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OFTEN TIRED BUT NEVER WEARY.

Lot's dinonas thin point for two mm

ult)8. lloro's i\ idisii who says that at a curtain period lie boj,'»n to feel " tired and weary." That's precisely the way ho puts it in his letter. Now anybody has the right to feel tirod aud fatigued

(It's the same thing), after labour or much exercise. It's tbe body's fashion of telling you to hold up, to give it a rest. It ia a natural and, in health. with Bupper and sleep just ahead, a pleasant feeling. But weariness !— that's different. That comes of monotony, of waiting, of loneliuoss. Weariooßa ia of ;he mind, not of the body. But it can arise in the body, all the same. If this bothers you at first, don't Bay, "Stuff I " " humbug ! " but study up on it. A ■nan may be tired and happy, but not iccary and happy. For weariness means depreased aplrita, aud nerves all sagged down in the middle, And when you get both at once you will be wise to find out what's gone wrong.

It ia a short letter, this Is, and we can just aa well quote the whole of it. The writer aays : "It was in November, 1887, when I bogan to feel tired and weary. It seemed as if I had no strength left in me. Before I had

always been strong and healthy. My ippetite was poor, and for days together [ oould not touch any food that waß placed beforo me. After every meal ihat I did succeed in forcing down I had such dreadful pains in the chest and back that I waa alwaya afraid to eat. Then there was a sharp pain around the excursions tho Qaoen receiveß a small number of local notabilities, but we learn that those thus privileged to have a personal inter vie wareof ten disappointed. Her Majesty, though she oan talk admirably, never talks for tbo aake of doing so, and though she is an excellent listener, it must be to someone worth

listening to. " With the exception of the higher clergy and a few generals, interesting ollioial personages are becoming more rare in France every day ; hence the frequent disappointments." At eleven o'clock, all tho lights are out in the Queen's reaidenoe aud tbe detectives, English and Frenoh, take charge of it for the night.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBH18950615.2.24.5

Bibliographic details

Hawke's Bay Herald, Volume XXX, Issue 10017, 15 June 1895, Page 5

Word Count
392

OFTEN TIRED BUT NEVER WEARY. Hawke's Bay Herald, Volume XXX, Issue 10017, 15 June 1895, Page 5

OFTEN TIRED BUT NEVER WEARY. Hawke's Bay Herald, Volume XXX, Issue 10017, 15 June 1895, Page 5