<h2 class="nobreak" id="ii"><span class="tint">ii</span><br/> <span class="subhead">Some of the Qualities Essential to the Most Successful School Life</span></h2></div>
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<p class="drop-cap-image"><span class="idcfirst">The</span> student who would put the
most into his school life must
first of all be happy. I do not believe
it is possible for a student
to accomplish very much, certainly
not the most, while he is in school, unless
he learns to be happy in all his relations in
school life. If the students are unhappy there is
something wrong with the institution, or with
the teachers, or with the student body. The
normal state of a student in a well-ordered institution
is a happy one. It is impossible to get
the most out of the life of any institution unless
there is joy in working out the ideals of
the institution. The student should make himself
familiar with the purposes of the school to
which he seeks admission, and having made
the choice, he should be loyal to its traditions
and purposes.</p>
<p>The Bible teaches over and over again that
freedom, without which happiness is impossible,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
is self-imposed restraint, that to be really
free we must live within the law. He who lives
outside the law is a slave. The freeman is the
man who lives within the law, whether that law
be the physical or the divine. All life is governed
by law, and the student must acquire freedom
by obedience to law. The students in any institution
are divided into two classes: the happy,
contented, ambitious, hopeful ones, who have
faith in the institution and respect for its traditions,
and the miserable, discontented, grumbling
class. One class live not only within the
letter but in the spirit of the law, and are consequently
happy. The second class are miserable,
discontented and hopeless because they
try to live outside the law. No student can get
much out of any institution who does not enter
whole-heartedly into its spirit, its traditions
and its ideals.</p>
<p>The ability to do hard methodical work is one
of the prizes which every school worthy of the
name offers to its students. The years at school
not infrequently give bent to the whole life.
The student who does slipshod work at school
is more than likely to lack direction in his subsequent
career. But mental strength comes not
as a bequest. It is a prize that must be contended
for right earnestly, and dictionary, cyclopaedia,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
text-book and shop are tools which
instructors place in the hands of students to
help them win the prize. The proper use of
these tools must depend finally upon the individual
student. No one gets much out of life
who does not make his education a real, vital
part of himself. Many people have education
very much as a parrot has at his command
a certain number of words or sentences. The
words and sentences that the parrot utters are
no real part of him. They are merely something
tacked on to the parrot, and foreign to his real
natural make-up. Some people use education
as they use their “Sunday clothes,” on extra
occasions only. They bring their education into
play when they are in the company of others,
commit a few quotations and use big words
which have no working place in their vocabulary.
To try to make education a real part of
one’s self is the way to get most out of one’s
school life. Just as the food a man eats becomes
a part of his blood and bone, so should education
become a vital part of him. Education
must be digested and assimilated in order to
make it significant.</p>
<p>The student who leaves undone immediate
duties because of bodily laziness is leaving
happiness far behind him. Sins of commission<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
and sins of omission alike tend to weakness.
Our ability to make the world better depends
entirely upon our ability to use every opportunity
to make ourselves better. A largeness
of life, a variety of interests and breadth of view
are among the prizes which a school offers to
its students. These qualities the ignorant man
does not possess. Largeness of life and breadth
of vision give faith in the future; that largeness
makes one person take the long view when
the other is taking the short view; that largeness
lifts the educated person far above the
temptation to gossip about little things, above
the temptation to get down into the mud
and slime with which weaker individuals are
smeared.</p>
<p>To be loyal and obedient to the legislation of
an institution, to make thrifty use of text-book
and shop and farm and every part of the school
equipment, is to attain that mental strength
that makes for largeness of life and breadth of
view. These qualities come not by observation,
but they do come by conscientious work in season
and out of season. They are all within the
reach of the student who is willing to work for
them, and they are all essential to real happiness.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span></p>
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