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Success is often due less to ability than to enthusiasm.

The world makes way for the man who believes in his mission. No matter what objections may be raised, no matter how dark the outlook, he believes in his power to transform into reality the vision which he alone has seen.

It has been well said that all the liberties, reforms, and political achievements of society have been gained by nations thrilling and throbbing to one great enthusiasm.

Enthusiasm will steady the heart and strengthen the will; it williive force to the thought and nerve. to the hand, until what was only a possibility becomes a reality.

No barrier however formidable, no obstacle however insurmountable it may seem to the timid or the faint-hearted, can bar the way to any man possessed of enthusiasm for a high ideal. Never before in the world's history has the man fired by enthusiasm had such an opportunity as he has today.

It is particularly the age of young men and young women. The world looks to them to be interpreters of new forms of youth and beauty. Secrets, jealously guarded by nature, are waiting to reveal themselves to the enthusiast who is willing to devote his life to the work. Inventions, foreshadowed today, are waiting for lhe passionate patience of enthusiasm to develop them.

Indifference is the opposite of enthusiasm. Indifferdnce never leads armies that conquer, never models statues that live, nor moves the world with heroic philanthropies. Enthusiasm it was that wrought the statue of Memnon and hung the brazen gates of Thebes; it fixed the mariner's trembling needle upon its'axis, and first heaved the great bar of the printing press. It opened the tubes of Galileo until world after world swept before his vision; and it reefed the topsail that ruffled over Columbus in the morning breezes of the Bahamas. It has held the sword with which freedom has fought her battles, and poised the axe of the dauntless woodsman as he blazed the pathway of civilization. It turned the mystic leaves upon which Shakespeare and Milton inscribed their burning thoughts, and sustained and soothed the heroic soul of Thomas Jefferson in his declining days.

Enthusiasm is the inspiration of everything that i" gt.at. Without it, no man is to be feared. With it, no man is to be despised.

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