The significant inscription found on an old key---“If I rest, I
rust”---would be an excellent motto for those who are afflicted with the
slightest bit of idleness. Even the most industrious person might adopt
it with advantage to serve as a reminder that, if one allows his
faculties to rest, like the iron in the unused key, they will soon show
signs of rust and, ultimately, cannot do the work required of them.
Those who would attain the heights reached and kept by great men
must keep their faculties polished by constant use, so that they may
unlock the doors of knowledge, the gate that guard the entrances to the
professions, to science, art, literature, agriculture---every department
of human endeavor.
Industry keeps bright the key that opens the treasury of
achievement. If Hugh Miller, after toiling all day in a quarry, had
devoted his evenings to rest and recreation, he would never have become a
famous geologist. The celebrated mathematician, Edmund Stone, would
never have published a mathematical dictionary, never have found the key
to science of mathematics, if he had given his spare moments to
idleness, had the little Scotch lad, Ferguson, allowed the busy brain to
go to sleep while he tended sheep on the hillside instead of
calculating the position of the stars by a string of beads, he would
never have become a famous astronomer.
Labor vanquishes all---not inconstant, spasmodic, or ill-directed
labor; but faithful, unremitting, daily effort toward a well-directed
purpose. Just as truly as eternal vigilance is the price of liberty, so
is eternal industry the price of noble and enduring success.
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