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How the Magic Story was found
The Magic Story
Table of Contents
1. How the Magic Story was found
2. The Magic Story (author unknown)
I was sitting alone in the cafe and had just reached for the sugar
preparatory to putting it into my coffee. Outside, the weather was hideous. Snow
and sleet came swirling down, and the wind howled frightfully. Every time the
outer door opened, a draft of unwelcome air penetrated the uttermost corners of
the room. Still I was comfortable.
The snow and sleet and wind conveyed nothing to me except an abstract
thanksgiving that I was where it could not affect me. While I dreamed and sipped
my coffee, the door opened and closed, and admitted - Sturtevant. Sturtevant was
an undeniable failure, but, withal, an artist of more than ordinary talent. He
had, however, fallen into the rut traveled by ne'er-do-wells, and was out at the
elbows as well as insolvent.
As I raised my eyes to Sturtevant's I was conscious of mild surprise at the
change in his appearance. Yet he was not dressed differently. He wore the same
threadbare coat in which he always appeared, and the old brown hat was the same.
And yet there was something new and strange in his appearance. As he swished his
hat around to relieve it of the burden of snow deposited by the howling
nor'wester, there was something new in the gesticulation.
I could not remember when I had invited Sturtevant to dine with me, but
involuntarily I beckoned to him. He nodded and presently seated himself opposite
to me. I asked him what he would have, and he, after scanning the bill of fare
carelessly, ordered from it leisurely, and invited me to join him in coffee for
two.
I watched him in stupid wonder, but, as I had invited the obligation, I was
prepared to pay for it, although I knew I hadn't sufficient cash to settle the
bill. Meanwhile I noticed the brightness of his usual lackluster eyes, and the
healthful, hopeful glow upon his cheek, with increasing amazement.
"Have you lost a rich uncle?" I asked. "No," he replied, calmly, "but I have
found my mascot." "Brindle, bull or terrier?" I inquired. "Currier," said
Sturtevant, at length, pausing with his coffee cup half way to his lips, "I see
that I have surprised you. It is not strange, for I am a surprise to myself. I
am a new man, a different man, - and the alteration has taken place in the last
few hours.
You have seen me come into this place 'broke' many a time, when you have
turned away, so that I would think you did not see me. I knew why you did that.
It was not because you did not want to pay for a dinner, but because you did not
have the money to do it. Is that your check? Let me have it. Thank you. I
haven't any money with me tonight, but I, - well, this is my treat." He called
the waiter to him, and, with an inimitable flourish, signed his name on the
backs of the two checks, and waved him away.
After that he was silent for a moment while he looked into my eyes, smiling
at the astonishment which I in vain strove to conceal. "Do you know an artist
who possess more talent than I?" he asked, presently. "No. Do you happen to know
anything in the line of my profession that I could not accomplish, if I applied
myself to it? No. You have been a reporter for the dailies for - how many? -
seven or eight years. Do you remember when I ever had any credit until tonight?
No. Was I refused just now? You have seen for yourself. Tomorrow my new career
begins. Within a month I shall have a bank account. Why? Because I have
discovered the secret of success."
"Yes," he continued, when I did not reply, "my fortune is made. I have been
reading a strange story, and since reading it, I feel that my fortune is
assured. It will make your fortune, too. All you have to do is read it. You have
no idea what it will do for you. Nothing is impossible after you know that
story. It makes everything as plain as A, B, C. The very instant you grasp its
true meaning, success is certain. This morning I was a hopeless, aimless bit of
garbage in the metropolitan ash can; tonight I wouldn't change places with a
millionaire. That sounds foolish, but it is true. The millionaire has spent his
enthusiasm; mine is all at hand."
"You amaze me," I said, wondering if he had been drinking absinthe.
"Won't you tell me the story? I should like to hear it."
"Certainly. I mean to tell it to the whole world. It is really remarkable
that it should have been written and should remain in print so long, with never
a soul to appreciate it until now. This morning I was starving. I hadn't any
credit, nor a place to get a meal. I was seriously meditating suicide. I had
gone to three of the papers for which I had done work, and had been handed back
all that I had submitted. I had to choose quickly between death by suicide and
death slowly by starvation. Then I found the story and read it. You can hardly
imagine the transformation. Why, my dear boy, everything changed at once, - and
there you are."
"But what is the story, Sturtevant?"
"Wait; let me finish. I took those old drawings to other editors, and every
one of them was accepted at once."
"Can the story do for others what it has done for you? For example, would it
be of assistance to me?" I asked.
"Help you? Why not? Listen and I will tell it to you, although, really, you
should read it. Still I will tell it as best I can. It is like this: you see, -
- -" The waiter interrupted us at that moment. He informed Sturtevant that he
was wanted on the telephone, and with a word of apology, the artist left the
table.
Five minutes later I saw him rush out into the sleet and wind and disappear.
Within the recollection of the frequenters of that cafe, Sturtevant had never
before been called out by telephone. That, of itself, was substantial proof of a
change in his circumstances.
One night, on the street, I encountered Avery, a former college chum, then a
reporter on one of the evening papers. It was about a month after my memorable
interview with Sturtevant, which, by that time, was almost forgotten.
"Hello, old chap," he said; "how's the world using you? Still on space?"
"Yes," I replied, bitterly, "with prospects of being on the town, shortly. But
you look as if things were coming your way. Tell me all about it."
"Things have been coming my way, for a fact, and it is all remarkable, when
all is said. You know Sturtevant, don't you? It's all due to him. I was plumb
down on my luck, - thinking of the morgue and all that, - looking for you, in
fact, with the idea you would lend me enough to pay my room rent, when I met
Sturtevant. He told me a story, and, really, old man, it is the most remarkable
story you ever heard; it made a new man out of me. Within twenty-four hours I
was on my feet and I've hardly known a care or a trouble since." Avery's
statement, uttered calmly, and with the air of one who had merely pronounced an
axiom, recalled to my mind the conversation with Sturtevant in the cafe that
stormy night, nearly a month before. "It must be a remarkable story," I said,
incredulously. "Sturtevant mentioned it to me once. I have not seen him since.
Where is he now?" "He has been making war sketches in Cuba, at two hundred a
week; he's just returned. It is a fact that everybody who has heard the story
has done well since. There are Cosgrove and Phillips, - friends of mine, - you
don't know them. One's a real estate agent; the other's a broker's clerk,
Sturtevant told them the story, and they have experienced the same results that
I have; and they are not the only ones.
"Do you know the story?" I asked. "Will you try its effect on me?"
"Certainly; with the greatest pleasure in the world. I would like to have it
printed in big black type, and posted on the elevated stations throughout New
York. It certainly would do a lot of good, and it's as simple as A, B, C: like
living on a farm. Excuse me a minute, will you? I see Danforth over there. Back
in a minute, old chap." If the truth be told, I was hungry. My pocket at that
moment contained exactly five cents; just enough to pay my fare up-town, but
insufficient also to stand the expense of filling my stomach.
There was a "night owl" wagon in the neighborhood, where I had frequently
"stood up" the purveyor of midnight dainties, and to him I applied. He was
leaving the wagon as I was on the point of entering it, and I accosted him. "I'm
broke again," I said, with extreme cordiality. "You'll have to trust me once
more. Some ham and eggs, I think, will do for the present." He coughed,
hesitated a moment, and then re-entered the wagon with me. "Mr. Currier is good
for anything he orders'" he said to the man in charge; "one of my old customers.
This is Mr. Bryan, Mr. Currier. He will take good care of you, and 'stand for'
you, just the same as I would. The fact is, I have sold out. I've just turned
over the outfit to Bryan. By the way, isn't Mr. Sturtevant a friend of yours?" I
nodded.
I couldn't have spoken if I had tried. "Well," continued the ex-"night owl"
man, "he came in here one night, about a month ago, and told me the most
wonderful story I ever heard. I've just bought a place in Eighth Avenue, where I
am going to run a regular restaurant - near Twenty-third Street. Come and see
me." He was out of the wagon and the sliding door had been banged shut before I
could stop him; so I ate my ham and eggs in silence, and resolved that I would
hear that story before I slept. In fact, I began to regard it with superstition.
If it had made so many fortunes, surely it should be capable of making mine. The
certainty that the wonderful story - I began to regard it as magic - was in the
air, possessed me. As I started to walk homeward, fingering the solitary nickel
in my pocket and contemplating the certainty of riding downtown in the morning,
I experienced the sensation of something stealthily pursuing me, as if Fate were
treading along behind me, yet never overtaking, and I was conscious that I was
possessed with or by the story.
When I reached Union Square, I examined my address book for the home of
Sturtevant. It was not recorded there. Then I remembered the cafe in University
Place, and, although the hour was late, it occurred to me that he might be
there. He was! In a far corner of the room, surrounded by a group of
acquaintances, I saw him. He discovered me at the same instant, and motioned to
me to join them at the table. There was no chance for the story, however. There
were half a dozen around the table, and I was the furthest removed from
Sturtevant. But I kept my eyes upon him, and bided my time, determined that,
when he rose to depart, I would go with him.
A silence, suggestive of respectful awe, had fallen upon the party when I
took my seat. Everyone had seemed to be thinking, and the attention of all was
fixed upon Sturtevant. The cause was apparent. He had been telling the story. I
had entered the cafe just too late to hear it. On my right, when I took my seat,
was a doctor; on my left a lawyer. Facing me on the other side was a novelist
with whom I had some acquaintance. The others were artists and newspapermen.
"It's too bad, Mr. Currier," remarked the doctor; "you should have come a
little sooner, Sturtevant has been telling us a story; it is quite wonderful,
really. I say, Sturtevant, won't you tell that story again, for the benefit of
Mr. Currier?" "Why yes. I believe that Currier has, somehow, failed to hear the
magic story, although, as a matter of fact, I think he was the first one to whom
I mentioned it at all. It was here, in this cafe, too, -at this very table.
Do you remember what a wild night that was, Currier? Wasn't I called to the
telephone, or something like that?
To be sure! I remember, now; interrupted just at the point when I was
beginning the story. After that I told it to three or four fellows, and it
'braced them up,' as it had me. It seems incredible that a mere story can have
such a tonic effect upon the success of so many persons who are engaged in such
widely different occupations, but that is what it has done. It is a kind of
never-failing remedy, like a cough mixture that is warranted to cure everything,
from a cold in the head to galloping consumption. There was Parsons, for
example. He is a broker, you know, and had been on the wrong side of the market
for a month. He had utterly lost his grip, and was on the verge of failure. I
happened to meet him at the time he was feeling the bluest, and before we
parted, something brought me around to the subject of the story, and I related
it to him. It had the same effect on him as it had on me, and has had on
everybody who has heard it, as far as I know.
I think you will all agree with me, that it is not the story itself that
performs the surgical operation on the minds of those who are familiar with it;
it is the way it is told, -in print, I mean. The author has, somehow, produced a
psychological effect which is indescribable. The reader is hypnotized. He
receives a mental and moral tonic.
Perhaps, doctor, you can give some scientific explanation of the influence
exerted by the story. It is a sort of elixir manufactured out of words, eh?"
From that the company entered upon a general discussion of theories.
Now and then slight references were made to the story itself, and they were
just sufficient to tantalize me, -the only one present who had not heard it.
At length, I left my chair, and passing around the table, seized Sturtevant
by one arm, and succeeded in drawing him away from the party. "If you have any
consideration for an old friend who is rapidly being driven mad by the existence
of that confounded story, which Fate seems determined that I shall never hear,
you will relate it to me now," I said, savagely. Sturtevant stared at me in wild
surprise. "All right," he said. "The others will excuse me for a few moments, I
think. Sit down here, and you shall have it. I found it pasted in an old
scrapbook I purchased in Ann Street, for three cents and there isn't a thing
about it by which one can get any idea in what publication it originally
appeared, or who wrote it. When I discovered it, I began casually to read it,
and in a moment I was interested. Before I left it, I had read it through many
times, so that I could repeat it almost word for word. It affected me strangely,
-as if I had come in contact with some strong personality.
There seems to be in the story a personal element that applies to every one
who reads it. Well, after I had read it several times, I began to think it over.
I couldn't stay in the house, so I seized my coat and hat and went out. I must
have walked several miles, buoyantly, without realizing that I was the same man,
who, in only a short time before, had been in the depths of despondency. That
was the day I met you here, -you remember." We were interrupted at that instant
by a uniformed messenger, who handed Sturtevant a telegram. It was from his
chief, and demanded his instant attendance at the office. The sender had already
been delayed an hour, and there was no help for it; he must go at once. "Too
bad!" said Sturtevant, rising and extending his hand.
"Tell you what I'll do, old chap. I'm not likely to be gone any more than an
hour or two. You take my key and wait for me in my room. In the escritoire near
the window you will find an old scrapbook bound in rawhide. It was manufactured,
I have no doubt, by the author of the magic story. Wait for me in my room until
I return."
I found the book without difficulty. It was a quaint, homemade affair,
covered, as Sturtevant had said, with rawhide, and bound with leather thongs.
The pages formed an odd combination of yellow paper, vellum and homemade
parchment. I found the story, curiously printed on the last-named material. It
was quaint and strange. Evidently, the printer had "set" it under the
supervision of the writer. The phraseology was an unusual combination of
seventeenth and eighteenth century mannerisms, and the interpolation of italics
and capitals could have originated in no other brain than that of its author. In
reproducing the following story, the peculiarities of type, etc. are eliminated,
but in other respects it remains unchanged.
The Magic Story (author unknown)
Inasmuch as I have evolved from my experience the one great secret of success
for all worldly undertakings, I deem it wise, now that the number of my days is
nearly counted, to give to the generations that are to follow me the benefit of
whatsoever knowledge I possess. I do not apologize for the manner of my
expression, nor for the lack of literary merit, the latter being, I wot, its own
apology. Tools much heavier than the pen have been my portion, and moreover, the
weight of years has somewhat palsied the hand and brain; nevertheless, the fact
I can tell, and what I deem the meat within the nut. What mattereth it, in what
manner the shell be broken, so that the meat be obtained and rendered useful? I
doubt not that I shall use, in the telling, expressions that have clung to my
memory since childhood; for, when men attain the number of my years, happenings
of youth are like to be clearer to their perceptions than are events of recent
date; nor doth it matter much how a thought is expressed, if it be wholesome and
helpful, and findeth the understanding.
Much have I wearied my brain anent the question, how best to describe this
recipe for success that I have discovered, and it seemeth advisable to give it
as it came to me; that is, if I relate somewhat of the story of my life, the
directions for agglomerating the substances, and supplying the seasoning for the
accomplishment of the dish, will plainly be perceived. Happen they may; and that
men may be born generations after I am dust, who will live to bless me for the
words I write.
* * *
My father, then, was a seafaring man who, early in life, forsook his
vocation, and settled on a plantation in the colony of Virginia, where, some
years thereafter, I was born, which event took place in the year 1642; and that
was over a hundred years ago. Better for my father had it been, had he hearkened
to the wise advice of my mother, that he remain in the calling of his education;
but he would not have it so, and the good vessel he captained was bartered for
the land I spoke of. Here beginneth the first lesson to be acquired:
Man should not be blinded to whatsoever merit exists in the opportunity
which he hath in hand, remembering that a thousand promises for the future
should weigh as naught against the possession of a single piece of silver.
When I had achieved ten years, my mother's soul took flight, and two years
thereafter my worthy father followed her. I, being their only begotten, was left
alone; howbeit, there were friends who, for a time, cared for me; that is to
say, they offered me a home beneath their roof - a thing which I took advantage
of for the space of five months. From my father's estate there came to me
naught; but, in the wisdom that came with increasing years, I convinced myself
that his friend, under whose roof I lingered for some time, had defrauded him,
and therefore me.
Of the time from the age of twelve and a half until I was three and twenty, I
will make no recital here, since that time hath naught to do with this tale; but
some time after, having in my possession the sum of sixteen guineas, ten, which
I had saved from the fruits of my labor, I took ship to Boston town, where I
began to work first as a cooper, and thereafter as a ship's carpenter, although
always after the craft was docked; for the sea was not amongst my desires.
Fortune will sometimes smile upon an intended victim because of pure
perversity of temper. Such was one of my experiences. I prospered, and at seven
and twenty, owned the yard wherein, less than four years earlier, I had worked
for hire. Fortune, howbeit, is a jade who must be coerced; she will not be
coddled. Here beginneth the second lesson to be acquired:
Fortune is ever elusive, and can only be retained by force. Deal with her
tenderly and she will forsake you for a stronger man. (In that, methinks, she is
not unlike other women of my knowledge)
About this time, Disaster (which is one of the heralds of broken spirits and
lost resolve), paid me a visit. Fire ravaged my yards, leaving me nothing in its
blackened paths but debts, which I had not the coin wherewith to defray. I
labored with my acquaintances, seeking assistance for a new start, but the fire
that had burned my competence, seemed also to have consumed their sympathies. So
it happened, within a short time, that not only had I lost all, but I was
hopelessly indebted to others; and for that they cast me into prison.
It is possible that I might have rallied from my losses but for this last
indignity, which broke down my spirits so that I became utterly despondent.
Upward of a year I was detained within the gaol; and, when I did come forth, it
was not the same hopeful, happy man, content with his lot, and with confidence
in the world and its people, who had entered there.
Life has many pathways, and of them by far the greater number lead downward.
Some are precipitous, others are less abrupt; but ultimately, no matter at what
inclination the angle may be fixed, they arrive at the same destination -
failure. And here beginneth the third lesson:
Failure exists only in the grave. Man, being alive, hath not yet failed;
always he may turn about and ascend by the same path he descended by; and there
may be one that is less abrupt (albeit longer of achievement) and more adaptable
to his condition.
When I came forth from prison, I was penniless. In all the world I possessed
naught beyond the poor garments which covered me, and a walking stick which the
turnkey had permitted me to retain, since it was worthless. Being a skilled
workman, howbeit, I speedily found employment at good wages; but, having eaten
of the fruit of worldly advantage, dissatisfaction possessed me. I became morose
and sullen; whereat, to cheer my spirits, and for the sake of forgetting the
losses I had sustained, I passed my evenings at the tavern. Not that I drank
overmuch of liquor, except on occasion (for I have ever been somewhat
abstemious), but that I could laugh and sing, and parry wit and badinage with my
ne'er-do-well companions; and here might be included the fourth lesson:
Seek comrades among the industrious, for those who are idle will sap your
energies from you.
It was my pleasure at that time to relate, upon slight provocation, the tale
of my disasters, and to rail against the men whom I deemed to have wronged me,
because they had seen fit not to come to my aid. Moreover, I found childish
delight in filching from my employer, each day, a few moments of the time for
which he paid me. Such a thing is less honest than downright theft.
This habit continued and grew upon me until the day dawned which found me not
only without employment, but also without character, which meant that I could
not hope to find work with any other employer in Boston town. It was then that I
regarded myself a failure. I can liken my condition at that time for naught more
similar than that of a man who, descending the steep side of a mountain, loses
his foothold. The farther he slides, the faster he goes. I have also heard this
condition described by the word Ishmaelite, which I understand to be a man whose
hand is against everybody, and who thinks that the hands of every other man are
against him; and here beginneth the fifth lesson:
The Ishmaelite and the leper are the same, since both are abominations in
the sight of man - albeit they differ much, in that the former may be restored
to perfect health. The former is entirely the result of imagination; the latter
has poison in his blood.
I will not discourse at length upon the gradual degeneration of my energies.
It is not meet ever to dwell much upon misfortunes (which saying is also worthy
of remembrance).
It is enough if I add that the day came where I possessed naught wherewith to
purchase food and raiment, and I found myself like unto a pauper, save at
infrequent times when I could earn a few pence, or mayhap, a shilling. Steady
employment I could not secure, so I became emaciated in body, and naught but
skeleton in spirit. My condition, then, was deplorable; not so much for the
body, be it said, as for the mental part of me, which was sick unto death. In my
imagination I deemed myself ostracized by the whole world, for I had sunk very
low indeed; and here beginneth the sixth and final lesson to be acquired, (which
cannot be told in one sentence, nor in one paragraph, but must needs be adopted
from the remainder of this tale).
* * *
Well do I remember my awakening, for it came in the night, when, in truth, I
did awake from sleep. My bed was a pile of shavings in the rear of the cooper
shop where once I had worked for hire; my roof was the pyramid of casks,
underneath which I had established myself. The night was cold, and I was
chilled, albeit, paradoxically, I had been dreaming of light and warmth and of
the depletion of good things. You will say, when I relate the effect the vision
had on me, that my mind was affected. So be it, for it is the hope that the
minds of others might be likewise influenced which disposes me to undertake the
labor of this writing. It was the dream which converted me to the belief - nay,
to the knowledge - that I was possessed of two entities: and it was my own
better self that afforded me the assistance for which I had pleaded in vain from
my acquaintances. I have heard this condition described by the word "double."
Nevertheless, that word does not comprehend my meaning. A double, can be naught
more than a double, neither half being possessed of individuality. But I will
not philosophize, since philosophy is naught but a suit of garments for the
decoration of a dummy figure.
Moreover, it was not the dream itself which affected me; it was the
impression made by it, and the influence that it exerted over me, which
accomplished my enfranchisement. In a word, then, I encouraged my other
identity. After toiling through a tempest of snow and wind, I peered into a
window and saw that other being. He was rosy with health; before him, on the
hearth, blazed a fire of logs; there was a conscious power and force in his
demeanor; he was phisically and mentally muscular. I rapped timidly upon the
door, and he bade me enter. There was a not unkindly smile of derision in his
eyes as he motioned me to a chair by the fire; but he uttered no word of
welcome; and, when I had warmed myself, I went forth again into the tempest,
burdened with the shame which the contrast between us had forced upon me. It was
then that I awoke; and here cometh the strange part of my tale, for, when I did
awake, I was not alone. There was a Presence with me; intangible to others, I
discovered later, but real to me.
The Presence was in my likeness, yet it was strikingly unlike. The brow, not
more lofty than my own, yet seemed more round and full; the eyes, clear, direct,
and filled with purpose, glowed with enthusiasm and resolution; the lips, chin -
ay, the whole contour of face and figure was dominant and determined. He was
calm, steadfast, and self-reliant; I was cowering, filled with nervous
trembling, and fearsome of intangible shadows. When the Presence turned away, I
followed, and throughout the day I never lost sight of it, save when it
disappeared for a time beyond some doorway where I dared not enter; at such
places, I awaited its return with trepidation and awe, for I could not help
wondering at the temerity of the Presence (so like myself, and yet so unlike) in
daring to enter where my own feet feared to tread.
It seemed also as if purposely, I was led to the place and to the men where,
and before whom I most dreaded to appear; to offices where once I had transacted
business; to men with whom I had financial dealings. Throughout the day I
pursued the Presence, and at evening saw it disappear beyond the portals of a
hostelry famous for its cheer and good living. I sought the pyramid of casks and
shavings.
Not again in my dreams that night did I encounter the Better Self (for that
is what I have named it), albeit, when, perchance, I awakened from slumber, it
was near to me, ever wearing that calm smile of kindly derision which could not
be mistaken for pity, nor for condolence in any form. The contempt of it stung
me sorely.
The second day was not unlike the first, being a repetition of its
forerunner, and I was again doomed to wait outside during the visits which the
Presence paid to places where I fain would have gone had I possessed the
requisite courage. It is fear which deporteth a man's soul from his body and
rendereth it a thing to be despised. Many a time I essayed to address it but
enunciation rattled in my throat, unintelligible; and the day closed like its
predecessor. This happened many days, one following another, until I ceased to
count them; albeit, I discovered that constant association with the Presence was
producing an effect on me; and one night when I awoke among the casks and
discerned that he was present, I made bold to speak, albeit with marked
timidity.
"Who are you?" I ventured to ask; and I was startled into an upright posture
by the sound of my own voice; and the question seemed to give pleasure to my
companion, so that I fancied there was less of derision in his smile when he
responded.
"I am that I am," was the reply. "I am he who you have been; I am he who you
may be again; wherefore do you hesitate? I am he who you were, and whom you have
cast out for other company. I am the man made in the image of God, who once
possessed your body. Once we dwelt within it together, not in harmony, for that
can never be, nor yet in unity, for that is impossible, but as tenants in common
who rarely fought for full possession. Then, you were a puny thing, but you
became selfish and exacting until I could no longer abide with you, therefore I
stepped out. There is a plus-entity and minus-entity in every human body that is
born into the world. Whichever one of these is favored by the flesh becomes
dominant; then is the other inclined to abandon its habitation, temporarily or
for all time. I am the plus-entity of yourself; you are the minus-entity. I own
all things; you possess naught. That body which we both inhabited is mine, but
it is unclean, and I will not dwell within it. Cleanse it, and I will take
possession."
"Why do you pursue me?" I next asked of the Presence.
"You have pursued me, not I you. You can exist without me for a time, but
your path leads downward, and the end is death. Now that you approach the end,
you debate if it be not politic that you should cleanse your house and invite me
to enter. Step aside, from the brain and the will; cleanse them of your
presence; only on that condition will I ever occupy them again."
"The brain has lost its power," I faltered. "The will is a weak thing, now;
can you repair them?"
"Listen!" said the Presence, and he towered over me while I cowered
abjectly at his feet.
"To the plus-entity of a man, all things are possible. The world belongs to
him, - is his estate. He fears naught, dreads naught, stops at naught; he asks
no privileges, but demands them; he dominates, and cannot cringe; his requests
are orders; opposition flees at his approach; he levels mountains, fills in
vales, and travels on an even plane where stumbling is unknown."
Thereafter, I slept again, and, when I awoke, I seemed to be in a different
world. The sun was shining and I was conscious that birds twittered above my
head. My body, yesterday trembling and uncertain, had become vigorous and filled
with energy. I gazed upon the pyramid of casks in amazement that I had so long
made use of it for an abiding place, and I was wonderingly conscious that I had
passed my last night beneath its shelter.
The events of the night recurred to me, and I looked about me for the
Presence. It was not visible, but anon I discovered, cowering in a far corner of
my resting place, a puny abject shuddering figure, distorted of visage, deformed
of shape, disheveled and unkempt of appearance. It tottered as it walked, for it
approached me piteously; but I laughed aloud, mercilessly. Perchance I knew then
that it was the minus-entity, and that the plus-entity was within me; albeit I
did not then realize it. Moreover, I was in haste to get away; I had no time for
philosophy. There was much for me to do - much; strange it was that I had not
thought of that yesterday. But yesterday was gone - today was with me - it had
just begun.
As had once been my daily habit, I turned my steps in the direction of the
tavern, where formerly I had partaken of my meals. I nodded cheerily as I
entered, and smiled in recognition of returned salutations. Men who had ignored
me for months bowed graciously when I passed them on the thoroughfare. I went to
the washroom, and from there to the breakfast table; afterwards, when I passed
the taproom, I paused a moment and said to the landlord:
"I will occupy the same room that I formerly used, if perchance, you have it
at disposal. If not, another will do as well, until I can obtain it."
Then I went out and hurried with all haste to the cooperage. There was a huge
wain in the yard, and men were loading it with casks for shipment. I asked no
questions, but, seizing barrels, began hurling them to the men who worked atop
of the load. When this was finished, I entered the shop. There was a vacant
bench; I recognized its disuse by the litter on its top. It was the same at
which I had once worked. Stripping off my coat, I soon cleared it of
impedimenta. In a moment more I was seated, with my foot on the vice-lever,
shaving staves.
It was an hour later when the master workman entered the room, and he paused
in surprise at sight of me; already there was a goodly pile of neatly shaven
staves beside me, for in those days I was an excellent workman; there was none
better, but, alas! now, age hath deprived me of my skill. I replied to his
unasked question with the brief, but comprehensive sentence: "I have returned to
work, sir." He nodded his head and passed on, viewing the work of other men,
albeit anon he glanced askance in my direction. Here endeth the sixth and last
lesson to be acquired, although there is more to be said, since from that moment
I was a successful man, and ere long possessed another shipyard, and had
acquired a full competence of worldly goods.
I pray you who read, heed well the following admonitions, since upon them
depend the word "success" and all that it implies:
Whatsoever you desire of good is yours. You have but to stretch forth your
hand and take it.
Learn that the consciousness of dominant power within you is the possession
of all things attainable.
Have no fear of any sort or shape, for fear is an adjunct of the
minus-entity. If you have skill, apply it; the world must profit by it, and
therefore, you.
Make a daily and nightly companion of your plus-entity; if you heed its
advice, you cannot go wrong.
Remember, philosophy is an argument; the world, which is your property, is an
accumulation of facts.
Go therefore, and do that which is within you to do; take no heed of gestures
which would beckon you aside; ask of no man permission to perform.
The minus-entity requests favors; the plus-entity grants them. Fortune waits
upon every footstep you take; seize her, bind her, hold her, for she is yours;
she belongs to you.
Start out now, with these admonitions in your mind.
Stretch out your hand, and grasp the plus, which, maybe, you have never made
use of, save in great emergencies. Life is an emergency most grave. Your
plus-entity is beside you now; cleanse your brain, and strengthen your will. It
will take possession. It waits upon you.
Start tonight; start now upon this new journey.
Be always on your guard. Whichever entity controls you, the other hovers at
your side; beware lest the evil enter, even for a moment.
My task is done. I have written the recipe for "success." If followed, it
cannot fail.
Wherein I may not be entirely comprehended, the plus-entity of whosoever
reads will supply the deficiency; and upon that Better Self of mine, I place the
burden of imparting to generations that are to come, the secret of this
all-pervading good - the secret of being what you have it within you to be.
THE END
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