How to Get Strong and How to Stay So (1899)/Chapter 9

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Chapter IX

Work for the Fleshy, the Thin, the Old

While the endeavor has been made to point out the value of plain and simple exercise—for, in a later chapter, particular work will be designated which, if followed systematically and persistently, will correct many physical defects; substituting good working health and vigor for weakness; the reply may be made, "Yes, these are well enough for the young and active; but they will not avail a fleshy person; or a slim one; or one well up in years."

Let us see about this. Take, first, those burdened with flesh which seems to do them little or no good; and which is often a hinderance; dulling and slackening their energies; preventing them from doing much which they could; and which they believe they would do with alacrity, were they once freed from this unwelcome burden. There are some persons with whom the reduction of flesh becomes a necessity. They have a certain physical task to perform; and they know they cannot have either the strength or the wind to get through with it creditably, unless they first rid themselves of considerable superfluous flesh.

Take the man, for instance, who wants to walk a race of several miles; or to run, or row one. He has often heard of men getting their weight down to a certain figure for a similar purpose. He has seen some one who did it; and he is confident that he can do it. He sets about it, takes much and severe physical work daily; warmly clad; perspiring freely; while he subjects his skin to much friction from coarse towels. He does without certain food which he understands makes fat; and only eats that which he believes makes mainly bone and muscle. He sticks to his work, and gradually makes that work harder and faster. To his gratification, he finds that not only has his wind improved; so that, in the place of the old panting after a slight effort—walking briskly up an ordinary flight of stairs, for instance;—he can now breathe as easily and quietly, and can stick to it as long, as any of his leaner companions. By race-day he is down ten, fifteen, or twenty pounds, or even more, as the case may be. While he has thus reduced himself; and is far stronger and more enduring than he was before; he is not the only one who has lost flesh, if there have been a number working with him, as in a boat-crew or football-team. Notice the lists of our university crews and their weights, published when they commence strict training; say a month before the race; and compare them with those of the same men on race-day, particularly in hot weather. The reduction is very marked all through the crew. In the English university eights, it is even more striking; the large and stalwart fellows, who fill their thwarts, often coming down in a month an average of over a dozen pounds per man.

We have seen a student, after weighing himself on scales in the gymnasium, sit down at a fifty-five pound rowing weight; pull forty-five full strokes a minute for twenty minutes; then, clad exactly as before, weigh again on the same scales; and find he was just one pound lighter than he was twenty minutes earlier!

But the difference is more marked in more matured men, who naturally run to flesh, than in students. A prize-fighter, for instance, in changing from a life of indulgence and immoderate drinking, will often come down as much as thirty, or even forty pounds, in preparing for his contest. It should be remembered that; besides other advantages of his being thin; it is of great importance that his face should be so lean that a blow on his cheek shall not puff it up; and swell it so as to shut up his eye; and put him at his enemy's mercy.

But most people do not care to take such severe and arduous work as either the amateur athlete, or the prize-fighter. If they could hit upon some comparatively light and easy way of restoring themselves physically to a hard-muscle basis; and could so shake off their burden of flesh without interfering seriously with their business; they would be glad to try it. Let us see if this can be done.

Some time ago the writer met a gentleman of middle age, whom he had known for years; and who has been long connected with one of the United States departments in New York City. A very steady, hard-working officer; his occupation was a sedentary one. Remembering him as a man, till recently, of immense bulk, and being struck with his evident and great shrinkage, we inquired if he had been ill. He replied that he had not been ill, that for years he had not enjoyed better health. Questioning him as to his altered appearance, he said that, on the eighteenth day of the preceding January, he weighed three hundred and five pounds; that, having become so unwieldy, his flesh was a source of great hinderance and annoyance to him. Then he had determined, if possible, to get rid of some of it. Having to be at work all day; he could only effect his purpose in the evenings; or not at all. So, making no especial change in his diet, he took to walking; and soon began to average from three to five miles an evening; and at the best pace he could make. In the cold months he says that he often perspired so that small icicles would form on the ends of his hair. Asking if it did not come a little stiff sometimes, on stormy nights or when he was very tired; and whether he did not omit his exercise at such times; he said no; but, on the contrary, added two miles; which shows the timber the man was made of. On the eighteenth of June of the same year, just five months from the start, he weighed but two hundred and fifteen pounds; having actually taken off ninety pounds, and had so altered that his former clothes would not fit him at all. Since that time we have again seen him; and he said he was down to two hundred; and that he had taken to horseback-riding, as he was fond of that. He looked a large, strong, hearty man of about five feet ten; of rather phlegmatic temperament; but no one would ever think of him as a fat man.

Now here is a man well known to hundreds of the lawyers of the New York Bar; a living example of what a little energy and determination will accomplish for a person who sets about his task as if he meant to perform it.

A girl of fifteen or sixteen, and inclined to be fleshy, found that, by a good deal of horseback-riding daily; she lost twenty-five pounds in one year—so a physician familiar with her case informed us.

Dr. Schweninger's famous reduction of Bismarck by sixty pounds after he was seventy years old, will answer the question whether it is too late for an elderly person to begin. And the following experience of Roberts with one of his pupils—and he has had many such experiences, is a case nearer home. He says:


"Very often when men about three times ten years of age are asked to join our ranks, and gymnasticate themselves into better form and health; they answer: 'I am too old.' This is not true. As long as a man breathes the breath of this earthly life, he must exercise his body as regularly as he eats his meals; if he would maintain it in health. Never forget that health of body depends upon how you use it. I have in mind one member, past seventy-two years of age; who was so enthusiastic in his talk of what body-building work had done for him that he was continually bringing some one in on his arm to join the gymnasium. He persuaded his own son, a middle-aged (young) man of about fifty years, to join our ranks; and his son was so much pleased with what our work had done to improve the quality of his voice (a singer, if healthy, will be in better voice) that he in turn had his own son a youth of eighteen also join. I tell you, it was quite a sight to see them play a game of medicine ball together. The old gentleman held his own well in the final brush of lively pushing that finishes up this simple, interesting and beneficial game. This old gentleman had a very large waist-girth—size about forty-eight inches—which he was anxious to reduce. It was as round and as smooth as an apple. I gave him for home-work (besides three times a week that he performed it before my eyes in the gymnasium), the lie-down ball-drill; and some other exercises on the rowing-weights of kindred type. He was faithful in his work; and in about four months the size of his waist had decreased by many inches; and its shape began to assume the normal. He was somewhat alarmed at this 'normal shape.' 'What makes these lumps on my stomach?' (referring to the abdominal muscles which at last had had something to do). 'It looks like a washboard,' he said. When I explained matters to him, he laughed out loud; and said: 'I have carried this waist on me around nigh onto forty years; and never saw it in such a shape before. I thought something wrong was up, but now that you have explained matters, I feel better.'"


And he well adds:


"Now a last few words to ye lads who are past thirty years of age. Come, all ye who have too large abdomens, and we will show you how to reduce them to their normal size; also ye who are too flat-stomached, and caved-in at the loins and chest; with small shoulders, arms, and spindling legs; and we will show you how to enlarge and round out all these parts to more comely proportions. Never say again, 'I am too old to exercise.'"


One of the best-known actresses on the American stage, famous for her beauty, finding that she was getting too stout, not only took special exercises, to reduce her weight, but, when exercising, is said to have worn unusually heavy clothing over the very parts where she wished to get thinner—a common practice, by the way, in training horses. Indeed getting down one's weight seems to be done partly by exercise, and largely by copious perspiration. The principle is brought out with clearness by all the artists in this line—notably by Dr. Emerson and by Checkley—that the active continued use of any set of muscles directly reduces and takes off any adipose matter just around them. The energy and will-power to do this work, fleshy people often lack. And so they stay fat—or, rather, get fatter. Indeed, fleshiness is often so hostile to hard work, that Napoleon is said to have lost all his battles after he began to get fat.

But fleshy people can get rid of their fat—if they will. A Connecticut lawyer in active practice—so stout that his eyes seemed to be gradually closing—asked us how to get down his weight. We told him it was idle to suggest, as he would not do it. But he was so earnest that we said: "Take a lot of hard, sweating, muscular work every day—of any sort you like." Mr. Nathaniel Wheeler, the famous sewing-machine maker, had a fast-walking horse. Daily our man and that horse tried to see which could walk fastest for an hour. Rivulets flowed off our friend; but he was of good timber, and stayed at his task. In six weeks he reported that he had taken off thirty pounds; and that the relief, mentally and bodily, was marvellous and delightful.

Brisk walking, and being on the feet much of the day—as Americans, for instance, find it necessary to do when they try to see the Parisian galleries and many other of Europe's attractions all in a very few weeks—will tell decidedly on the weight of fleshy people, and dispose them to move more quickly. When you can do it, this is perhaps not such a bad way to reduce yourself.

Now, if so many have found that vigorous muscular exercise, taken daily and assiduously, accomplished the desired end for them; does it not look as if a similar course, combined with a little strength of purpose, would bring similar benefit to others? In any case, such a course has this advantage: begun easily, and followed up with gradually increasing vigor; it will be sure to tone up and strengthen one; and add to the spring and quickness of movement, whether it reduces one's flesh or not. But it is a sort of work where free perspiration must be encouraged; not hindered.

In all these cases of healthy and satisfactory reduction of weight it will be seen that copious perspiration from daily vigorous muscular and breathing exercise is plainly the chief element in effecting the desired purpose.

But, while many of us know instances where fat people have, by exercise, been reduced to a normal weight, is it possible for a thin person to become stouter? A thin person may have a large frame or a slender one. Is there any work which will increase the weight of each, and bring desirable roundness and plumpness of trunk and limb?

Take, first, the slim man. Follow him for a day, or even an hour, and you will usually find that, while often active—indeed, too active—still he does no work which a person of his height need be really strong to do. Put him beside such a person who is not merely large, but really strong and in equally good condition, and correspondingly skilful, and let the two train for an athletic feat of some sort—row together, for instance, or some other work where each must carry other weight in addition to his own. The first mile they can go well together, and one will do about as much as the other. But as the second wears along, the good strength begins to tell; and the slim man, while, perhaps, sustaining his form pretty well, and going through the motions, is not quite doing the work; and his friend is gradually drawing away from him. At the third mile the disparity grows very marked, and the stronger fellow has it all his own way; while at the end he also finds that he has not taken as much out of him as his slender rival. He has had more to carry, both in his boat's greater weight, and especially in his own; but his carrying power was more than enough to make up for the difference. Measure the slim man where you will, about his arm or shoulders, chest or thigh or calf, and the other out-measures him; the only girth where he is up, and perhaps ahead, is that of his head—for thin fellows often have big heads. The muscles of the stronger youth are larger as well as stronger.

Now, take the slim fellow, and set him to making so many efforts a day with any given muscle or muscles, say those of his upper left arm, for instance. Put some reward before him which he would like greatly to have—say ten thousand dollars—if in one year from date he will increase the girth of that same upper left arm two honest inches. Now, watch him, if he has any spirit and stuff, as thin fellows very often have; and see what he does. Insist, too, that whatever he does shall in no may interfere with his business or regular duties, whatever they may be; but that he must find other time for it. And what will he do? Why, he will leave no stone unturned to find just what work uses the muscles in question; and at that work he will go, with a resolution which no obstacle will balk. He is simply showing the truth of Emerson's broad rule, that "in all human action those faculties will be strong that are used"; and of Maclaren's, "Where the activity is, there will be the development."

The new work flushes the muscles in question with far more blood than before; while, the wear and tear being greater, the call for new material corresponds; and more and more hearty food is eaten and assimilated. The quarter-inch or more of gain the first fortnight often becomes the whole inch in less than two months; and, long before the year is out, the coveted two inches have come. And, in acquiring them, his whole left arm and shoulder have had correspondingly new strength added, quite going past his right, though it were the larger at first, if meanwhile he has practically let it alone.

There are some men, either at the college or city gymnasiums, every year, who are practically getting to themselves such an increase in the strength and size of some particular muscles.

We know one at college who, on entering, stood hardly five feet four; weighed but about one hundred and fifteen pounds; and was small and rather spare. For four years he worked with great steadiness in the gymnasium; afoot and on the water; and he graduated a five-foot-eight man; splendidly built; and weighing one hundred and sixty-eight pounds—every pound a good one, for he was one of the best bow-oarsmen his university ever saw.

Another, tall and very slender, but with a large head and a very bright mind, was an habitual fault-finder at everything on the table, no matter if it was fit for a prince. A friend got him for a while into a little athletic work—walking, running, and sparring—until he could trot three miles fairly, and till one day he walked forty-five—pretty well used up, to be sure, but he walked it. Well, his appetite went up like a rocket. Where the daintiest food would not tempt him before, he would now promptly hide a beefsteak weighing a clean pound at a meal; and that no matter if cooked in some roadside eating-house, where nothing was neat or tidy, and flies abounded almost as they did once in Egypt in Pharaoh's day. His friends frequently spoke of his improved temper, and how much easier it was to get on with him. But after a while his efforts slackened, and his poor stomach returned to its old vices, at least in part. Had he kept at what was doing so much for him, it would have continued to prove a many-sided blessing.

If steady and vigorous use of one set of muscles gradually increases their size, why should not a similar allowance, distributed to each, do the same for all? See (Appendix V.) what it did in four months and twelve days for Maclaren's pupil of nineteen, whose upper arm not only gained a whole inch and a half (think how that would add to the beauty alone of many a woman's arm, to say nothing of its strength), and whose chest enlarged five inches and a quarter, but whose weight went up eight pounds! Or what it did (see Appendix IV.) for Sargent's pupil of nineteen, who in just one year, besides making an inch and a half of upper arm, and three and a half of chest, went up from a hundred and forty-five pounds to a hundred and sixty, or a clean gain of fifteen pounds. Or (see Appendix VI.) for Maclaren's man, fully twenty-eight years old, who, in seven months and nineteen days, made sixteen pounds; or (Appendix VII.) for his youth of sixteen, who in just one year increased his weight full twenty-one pounds!

These facts certainly show pretty clearly whether sensible bodily exercise, taken regularly, and aimed at the weak spots, will not tell, and tell pretty rapidly, on the thin man wanting to stouten, and tell, too, in the way he wants.

It will make one eat heartily, it will make him sleep hard and long. Every ounce of the food is now digested; and the long sleep is just what he needed. Indeed, if, after a hearty dinner, a man would daily take a nap; and later in the day enough hard work to make sure of being thoroughly tired when bedtime came; he would doubtless find the flesh coming in a way to which he was a stranger. Many thin persons do not rest enough. They are constantly on the go; and the lack of phlegm in their make-up rather increases this activity; though they do not necessarily accomplish more than those who take care to sit and lie still more.

The writer, at nineteen, spent four weeks on a farm behind the Catskills, in Delaware County, New York. It was harvest-time, and, full of athletic ardor, and eager to return to college the better for the visit, we took a hand with the men. All the farm-hands were uniformly on the field at six o'clock in the morning; and it would average nearly or quite eight at night before the last load was snugly housed away in the mow. It was sharp, hard work all day long, with a tough, wiry, square-loined fellow in the leading swath all the morning. But follow him we were bound to, or drop; while the pitchfork or rake never rested from noon till sunset. Breakfast was served at five-thirty; dinner at eleven; supper at four; and a generous bowl of bread-and-milk—or two bowls, if you wanted them—at nine o'clock, just before bedtime, with plenty of spring-water between meals; while the fare itself was good and substantial, just what you would find on any well-to-do farmer's table. And such an appetite; and such sleep! Solomon must have tried some similar adventure when he wrote that "the sleep of the laboring man is sweet, whether he eat little or much." Well, when we returned to college and got on the scales again; the one hundred and forty-three pounds at starting had somehow become a hundred and fifty-six! And with them such a grip, and such a splendid feeling! We have rowed many a race since; but there was as hard work done by some of that little squad, on that old mountain-farm, as any man in our heat ever did; and there was not much attention paid to any one's training rules either.

It is notorious, among those used to training for athletic contests, that thin men, it judiciously held in, and not allowed to do too much work, generally "train up," or gain decidedly in weight; almost as much, in fact, as the fleshy ones lose.

Now, were the object simply to train up as much as possible, unusual care could be taken to insure careful and deliberate eating, with a generous share of the fat and flesh-making sorts of food; and quiet rest always for a while after each meal, to aid the digestive organs at their work. Slow, deep, abdominal breathing is a great ally to this latter process; indeed, works direct benefit to many of the vital organs, and so to the whole man. All the sleep the man can possibly take at night would also tell in the right way. So would everything that would tend to prevent fret and worry; or which would cultivate the ability to bear them philosophically. But most thin people do not keep still enough; do not take matters leisurely; do not breathe deeply; and do not rest enough; while, if their work is muscular, they do too much daily in proportion to their strength.

They are very likely also to be inerect; with flat, thin chests, and contracted stomach and abdomen. Now the habit of constantly keeping erect, whether sitting, standing, or walking; combined with this same deep, abdominal breathing, soon tends to expand not only the lower ribs, and lower part of the lungs; but the waist as well; so giving the digestive organs more room and freer play. Like the lungs, or any other organ, they do their work best when in no way constrained. Better yet, if the person will also habituate himself; no matter what he is at, whether in motion or sitting still; to not only breathing the lower half of the lungs full; but the whole lungs as well; and at each inspiration hold the air in his chest as long as he comfortably can; he will speedily find a quickened and more vigorous circulation; which will be shown, for instance, by the veins in his hands becoming larger; and the hands themselves growing warmer if the air be cold; he will also feel a mild and agreeable exhilaration, such as he has seldom before experienced. Some of these are little things; and for that reason they are the easier to do; but in this business, as in many others, little things often turn the scale. Of two brothers, equally thin, equally over-active, as much alike as possible—if one early formed these simple habits of slow and thorough mastication, deep and full breathing; resting a while after meals; carrying his body uniformly erect; and sleeping plentifully; and his brother all the while cared for none of these things; it is highly probable that these little attentions would; in a few years, tell very decidedly in favor of him who practised them, and gradually bring to him that greater breadth, depth, and serenity, and the accompanying greater Weight, of the broad, full, and hearty man.

And what about the old people? Take a person of sixty. You don't want him to turn gymnast, surely. No; not to turn gymnast; but to set aside a small portion of each day for taking such body as he or she now has, and making the best of it.

But how can that be done? and is it practicable at all for a person sixty years old, or more? Well, let us see what one, not merely sixty, but eighty, and more too, had to say on this point. Shortly after the death of the late William Cullen Bryant, the New York Evening Post, of which he had long been editor, published in its semi-weekly issue of June 14, 1878, the following letter:


"mr bryant's mode of life.

"The following letter, written by Mr. Bryant several years ago, describing the habits of his life, to which he partly ascribed the wonderful preservation of his physical and mental vigor, will be read with interest now:

"'New York, March 30, 1871.

"'To Joseph II. Richards, Esq.:

"'My dear Sir,—I promised some time since to give you some account of my habits of life, so far at least as regards diet, exercise, and occupations. I am not sure that it will be of any use to you, although the system which I have for many years observed seems to answer my purpose very well. I have reached a pretty advanced period of life, without the usual infirmities of old age, and with my strength, activity, and bodily faculties generally, in pretty good preservation. How far this may be the effect of my

SAMUEL E. GRISCOM (AT 80)


way of life, adopted long ago and steadily adhered to, is perhaps uncertain.

"'I rise early; at this time of the year about half-past five; in summer, half an hour or even an hour earlier. Immediately, with very little encumbrance of clothing, I begin a series of exercises, for the most part designed to expand the chest, and at the same time call into action all the muscles and articulations of the body. These are performed with dumb-bells, the very lightest, covered with flannel, with a pole, a horizontal bar, and a light chair swung around my head. After a full hour, and sometimes more, passed in this manner, I bathe from head to foot. When at my place in the country, I sometimes shorten my exercises in the chamber, and, going out, occupy myself for half an hour or more in some work which requires brisk exercise. After my bath, if breakfast be not ready, I sit down to my studies till I am called.

********

"'After breakfast I occupy myself for a while with my studies, and then, when in town, I walk down to the office of the Evening Post, nearly three miles distant, and, after about three hours, return, always walking, whatever be the weather or the state of the streets. In the country, I am engaged in my literary tasks till a feeling of weariness drives me out into the open air, and I go upon my farm or into the garden and prune the fruit-trees, or perform some other work about them which they need, and then go back to my books. I do not often drive out, preferring to walk.

********

"'I am, sir, truly yours,

"'W. C. Bryant'"


And would you like another instance? At fifty-five, Mr. Samuel E. Griscom, a well-known active businessman, of Pottsville, Pennsylvania, troubled with nervousness and insomnia, taking in each hand an eight-pound dumbbell, for two minutes swung them about a foot behind him; then up in front, till his hands went as high as his shoulders. Then he rested three minutes and worked two minutes more, with eight-pound bells at first; after about three years he used twelve-pound bells, and then for about ten years twenty-pound ones, until one thousand strokes became his daily exercise; and, as he says:


"On the morning of December 24, 1896, taking three thousand swings continuously with the twenty-pound bells," and "not exhausted" he "felt that he could have kept on indefinitely—or probably one or two thousand more—had it been desirable or prudent."


Thus lifting sixty tons each morning—which few men of any age can do to-day, were they to get even a dollar a pound for it. He adds:


"While these figures look startling, and to some perhaps excessive and dangerous, I am perfectly sure that I have never received any injury in the least from it, but have always been benefited. When suffering from nervous headache, from an over-worked brain surcharged with blood, I have found the dumb-bell exercise gradually drawing the blood from the brain to the body, arms, and hands, and as gradually and as certainly relieved the headache, so that before the end of one thousand swings it was entirely gone. It never failed, and though under most extraordinary mental strain for the past ten or twelve years, nervous headaches for about that time have been regarded as things of the past."


Asked what other good these exercises had done him, he said:


"They have greatly increased my strength in my back, arms, and hands; making it easier to stand erect and keep straight. They have promoted digestion, expanded the lungs, cured an irregular action of the heart, which was caused by insomnia, and increased and equalized the circulation, so that cold hands and cold feet are not known as formerly. They have improved my health in every respect until it now seems as nearly perfect as attainable, 'thanks to the Giver of every good and perfect gift.' But the crowning triumph was the cure of the insomnia. Like thousands of others, on awakening in the night-time I have spent one, two, three, and more hours vainly endeavoring to secure sleep. At length I limited the time to one hour, and failing, arose, took one thousand swings with success, losing only, at most one hour.
"Finally, I resolved to lose no time, but when once fairly awake, arise, take the exercise, and immediately secure two or three hours additional sleep."


Here is his diary entry: "On May 9, 1898, retired 10.50 p.m.; awoke 3.50 a.m., took two thousand swings (with twelve-pound bells); 7 a.m. arose again and took one thousand swings—eight hours, ten minutes, less one hour exercising, equals seven hours, ten minutes sleep"—which is a fair sample of the entries for years. After several months of this exercise, and of three or four miles of walking almost every day, he says: "My eyesight greatly improved, and is better than it was ten years ago, although I have never worn glasses. My hearing also is good, as good as it over was.

How old is he? Eighty on the day before Christmas, 1897. No arcus senilis in his eye. A strong, clear eye like that of a man of fifty. He had this picture taken in March, 1898. A sunny, even-tempered, well-balanced, high-minded, busy man; as ready to start for California or Europe if business calls as you or I. And he says that the mother of one of Philadelphia's best-known citizens told him that she used her dumb-bells in a different way from his; but she kept it up almost to her death at ninety-two!

What a wonderful story! And what a helpful one! Many men, along in years, are dying slowly from not doing some such work, and will lose years they might have had. All other machines rust out from disuse; and the human body is no exception. Had Jay Gould done as Mr. Griscom has done, he would probably be a live, active man to-day. Yet what did this little work cost? Not one dollar! Simply a little common-sense and determination; and the prize—a human life.

This activity among men so far on in years seems surprising. And why? Because, as people get past middle life, often from becoming engrossed in business; and out of the way of anything to induce them to continue their muscular activity; oftener from increasing caution; and fear that some effort, formerly easy, may now prove hazardous to them; they purposely avoid even ordinary exercise,—riding when they might, and indeed ought to walk; and, instead of walking their six miles a day; and looking after their arms and chests besides, as Bryant did, gradually come to do nothing each day worthy of the name of exercise. Then the joints grow dry and stiff; and snap and crack as they work. The old ease of action is gone; and disinclination takes its place. The man makes up his mind that he is growing old and stiff—often before he is sixty—and that there is no help for that stiffness.

Well, letting the machinery alone works a good deal the same whether it is made of iron and steel, and driven by steam; or of flesh and bones, and driven by the human heart. Maclaren cleverly compares this stiffening of the joints to the working of hinges, which, when "left unused and unoiled for any length of time, grate and creak, and move stiffly. The hinges of the human body do just the same thing; and from the same cause; and they not only require frequent oiling to enable them to move easily; but they are oiled every time they are put in motion, and when they are put in motion only. The membrane which secretes this oil, and pours it forth over the opposing surfaces of the bones and the overlying ligaments, is stimulated to activity only by the motion of the joint itself." Had Bryant spared himself as most men do; would he have been such a springy, easy walker, and so strong and handy at eighty-four? Does it not look as if the half-hour at the dumb-bells, and chairs, and horizontal bar, and the twelve or fifteen thousand steps which he took each day, had much to do with his spring and activity in such a green old age? Does it not look almost as if he had, half a century ago, read something not unlike the following from Maclaren:


"The first course of the system may be freely and almost unconditionally recommended to men throughout what may be called middle life; care being taken to use a bell and bar well within the physical capacity. The best time for this practice is in the early morning; immediately after the bath; and, when regularly taken, it need not extend over a few minutes."


Whether Bryant had ever seen these rules or not, the bell, the bar, and the morning-time for exercise make a noticeable coincidence.

Looking at the benefit daily exercise brought in the instances mentioned, would it not be well for every man, who begins to feel his age, to at once adopt some equally moderate and sensible course of daily exercise; and to enter on it with a good share of his own former energy and vigor? He does not need to live in the country to effect it; nor in the city. He can readily secure the exerciser suggested elsewhere[1] for his own home, wherever that home is; and so take care of his arms and chest, indeed of the whole of him. For foot-work there is always the road. Is it not worth while to make the effort? He can begin very mildly; and yet in a month reach quite a creditable degree of activity; and then keep that up. And if, as Mr. Bryant did, he should last till well past eighty; and, like him, keep free from deafness and dimness of vision; from stiffness and shortness of breath; from gout; rheumatism; paralysis; and other senile ailments; as he put it himself, "without the usual infirmities of old age"—indeed, with his "strength, activity, and bodily faculties generally in pretty good preservation," and all that time could attend promptly to all the daily duties of an active business as he did; as Vanderbilt did; as Palmerston did; as Thiers did,—is not the effort truly worth the making? And who knows what he can do till he tries?


  1. See p. 48.