Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 85, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 April 1911 — ALL MANKIND IS VAIN [ARTICLE]

ALL MANKIND IS VAIN

" '"'r "jr* —f* ...... SOOTHING BALM FOR MANY!. WOUNDS VANITY. Uncle Hiram Warn* Hl* Nephew Not to Mistake Self-Esteem for SelfBelief—Homely Men Think Themselves Handsome. “Stevey, my boy,” said Uncle HITjim to his hopeful young nephew, “there’s a terrible difference between, vanity and self-belief. “I’ve known plenty of men who were fairly saturated, soaking jwith vanity, but who didn’t have real courage enough to scare away a cat. They thought they were the handsomest men alive; but there were plenty of homely men that they’d let walk right over them. They had no end of vanity, but no real self-belief. “As matter of fact, Stephen, I think you are about as homely a young chap as I know; but it doesn’t follow from that that you’re rugged. And as far as that goes I never yet knew a homely man but what thought he was handsome; and that thought does a n/an no harm unless he lets his vanity satisfy hini ! “so that ke’s content to rest on that without further effort. j “Our vanity is a soothing balm for many wounds; it helps us much to bear life’s buftetings. When somebody treats us rudely we say to-our-selves we know what he is and we know what we are, and humph! and so on; and under such exasperation our vanity is very soothing to us, and that’s all right. “And there are millions and millions of people, Stevey, who never get anywhere in the world because they haven’t got it in ’em, but who still are vain; people who never get a chance, and who wouldn’t try if they clid get one, because they are too timid, but who still are filled with vanity, vanity that Is to &em a blessing, for it is all they have or ever will have; and these may be, you understand, good, hard working people, good people; the only solace they have Is their own harmless vanity. But it is a great Bolace; it makes life easier for them and it makes them hopeful, cheerful. “Sometimes when I think of it I think our vanity is our greatest blessing, and I am not sure now but what It is so. Good thing to remember, Stephen, that all men, all men, are vain. Every man, whatever his lot in life, high or low, is vain and easily wounded. Never wound anybody, Stephen.

“So I have no objection to your being vain, Stephen. You may think you are handsome if you want to or you may admire your own clothes or your neckties; you may think you’re the finest fellow on earth; but don’t, mistake your vanity for self-belief. Above all things you want really to believe in yourself, and this belief must be not a mere fancy. It must be a true, rugged, 100 per cent plus belief, something very different from vanity; it must be a real belief that inspires you to do things and that sustains and fortifies you; that invigorates and constantly strengthens you In whatever you undertake. “And you must do things. You can’t be content to sit down and admire You must butt into things and buck ’em, and if you’re thrown on one side advance on the other, growing bigger dnd stronger all the time with the , exercise of your strength grown invincible; finally in your blood, tissue and bone belief in In yourself. “That’s what you want, Stevey, whole hearted, thorough, complete, 100 per cent plus belief in yourself; with that you’ll get on in the world and have a little time left over to indulge in harmless vanity.”