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Beveridge, Albert Jeremiah, 1862-1927

"The Young Man and the World"

He is a keen and persistent man," was his inquiry
of and comment on a certain man. And he asked questions concerning
three or four. Among them he said: "And Mr. ----, of your state; how
is his health? He is very brilliant, yes, even able, but--he drinks
too much."
Three generalizations may justly be deducted from the above discursive
talk. They are practically the ones with which for many years I have
been impressed--namely, that that man will be of very little present
use, and of no permanent and ultimate value to the world or to
himself, who drinks too much, who talks too much, or who thinks he can
get along without the ennobling influence of women.
Let us take them one at a time. A young man could hardly do a more
fatal thing than to fall into the habit of taking stimulants. This is
no temperance lecture. It is merely a summary of suggestions, by
observing which the young man may avoid a few of the rocks in his
necessarily rugged pathway to success. I emphasized this in two
preceding chapters and shall reiterate it again and again; for I am
trying to say a helpful word to _you_; and all your talents will be
folly and all your toil the labor of Sisyphus if you companion with
the bottle.


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