<SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>
<h3> I </h3>
<h3> THE DAILY MIRACLE </h3>
<p>"Yes, he's one of those men that don't know how to manage. Good
situation. Regular income. Quite enough for luxuries as well as
needs. Not really extravagant. And yet the fellow's always in
difficulties. Somehow he gets nothing out of his money. Excellent
flat—half empty! Always looks as if he'd had the brokers in. New
suit—old hat! Magnificent necktie—baggy trousers! Asks you to
dinner: cut glass—bad mutton, or Turkish coffee—cracked cup! He
can't understand it. Explanation simply is that he fritters his income
away. Wish I had the half of it! I'd show him—"</p>
<p>So we have most of us criticised, at one time or another, in our
superior way.</p>
<p>We are nearly all chancellors of the exchequer: it is the pride of the
moment. Newspapers are full of articles explaining how to live on
such-and-such a sum, and these articles provoke a correspondence whose
violence proves the interest they excite. Recently, in a daily organ,
a battle raged round the question whether a woman can exist nicely in
the country on L85 a year. I have seen an essay, "How to live on eight
shillings a week." But I have never seen an essay, "How to live on
twenty-four hours a day." Yet it has been said that time is money.
That proverb understates the case. Time is a great deal more than
money. If you have time you can obtain money—usually. But though you
have the wealth of a cloak-room attendant at the Carlton Hotel, you
cannot buy yourself a minute more time than I have, or the cat by the
fire has.</p>
<br/>
<p>Philosophers have explained space. They have not explained time. It is
the inexplicable raw material of everything. With it, all is possible;
without it, nothing. The supply of time is truly a daily miracle, an
affair genuinely astonishing when one examines it. You wake up in the
morning, and lo! your purse is magically filled with twenty-four hours
of the unmanufactured tissue of the universe of your life! It is
yours. It is the most precious of possessions. A highly singular
commodity, showered upon you in a manner as singular as the commodity
itself!</p>
<p>For remark! No one can take it from you. It is unstealable. And no
one receives either more or less than you receive.</p>
<p>Talk about an ideal democracy! In the realm of time there is no
aristocracy of wealth, and no aristocracy of intellect. Genius is
never rewarded by even an extra hour a day. And there is no
punishment. Waste your infinitely precious commodity as much as you
will, and the supply will never be withheld from you. No mysterious
power will say:—"This man is a fool, if not a knave. He does not
deserve time; he shall be cut off at the meter." It is more certain
than consols, and payment of income is not affected by Sundays.
Moreover, you cannot draw on the future. Impossible to get into debt!
You can only waste the passing moment. You cannot waste to-morrow; it
is kept for you. You cannot waste the next hour; it is kept for you.</p>
<p>I said the affair was a miracle. Is it not?</p>
<p>You have to live on this twenty-four hours of daily time. Out of it
you have to spin health, pleasure, money, content, respect, and the
evolution of your immortal soul. Its right use, its most effective
use, is a matter of the highest urgency and of the most thrilling
actuality. All depends on that. Your happiness—the elusive prize
that you are all clutching for, my friends!—depends on that. Strange
that the newspapers, so enterprising and up-to-date as they are, are
not full of "How to live on a given income of time," instead of "How to
live on a given income of money"! Money is far commoner than time.
When one reflects, one perceives that money is just about the commonest
thing there is. It encumbers the earth in gross heaps.</p>
<p>If one can't contrive to live on a certain income of money, one earns a
little more—or steals it, or advertises for it. One doesn't
necessarily muddle one's life because one can't quite manage on a
thousand pounds a year; one braces the muscles and makes it guineas,
and balances the budget. But if one cannot arrange that an income of
twenty-four hours a day shall exactly cover all proper items of
expenditure, one does muddle one's life definitely. The supply of
time, though gloriously regular, is cruelly restricted.</p>
<br/>
<p>Which of us lives on twenty-four hours a day? And when I say "lives,"
I do not mean exists, nor "muddles through." Which of us is free from
that uneasy feeling that the "great spending departments" of his daily
life are not managed as they ought to be? Which of us is quite sure
that his fine suit is not surmounted by a shameful hat, or that in
attending to the crockery he has forgotten the quality of the food?
Which of us is not saying to himself—which of us has not been saying
to himself all his life: "I shall alter that when I have a little more
time"?</p>
<p>We never shall have any more time. We have, and we have always had,
all the time there is. It is the realisation of this profound and
neglected truth (which, by the way, I have not discovered) that has led
me to the minute practical examination of daily time-expenditure.</p>
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