|
| Home | Forum | Search |
| eNotAlone > Personal Growth > Success |
|
Dare : Part 1 Architects of Fate: Steps to Success and Power (Page 2 of 24) The Spartans did not inquire how many the enemy are, but where they are. - Agis II. What's brave, what's noble, let's do it after the high Roman fashion, and make death proud to take us. - Shakespeare.
Better, like Hector, in the field to die, Let me die facing the enemy. - Bayard. Who conquers me, should find a stubborn foe. - Byron. Courage in danger is half the battle. - Plautus.
No great deed is done Fortune befriends the bold. - Dryden.
Tender handed stroke a nettle, | ||||||||
Aaron Hill. We make way for the man who boldly pushes past us. - BOVÉE.
Man should dare all things that he knows is right,
Soft-heartedness, in times like these, O friend, never strike sail to fear. Come into port grandly, or sail with God the seas. - Emerson. To stand with a smile upon your face against a stake from which you cannot get away - that, no doubt, is heroic. But the true glory is resignation to the inevitable. To stand unchained, with perfect liberty to go away, held only by the higher claims of duty, and let the fire creep up to the heart, - this is heroism. - F. W. Robertson. "Steady, men! Every man must die where he stands!" said Colin Campbell to the Ninety-third Highlanders at Balaklava, as an overwhelming force of Russian cavalry came sweeping down. "Ay, ay, Sir Colin! we'll do that!" was the cordial response from men many of whom had to keep their word b. Therefore obeying. "We have met the enemy and they are ours."
"He either fears his fate too much "Bring back the colors," shouted a captain at the battle of the Alma, when an ensign maintained his ground in front, although the men were retreating. "No," cried the ensign, "bring up the men to the colors." "To dare, and again to dare, and without end to dare," was Danton's noble defiance to the enemies of France. "The Commons of France have resolved to deliberate," said Mirabeau to De Breze, who brought an order from the king for them to disperse, June 23, 1789. "We have heard the intentions that have been attributed to the king; and you, sir, who cannot be recognized as his organ in the National Assembly, - you, who have neither place, voice, nor right to speak, - you are not the person to bring to us a message of his. Go, say to those who sent you that we are here by the power of the people, and that we will not be driven hence, save by the power of the bayonet." When the assembled senate of Rome begged Regulus not to return to Carthage to fulfill an illegal promise, he calmly replied: "Have you resolved to dishonor me? Torture and death are awaiting me, but what are these to the shame of an infamous act, or the wounds of a guilty mind? Slave as I am to Carthage, I still have the spirit of a Roman. I have sworn to return. It is my duty. Let the gods take care of the rest." The courage which Cranmer had shown since the accession of Mary gave way the moment his final doom was announced. The moral cowardice which had displayed itself in his miserable compliance with the lust and despotism of Henry displayed itself again in six successive recantations by which he hoped to purchase pardon. But pardon was impossible; and Cranmer's strangely mingled nature found a power in its very weakness when he was brought into the church of St. Mary at Oxford on the 21st of March, to repeat his recantation on the way to the stake. "Now," ended his address to the hushed congregation before him, - "now I come to the great thing that troubled my conscience more than any other thing that ever I said or did in my life, and that is the setting abroad of writings contrary to the truth; which here I now renounce and refuse as things written by a hand contrary to the truth which I thought in my heart, and written for fear of death to save my life, if it might be. And, for as much as my hand offended in writing contrary to my heart, my hand therefore should be the first punished; for if I come to the fire it should be the first burned." "This was the hand that wrote it," he again exclaimed at the stake, "therefore it should suffer first punishment;" and holding it steadily in the flame, "he never stirred nor cried till life was gone." "Oh, if I were only a man!" exclaimed Rebeca Bates, a girl of fourteen, as she looked from the window of a lighthouse at Scituate, Mass., during the War of 1812, and saw a British warship anchor in the harbor. "What could you do?" asked Sarah Winsor, a young visitor. "See what a lot of them the boats contain, and look at their guns!" and she pointed to five large boats, filled with soldiers in scarlet uniforms, who were coming to burn the vessels in the harbor and destroy the town. "I don't care, I'd fight," said Rebeca. "I'd use father's old shotgun - anything. Think of uncle's new boat and the sloop! And how hard it is to sit here and see it all, and not lift a finger to help. Father and uncle are in the village and will do all they can. How still it is in the town! There is not a man to be seen." "Oh, they are hiding till the soldiers get nearer," said Sarah, "then we'll hear the shots and the drum." "The drum!" exclaimed Rebeca, "how can they use it? It is here. Father brought it home last night to mend. See! the first boat has reached the sloop.
Copyright, 1895 by Orison Swett Marden. |
| |||||||
|
© 2008 eNotAlone.com | ||||||||