登陆注册
32964300000019

第19章

THE BEGINNING AT OLD LEXINGTON

IT is not because he is a minister that Russell Conwell is such a force in the world. He went into the ministry because he was sincerely and profoundly a Christian, and because he felt that as a minister he could do more good in the world than in any other capacity. But being a minister is but an incident, so to speak. The important thing is not that he is a minister, but that he is himself!

Recently I heard a New-Yorker, the head of a great corporation, say: ``I believe that Russell Conwell is doing more good in the world than any man who has lived since Jesus Christ.'' And he said this in serious and unexaggerated earnest.

Yet Conwell did not get readily into his life-work. He might have seemed almost a failure until he was well on toward forty, for although he kept ****** successes they were not permanent successes, and he did not settle himself into a definite line. He restlessly went westward to make his home, and then restlessly returned to the East. After the war was over he was a lawyer, he was a lecturer, he was an editor, he went around the world as a correspondent, he wrote books.

He kept ****** money, and kept losing it; he lost it through fire, through investments, through aiding his friends. It is probable that the unsettledness of the years following the war was due to the unsettling effect of the war itself, which thus, in its influence, broke into his mature life after breaking into his years at Yale. But however that may be, those seething, changing, stirring years were years of vital importance to him, for in the myriad experiences of that time he was building the foundation of the Conwell that was to come.

Abroad he met the notables of the earth. At home he made hosts of friends and loyal admirers.

It is worth while noting that as a lawyer he would never take a case, either civil or criminal, that he considered wrong. It was basic with him that he could not and would not fight on what he thought was the wrong side. Only when his client was right would he go ahead!

Yet he laughs, his quiet, infectious, characteristic laugh, as he tells of how once he was deceived, for he defended a man, charged with stealing a watch, who was so obviously innocent that he took the case in a blaze of indignation and had the young fellow proudly exonerated. The next day the wrongly accused one came to his office and shamefacedly took out the watch that he had been charged with stealing. ``I want you to send it to the man I took it from,'' he said. And he told with a sort of shamefaced pride of how he had got a good old deacon to give, in all sincerity, the evidence that exculpated him. ``And, say, Mr. Conwell--I want to thank you for getting me off--and I hope you'll excuse my deceiving you--and--I won't be any worse for not going to jail.'' And Conwell likes to remember that thereafter the young man lived up to the pride of exoneration; and, though Conwell does not say it or think it, one knows that it was the Conwell influence that inspired to honesty--for always he is an inspirer.

Conwell even kept certain hours for consultation with those too poor to pay any fee; and at one time, while still an active lawyer, he was guardian for over sixty children! The man has always been a marvel, and always one is coming upon such romantic facts as these.

That is a curious thing about him--how much there is of romance in his life! Worshiped to the end by John Ring; left for dead all night at Kenesaw Mountain; calmly singing ``Nearer, my God, to Thee,'' to quiet the passengers on a supposedly sinking ship; saving lives even when a boy; never disappointing a single audience of the thousands of audiences he has arranged to address during all his years of lecturing! He himself takes a little pride in this last point, and it is characteristic of him that he has actually forgotten that just once he did fail to appear: he has quite forgotten that one evening, on his way to a lecture, he stopped a runaway horse to save two women's lives, and went in consequence to a hospital instead of to the platform! And it is typical of him to forget that sort of thing.

The emotional temperament of Conwell has always made him responsive to the great, the striking, the patriotic. He was deeply influenced by knowing John Brown, and his brief memories of Lincoln are intense, though he saw him but three times in all.

The first time he saw Lincoln was on the night when the future President delivered the address, which afterward became so famous, in Cooper Union, New York. The name of Lincoln was then scarcely known, and it was by mere chance that young Conwell happened to be in New York on that day. But being there, and learning that Abraham Lincoln from the West was going to make an address, he went to hear him.

He tells how uncouthly Lincoln was dressed, even with one trousers-leg higher than the other, and of how awkward he was, and of how poorly, at first, he spoke and with what apparent embarrassment. The chairman of the meeting got Lincoln a glass of water, and Conwell thought that it was from a personal desire to help him and keep him from breaking down. But he loves to tell how Lincoln became a changed man as he spoke; how he seemed to feel ashamed of his brief embarrassment and, pulling himself together and putting aside the written speech which he had prepared, spoke freely and powerfully, with splendid conviction, as only a born orator speaks. To Conwell it was a tremendous experience.

The second time he saw Lincoln was when he went to Washington to plead for the life of one of his men who had been condemned to death for sleeping on post. He was still but a captain (his promotion to a colonelcy was still to come), a youth, and was awed by going into the presence of the man he worshiped. And his voice trembles a little, even now, as he tells of how pleasantly Lincoln looked up from his desk, and how cheerfully he asked his business with him, and of how absorbedly Lincoln then listened to his tale, although, so it appeared, he already knew of the main outline.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 破晓曙光

    破晓曙光

    当一切尘埃落定,当黎明来临之时,当古堡玫瑰枯萎,当滕蔓爬满坟墓,当午夜不再落魄,破晓,即将开始。
  • 王富贵传说

    王富贵传说

    开局死个系统,然后再死个主角别担心,我们的主角肉身不死、神魂不灭来到高武异世界,且看主角如何疯狂作死
  • 本神很忙:冷傲天君你走开

    本神很忙:冷傲天君你走开

    你认为这个世上除了我,还有谁会全心全意相信一个一心想要杀了自己的人。我曾经所失去的一切,都要一样一样的夺回来,如今你再瞧这一堆堆的白骨,难道你就不恨吗?若天明水治不好你的眼睛,我们就不治,你若想去哪我带你去便是,天涯也好,海角也罢。一场相隔百年的爱恨情仇,一次东海之渊的美丽重逢,一枚凤翎令引出的六界之争,一段付尽韶华,透彻心扉的倾城绝恋.若可以重来一次,她令愿没有去揭开这乱世中的一场惊世阴谋。
  • 学生人生观的教育(下)

    学生人生观的教育(下)

    学生德育是指学校按照一定的社会道德要求,有目的、有计划、有系统地对学生进行思想、观念和道德等方面的影响,并通过学生积极的认识、体验与践行,使广大学生形成社会所需要的道德品质。学校德育教育的目标是德育工作的出发点,它不仅决定了学校德育的内容、形式和方法,而且制约着德育工作的基本过程。
  • 夫人又变蝴蝶飞走了

    夫人又变蝴蝶飞走了

    在青月长大的星千月,在自己十五岁及笄礼的那天才知道自己原来是月神继承人。和蔼可亲的神王把星千月收作自己的女儿,星千月本来以为自己会在天宫幸福地生活下去,却没想到神王要把自己嫁去寸草不生的魔族……
  • 水浒之宋末风云

    水浒之宋末风云

    穿越成为晁盖之子,而此时梁山一百零八人也都上山,这还怎么集好汉走上人生巅峰啊,不仅如此,还要受到宋江的处处监视宋江要招安,金兵要南下这穿越也太难了吧!不要妄想带着梁山好汉大杀四方了还是先想想怎么活下去吧
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 清宫斗艳

    清宫斗艳

    莫名其妙的穿越;莫名其妙的成为囚犯;莫名其妙的被买入青楼;莫名其妙的让人骗入皇宫;莫名其妙的将皇帝痛扁一顿;……既来之,则安之,反正都穿越了,咱还是消消停停的过日子吧,平日不惹事儿,但绝不代表咱怕事儿。别看咱是个宫女,谁若惹了咱,统统都没有好下场(谁让咱学过历史呢)事先声明,本文主要讲述康熙初年的那点儿事,所以某某阿哥、某某福晋的,完全都是领酱油的角色。作者尊重历史,改动绝不会太大,最多钻钻空子而已……(新书期间,每日两更,也不跟大家做太多保证,日久见人心,时间可以证明一切。)
  • 妖孽王爷小萌妃

    妖孽王爷小萌妃

    他是琉璃国的传奇,他有着连老天都嫉妒的绝美面容,他是整个琉璃国万千少女的梦中情人。她是宰相府最卑微的五小姐,任由下人打压,姐姐妹妹都欺负他,就因为她有一张倾国倾城的脸。她是听到喜欢的人羞辱的话,一时想不开,跳楼的倾城女子。当她变成她,让他爱不释手,她光芒初露,成为绝世天才,什么灵力废物都是骗人的!曾经的未婚夫渣男六王爷开始穷追猛打,她倾城一笑,哎!那边那个死妖孽,我有一堆桃花!快来灭情敌,于是。。。某王爷连打带杀的开始灭情敌,某王爷曰:情敌不好灭啊。。。
  • 悭勃尔鬼魂与旧世界奇观(千种豆瓣高分原创作品·看小说)

    悭勃尔鬼魂与旧世界奇观(千种豆瓣高分原创作品·看小说)

    故事讲述了一个希望成为画家的杀手临死前和神父乔之间分享经历、命运交错的故事。杀手莱昂在刺杀大亨时受伤,躲藏在神父乔所在的修道院,两人相互交换各种瑰丽奇幻的故事和风景各异的人生经历,相互忏悔,获得内心的宽恕。美,则是近乎禁忌的喜悦之情。作品风格成熟,节奏紧凑,用不同时空里发生的故事交织推动整个情节发展,细腻笔触勾勒出的魔幻世界和人心的幽微,让作品在完成之余有了很多值得回味的空间。