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Levels of Living - Essays on Everyday Ideals by Henry Frederick Cope
page 12 of 179 (06%)
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Only an age that has lost both heart and intellect--the divinely given
measuring rods of life--will think of estimating a life by the money
measure. It is a shallow world that knows a man as soon as and only
when it has scheduled his marketable assets; nor is it a happy augury
for a nation when it acquires the habit of estimating its men by the
length of the catalogues of their possessions.

A period of outer prosperity is always in danger of being one of inner
paralysis. Luxury is a foe to life. Character does not develop
freely, largely, beautifully in an atmosphere of commercialism. A
moral decline that but presages enduring disaster is sure to succeed
the supremacy of the market.

The great danger is that we shall set the tools of life before its
work, that we shall make life serve our business or our ambitions
instead of causing ambitions, activities, and opportunities all to
contribute to the deepening, enriching, and strengthening of the life
itself. In the details of making a living it is easy to lose sight of
the prime thing, the life; it is easy to forget that the great question
is not, what have you? but, what are you?

Life cannot consist in things any more than silk can consist of
shuttles, or pictures of brushes and palettes. Life is both process
and product; but things and fame and power are no more than the tools
and machinery serving to perfect the product. Life must consist in
thoughts, experiences, motives, ideals--in a word, in character. A
man's life is what he is.

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