Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

SAY NO AND MEAN IT.

By Dr. Frank Crane.

No is next to the shortest word in the English language. It is the concentrated Declaration of Independence of the human soul. It is the central citadel of character, and can remain impregnable for ever. It is the only path to reformation. It is the steam guage of strength, the barometer of temperament, the electric indicator of moral force. It is the automatic safety-first dtevice.

It has saved more women than all the knights of chivalry. It has kept millions of young men from going over the Niagara Falls of drunkenness, prodigality and passion. It is the updrawn portcullis and barred gate to the castle of self-re-pect. It is the dragon that guards beauty’s tower. It is the high fence that preserves the innocence of the innocent. It is the thick wall of the home keeping the father from folly, the mother from indiscretion, the boys from ruin, and the girls from shame. It is the one word y,ou can always say when you can’t think of anything else. It is the one answer that needs no explanation. The mule is the surest footed and most dependable of all domestic animals. No is the mule-power of the soul. Say it and mean it. Say it and look your man in the eye. Say it and don't hesitate. A good round No is the most effective of known shells from the human howitzer. In the great Parliament of life the Noes have it. * The value of any Yes you utter is measured by the number of Noes banked behind it.

Live your own life. Make your own resolutions. Mark your own programme. Aim at your own work. Determine your own conduct. And plant all around these an impregnable hedge of Noes, with the jaggedest, sharpest thorns that grow. The N,o-man progresses under his own steam. He is not led about and pushed around by officious tugboats.

The woman who can say No carries the very best insurance against, the fires, tornadoes, earthquakes and accidents that threaten womankind. Be soft and gentle as you please outwardly, but let the centre of your soul be a No, as hard as steel.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS19230821.2.40

Bibliographic details

Thames Star, Volume LVII, Issue 15908, 21 August 1923, Page 7

Word Count
367

SAY NO AND MEAN IT. Thames Star, Volume LVII, Issue 15908, 21 August 1923, Page 7

SAY NO AND MEAN IT. Thames Star, Volume LVII, Issue 15908, 21 August 1923, Page 7