the office of a railroad president. It helps the railway president if he is also a politician and a man of the world. The experience tends to cynicism and cultivates the theory which gives too great prominence to the influence of association and point of view in fixing creeds, faiths, churchmanship and partizanship. The visitor always tried to make the president believe that he came for some other purpose than the real object of his mission. Why men believe they can succeed better in what they seek by this sort of fraud, is a mystery. The most curious exhibit is the man of many millions, who pretends that he wishes to consult you in regard to investments in the securities of your company, and ends by asking for a pass.—Chauncey M. Depew.
(1635)
Inspection, Careful Food—See Buying, Good.
INSPIRATION
The following lines on "Inspiration" were penned by Bishop Doane, of Albany, N. Y.:
Chisel in hand stood a sculptor boy,
With his marble block before him;
And his face lit up with a smile of joy
As an angel dream passed o'er him.
He carved that dream on the yielding stone
With many a sharp incision;
In heaven's own light the sculptor shone,
He had caught that angel vision.
Sculptors of life are we, as we stand,
With our lives uncarved before us;
Waiting the hour when, at God's command,
Our life dream passes o'er us.
Let us carve it then on the yielding stone,
With many a sharp incision;
Its heavenly beauty shall be our own—
Our lives, that angel vision.
(1636)
Inspiration from Things Done—See Ability, Gage of.
INSPIRATION OF EVENTS
On the 19th of April, 1861, some of the
enthusiastic Southern sympathizers of Baltimore,
driven frantic by the passage of
Northern troops through the city for the
invasion of the South, attacked the Sixth
Regiment of Massachusetts volunteers with
bricks and stones as they marched along
Pratt Street to take the train at Camden
Station for Washington. The soldiers, who
were fully armed with Springfield rifles, fired
upon the citizens, killing several and wounding
many others, some of whom had taken
no part in the affray, but were merely distant
spectators.
When this news was flashed around the land, it reached a young Baltimorean, a professor in Poydras College at Pointe Coupée, one hundred and twenty miles above New Orleans. His heart fired with patriotic enthusiasm and the great thoughts that surged through his mind kept him awake all night. At dawn he sat down at his desk and wrote "Maryland, My Maryland." It was first published in the New Orleans Delta. In a few weeks it was copied by all the leading newspapers of the South, and James R. Randall, like Byron, awoke one morning and found himself famous.
(1637)
INSPIRATION, SOURCE OF
A soul that is sensitive to truth is easily
excited to emotion and incited to effort.
Haydn, it is said, had his musical genius
aroused by the brilliancy of a diamond ring
he wore, the gift of Frederick the Great.
We confer a greater blessing on our
fellow men when by any act, or even by
any look, we draw out what is in them,
than when we bestow any gift or favor
upon them.
(1638)
The famous operatic composers had different methods of getting inspiration for their immortal compositions. One could not write the score unless he had a cat upon his shoulders. There are in his symphonies suggestions of an orchestra which every one of us born in the country recognizes as the familiar strain of a summer's night; another could stir his genius best at the billiard-*table, and in his refrains is heard the rattling fire of the ivory balls; while a third, by walks in the woods and communing with nature, transferred to the orchestra and chorus the sublime secrets of creation.—Chauncey M. Depew.
(1639)
INSTABILITY
Society is curst with young men and women
who are driven and tossed by every
wind. I would as soon think of anchoring
an ocean-liner to a fog-bank instead of a
rock as to anchor a reform, a useful club,
a great movement or church to their lives
and leadership.—N. D. Hillis.
(1640)