so ornamental that he is
valueless from any other standpoint. As a general rule ornamental
things serve but little purpose. A man may know so much of
everything that he knows little of anything. This may sound
paradoxical, but, nevertheless, experience proves its truth.</p>
<p>If you are poor that is not a detriment but an advantage.
Poverty is an incentive to endeavor, not a drawback. Better to be
born with a good, working brain in your head than with a gold spoon
in your mouth. If the world had been depending on the so-called
pets of fortune it would have deteriorated long ago.</p>
<p>From the pits of poverty, from the arenas of suffering, from the
hovels of neglect, from the backwood cabins of obscurity, from the
lanes and by-ways of oppression, from the dingy garrets and
basements of unending toil and drudgery have come men and women who
have made history, made the world brighter, better, higher, holier
for their existence in it, made of it a place good to live in and
worthy to die in,—men and women who have hallowed it by their
footsteps and sanctified it with their presence and in many cases
consecrated it with their blood. Poverty is a blessing, not an
evil, a benison from the Father's hand if accepted in the right
spirit. Instead of retarding, it has elevated literature in all
ages. Homer was a blind beggarman singing his snatches of song for
the dole of charity; grand old Socrates, oracle of wisdom, many a
day went without his dinner because he had not the wherewithal to
get it, while teaching the youth of Athens. The divine Dante was
nothing better than a beggar, houseless, homeless, friendless,
wandering through Italy while he composed his immortal cantos.
Milton, who in his blindness "looked where angels fear to tread,"
was steeped in poverty while writing his sublime conception,
"Paradise Lost." Shakespeare was glad to hold and water the horses
of patrons outside the White Horse Theatre for a few pennies in
order to buy bread. Burns burst forth in never-dying song while
guiding the ploughshare. Poor Heinrich Heine, neglected and in
poverty, from his "mattress grave" of suffering in Paris added
literary laurels to the wreath of his German Fatherland. In America
Elihu Burritt, while attending the anvil, made himself a master of
a score of languages and became the literary lion of his age and
country.</p>
<p>In other fields of endeavor poverty has been the spur to action.
Napoleon was born in obscurity, the son of a hand-to-mouth
scrivener in the backward island of Corsica. Abraham Lincoln, the
boast and pride of America, the man who made this land too hot for
the feet of slaves, came from a log cabin in the Ohio backwoods. So
did James A. Garfield. Ulysses Grant came from a tanyard to become
the world's greatest general. Thomas A. Edison commenced as a
newsboy on a railway train.</p>
<p>The examples of these men are incentives to action. Poverty
thrust them forward instead of keeping them back. Therefore, if you
are poor make your circumstances a means to an end. Have ambition,
keep a goal in sight and bend every energy to reach that goal. A
story is told of Thomas Carlyle the day he attained the highest
honor the literary world could confer upon him when he was elected
Lord Rector of Edinburgh University. After his installation speech,
in going through the halls, he met a student seemingly deep in
study. In his own peculiar, abrupt, crusty way the Sage of Chelsea
interrogated the young man: "For what profession are you studying?"
"I don't know," returned the youth. "You don't know," thundered
Carlyle, "young man, you are a fool." Then he went on to qualify
his vehement remark, "My boy when I was your age, I was stooped in
grinding, gripping poverty in the little village of Ecclefechan, in
the wilds of [Transcriber's note: First part of word
illegible]-frieshire, where in all the place only the minister and
myself could read the Bible, yet poor and obscure as I was, in my
mind's eye I saw a chair awaiting for me in the Temple of Fame and
day and night and night and day I studied until I sat in that chair
to-day as Lord Rector of Edinburgh University."</p>
<p>Another Scotchman, Robert Buchanan, the famous novelist, set out
for London from Glasgow with but half-a-crown in his pocket. "Here
goes," said he, "for a grave in Westminster Abbey." He was not much
of a scholar, but his ambition carried him on and he became one of
the great literary lions of the world's metropolis.</p>
<p>Henry M. Stanley was a poorhouse waif whose real name was John
Rowlands. He was brought up in a Welsh workhouse, but he had
ambition, so he rose to be a great explorer, a great writer, became
a member of Parliament and was knighted by the British
Sovereign.</p>
<p>Have ambition to succeed and you will succeed. Cut the word
"failure" out of your lexicon. Don't acknowledge it. Remember</p>
<p>"In life's earnest battle they only prevail<br/>
Who daily march onward and never say fail."<br/></p>
<p>Let every obstacle you encounter be but a stepping stone in the
path of onward progress to the goal of success.</p>
<p>If untoward circumstances surround you, resolve to overcome
them. Bunyan wrote the "Pilgrim's Progress" in Bedford jail on
scraps of wrapping paper while he was half starved on a diet of
bread and water. That unfortunate American genius, Edgar Allan Poe,
wrote "The Raven," the most wonderful conception as well as the
most highly artistic poem in all English literature, in a little
cottage in the Fordham section of New York while he was in the
direst straits of want. Throughout all his short and wonderfully
brilliant career, poor Poe never had a dollar he could call his
own. Such, however, was both his fault and his misfortune and he is
a bad exemplar.</p>
<p>Don't think that the knowledge of a library of books is
essential to success as a writer. Often a multiplicity of books is
confusing. Master a few good books and master them well and you
will have all that is necessary. A great authority has said:
"Beware of the man of one book," which means that a man of one book
is a master of the craft. It is claimed that a thorough knowledge
of the Bible alone will make any person a master of literature.
Certain it is that the Bible and Shakespeare constitute an epitome
of the essentials of knowledge. Shakespeare gathered the fruitage
of all who went before him, he has sown the seeds for all who shall
ever come after him. He was the great intellectual ocean whose
waves touch the continents of all thought.</p>
<p>Books are cheap now-a-days, the greatest works, thanks to the
printing press, are within the reach of all, and the more you read,
the better, provided they are worth reading. Sometimes a man takes
poison into his system unconscious of the fact that it is poison,
as in the case of certain foods, and it is very hard to throw off
its effects. Therefore, be careful in your choice of reading
matter. If you cannot afford a full library, and as has been said,
such is not necessary, select a few of the great works of the
master minds, assimilate and digest them, so that they will be of
advantage to your literary system. Elsewhere in this volume is
given a list of some of the world's masterpieces from which you can
make a selection.</p>
<p>Your brain is a storehouse, don't put useless furniture into it
to crowd it to the exclusion of what is useful. Lay up only the
valuable and serviceable kind which you can call into requisition
at any moment.</p>
<p>As it is necessary to study the best authors in order to be a
writer, so it is necessary to study the best speakers in order to
talk with correctness and in good style. To talk rightly you must
imitate the masters of oral speech. Listen to the best
conversationalists and how they express themselves. Go to hear the
leading lectures, speeches and sermons. No need to imitate the
gestures of elocution, it is nature, not art, that makes the
elocutionist and the orator. It is not <i>how</i> a speaker
expresses himself but the language which he uses and the manner of
its use which should interest you. Have you heard the present day
masters of speech? There have been past time masters but their
tongues are stilled in the dust of the grave, and you can only read
their eloquence now. You can, however, listen to the charm of the
living. To many of us voices still speak from the grave, voices to
which we have listened when fired with the divine essence of
speech. Perhaps you have hung with rapture on the words of Beecher
and Talmage. Both thrilled the souls of men and won countless
thousands over to a living gospel. Both were masters of words, they
scattered the flowers of rhetoric on the shrine of eloquence and
hurled veritable bouquets at their audiences which were eagerly
seized by the latter and treasured in the storehouse of memory.
Both were scholars and philosophers, yet they were far surpassed by
Spurgeon, a plain man of the people with little or no claim to
education in the modern sense of the word. Spurgeon by his speech
attracted thousands to his Tabernacle. The Protestant and Catholic,
Turk, Jew and Mohammedan rushed to hear him and listened,
entranced, to his language. Such another was Dwight L. Moody, the
greatest Evangelist the world has ever known. Moody was not a man
of learning; he commenced life as a shoe salesman in Chicago, yet
no man ever lived who drew such audiences and so fascinated them
with the spell of his speech. "Oh, that was personal magnetism,"
you will say, but it was nothing of the kind. It was the burning
words that fell from the lips of these men, and the way, the
manner, the force with which they used those words that counted and
attracted the crowds to listen unto them. Personal magnetism or
personal appearance entered not as factors into their success.
Indeed as far as physique were concerned, some of them were
handicapped. Spurgeon was a short, podgy, fat little man, Moody was
like a country farmer, Talmage in his big cloak was one of the most
slovenly of men and only Beecher was passable in the way of
refinement and gentlemanly bearing. Physical appearance, as so many
think, is not the sesame to the interest of an audience. Daniel
O'Connell, the Irish tribune, was a homely, ugly, awkward, ungainly
man, yet his words attracted millions to his side and gained for
him the hostile ear of the British Parliament, he was a master of
verbiage and knew just what to say to captivate his audiences.</p>
<p>It is words and their placing that count on almost all
occasions. No matter how refined in other respects the person may
be, if he use words wrongly and express himself in language not in
accordance with a proper construction, he will repel you, whereas
the man who places his words correctly and employs language in
harmony with the laws of good speech, let him be ever so humble,
will attract and have an influence over you.</p>
<p>The good speaker, the correct speaker, is always able to command
attention and doors are thrown open to him which remain closed to
others not equipped with a like facility of expression. The man who
can talk well and to the point need never fear to go idle. He is
required in nearly every walk of life and field of human endeavor,
the world wants him at every turn. Employers are constantly on the
lookout for good talkers, those who are able to attract the public
and convince others by the force of their language. A man may be
able, educated, refined, of unblemished character, nevertheless if
he lack the power to express himself, put forth his views in good
and appropriate speech he has to take a back seat, while some one
with much less ability gets the opportunity to come to the front
because he can clothe his ideas in ready words and talk
effectively.</p>
<p>You may again say that nature, not art, makes a man a fluent
speaker; to a great degree this is true, but it is <i>art</i> that
makes him a <i>correct</i> speaker, and correctness leads to
fluency. It is possible for everyone to become a correct speaker if
he will but persevere and take a little pains and care.</p>
<p>At the risk of repetition good advice may be here emphasized:
Listen to the best speakers and note carefully the words which
impress you most. Keep a notebook and jot down words, phrases,
sentences that are in any way striking or out of the ordinary run.
If you do not understand the exact meaning of a word you have
heard, look it up in the dictionary. There are many words, called
synonyms, which have almost a like signification, nevertheless,
when examined they express different shades of meaning and in some
cases, instead of being close related, are widely divergent. Beware
of such words, find their exact meaning and learn to use them in
their right places.</p>
<p>Be open to criticism, don't resent it but rather invite it and
look upon those as friends who point out your defects in order that
you may remedy them.</p>
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