On this Mother's Day 2017, I thought it very fitting to post a chapter from Orison Swett Marden's book, Pushing to the Front where he wrote on the importance of mothers. Additional words are simply not necessary except that keep in mind this was written in the late 1890s, early 1900s and the reference to "man" is gender neutral as it was in language and writing of that period in our history.
CHAPTER
LIX
Pushing
to the Front
Orison
Swett Marden
MOTHER
"All that I am or
hope to be," said Lincoln, after he had become President, "I owe to
my angel mother." "My mother was the making of me," said Thomas
Edison, recently. "She was so true, so sure of me; and I felt that I had
someone to live for; someone I must not disappoint." "All that I have
ever accomplished in life," declared Dwight L. Moody, the great
evangelist, "I owe to my mother." "To the man who has had a good
mother, all women are sacred for her sake," said Jean Paul Richter.
The testimony of great
men in acknowledgment of the boundless debt they owe to their mothers would
make a record stretching from the dawn of history to today. Few men, indeed,
become great who do not owe their greatness to a mother's love and inspiration.
How often we hear people in every walk of life say, "I never could have
done this thing but for my mother. She believed in me, encouraged me when
others saw nothing in me." "A kiss from my mother made me a
painter," said Benjamin West. A distinguished man of today says: "I
never could have reached my present position had I not known that my mother
expected me to reach it. From a child she made me feel that this was the
position she expected me to fill; and her faith spurred me on and gave me the
power to attain it."
Everything that a man
has and is he owes to his mother. From her he gets health, brain,
encouragement, moral character, and all his chances of success. "In the
shadow of every great man's fame walks his mother," says Dorothy Dix.
"She has paid the price of his success. She went down into the Valley of
the Shadow to give him life, and every day for years and years thereafter she
toiled incessantly to push him on toward his goal. "She gave the labor of
her hands for his support; she poured into him ambition when he grew
discouraged; she supplemented his weakness with her strength; she filled him
with her hope and faith when his own failed. "At last he did the Big
Thing, and people praised him, and acclaimed him, and nobody thought of the
quiet, insignificant little woman in the background, who had been the real
power behind the throne. Sometimes even the king himself forgets who was the
kingmaker."
Many a man is enjoying
a fame which is really due to a self-effacing, sacrificing mother. People
hurrah for the governor, or mayor, or congressman, but the real secret of his
success is often tucked away in that little unknown, unappreciated, unheralded
mother. His education and his chance to rise may have been due to her
sacrifices. It is a strange fact that our mothers, the molders of the world,
should get so little credit and should be so seldom mentioned among the world's
achievers. The world sees only the successful son; the mother is but a round in
the ladder upon which he has climbed. Her name or face is seldom seen in the
papers; only her son is lauded and held up to our admiration. Yet it was that
sweet, pathetic figure in the background that made his success possible. The
woman who merits the greatest fame is the woman who gives a brilliant mind to
the world. The mothers of great men and women deserve just as much honor as the
great men and women themselves, and they will receive it from the better
understanding of the coming days. "A wife may do much toward polishing up
a man and boosting him up the ladder, but unless his mother first gave him the
intellect to scintillate and the muscles to climb with, the wife labors in
vain," continues Dorothy Dix, in the Evening Journal. "You cannot
make a clod shine. You cannot make a mollusk aspire. You must have the material
to work with, to produce results.
"By the time a man
is married his character is formed, and he changes very little. His mother has
made him; and no matter how hard she tries, there is very little that his wife
can do toward altering him. "It is not the philosophies, the theories, the
code of ethics that a man acquires in his older years that really influence
him. It is the things that he learned at his mother's knee, the principles that
she instilled in him in his very cradle, the taste and habits that she formed,
the strength and courage that she breathed into him. "It is the childish
impressions that count. It is the memory of whispered prayers, of bedtime
stories, of old ideals held unfalteringly before a boy's gaze; it is
half-forgotten songs, and dim visions of heroes that a mother taught her child
to worship, that make the very warp and woof of the soul. "It is the
pennies, that a mother teaches a boy to save and the self-denial that she inculcates
in doing it, that form the real foundation of the fortune of the millionaire.
"It is the mother that loves books, and who gives her sons her love of
learning, who bestows the great scholars, the writers, and orators, on the
world. "It is the mother that worships science, who turns the eyes of the
child upon her breast up to the wonder of the stars, and who teaches the little
toddler at her side to observe the marvel of beast, and bird, and flower, and
all created things, whose sons become the great astronomers and naturalists,
and biologists."
The very atmosphere
that radiates from and surrounds the mother is the inspiration and constitutes
the holy of holies of family life. "In my mother's presence," said a
prominent man, "I become for the time transformed into another
person." How many of us have felt the truth of this statement! How ashamed
we feel when we meet her eyes, that we have ever harbored an unholy thought, or
dishonorable suggestion! It seems impossible to do wrong while under that magic
influence. What revengeful plans, what thoughts of hatred and jealousy, have
been scattered to the four winds while in the mother's presence! Her children
go out from communion with her resolved to be better men, nobler women, truer
citizens. "How many of us have stood and watched with admiration the
returning victor of some petty battle, cheering until we were hoarse,
exhausting ourselves with the vehemence of our enthusiasm," says a writer,
"when right beside us, possibly touching our hand, was one greater than he?
One whose battle has not been petty—whose conflict has not been of short
duration, but has for us fought many a severe fight. "When we had the
scarlet fever or diphtheria and not one would come near us, who held the cup of
cold water to our fever-parched lips? Who bent over us day and night and fought
away with almost supernatural strength the greatest of all enemies—death? The
world's greatest heroine—Mother! Who is it that each Sunday dinner-time chose
the neck of the chicken that we might have the juicy wing or breast or leg? Who
is it stays home from the concert, the social, the play, that we may go with
the others and not be stinted for small change? Who is it crucifies her love of
pretty clothes, her desire for good things, her longing for pleasure that we
may have all these? Who is it? Mother!"
The greatest heroine in
the world is the mother. No one else makes such sacrifices, or endures anything
like the suffering that she uncomplainingly endures for her children. What is
the giving of one's life in battle or in a wreck at sea to save another, in
comparison with the perpetual sacrifice of many mothers of a living death
lasting for half a century or more? How the world's heroes dwindle in
comparison with the mother heroine! There is no one in the average family, the
value of whose services begins to compare with those of the mother, and yet
there is no one who is more generally neglected or taken advantage of. She must
remain at home evenings, and look after the children, when the others are out
having a good time. Her cares never cease. She is responsible for the
housework, for the preparation of meals; she has the children's clothes to make
or mend, there is company to be entertained, darning to be done, and a score of
little duties which must often be attended to at odd moments, snatched from her
busy days, and she is often up working at night, long after everyone else in
the house is asleep. No matter how loving or thoughtful the father may be, the
heavier burdens, the greater anxieties, the weightier responsibilities of the
home, of the children, usually fall on the mother. Indeed, the very virtues of
the good mother are a constant temptation to the other members of the family,
especially the selfish ones, to take advantage of her. They seem to take it for
granted that they can put all their burdens on the patient, uncomplaining
mother; that she will always do anything to help out, and to enable the
children to have a good time; and in many homes, sad to say, the mother, just
because of her goodness, is shamefully imposed upon and neglected. "Oh,
mother won't mind, mother will stay at home." How often we hear remarks
like this from thoughtless children! It is always the poor mother on whom the
burden falls; and the pathetic thing is that she rarely gets much credit or
praise. Many mothers in the poor and working classes practically sacrifice all
that most people hold dearest in life for their children. They deliberately
impair their health, wear themselves out, make all sorts of sacrifices, to send
a worthless boy to college. They take in washing, go out house-cleaning, do the
hardest and most menial work, in order to give their boys and girls an
education and the benefit of priceless opportunities that they never had; yet,
how often, they are rewarded only with total indifference and neglect!
Some time ago I heard
of a young girl, beautiful, gay, full of spirit and vigor, who married and had
four children. Her husband died penniless, and the mother made the most heroic
efforts to educate the children. By dint of unremitting toil and unheard of
sacrifices and privations she succeeded in sending the boys to college and the
girls to a boarding-school. When they came home, pretty, refined girls and
strong young men, abreast with all the new ideas and tastes of their times, she
was a worn-out, commonplace old woman. They had their own pursuits and
companions. She lingered unappreciated among them for two or three years, and
then died, of some sudden failure of the brain. The shock of her fatal illness
woke them to consciousness of the truth. They hung over her, as she lay
prostrate, in an agony of grief. The oldest son, as he held her in his arms,
cried: "You have been a good mother to us!" Her face brightened, her
eyes kindled into a smile, and she whispered: "You never said so before,
John." Then the light died out, and she was gone.
Many men spend more
money on expensive caskets, flowers, and emblems of mourning than they ever
spent on their poor, loving, self-sacrificing mothers for many years while
alive. Men who, perhaps, never thought of carrying flowers to their mothers in
life, pile them high on their coffins. Who can ever depict the tragedies that
have been enacted in the hearts of American mothers, who have suffered untold
tortures from neglect, indifference, and lack of appreciation? What a pathetic
story of neglect many a mother's letters from her grown-up children could tell!
A few scraggy lines, a few sentences now and then, hurriedly written and
mailed—often to ease a troubled conscience—mere apologies for letters, which
chill the mother heart.
I know men who owe
their success in life to their mother; who have become prosperous and
influential, because of the splendid training of the self-sacrificing mother,
and whose education was secured at an inestimable cost to her, and yet they
seldom think of carrying to her flowers, confectionery, or little delicacies,
or of taking her to a place of amusement, or of giving her a vacation or
bestowing upon her any of the little attentions and favors so dear to a woman's
heart. They seem to think she is past the age for these things, that she no
longer cares for them, that about all she expects is enough to eat and drink,
and the simplest kind of raiment. These men do not know the feminine heart
which never changes in these respects, except to grow more appreciative of the
little attentions, the little considerations, and thoughtful acts which meant
so much to them in their younger days.
Not long ago I heard a
mother, whose sufferings and sacrifices for her children during a long and
trying struggle with poverty should have given her a monument, say, that she
guessed she'd better go to an old ladies' home and end her days there. What a
picture that was! An aged woman with white hair and a sweet, beautiful face;
with a wonderful light in her eye; calm, serene, and patient, yet dignified,
whose children, all of whom are married and successful, made her feel as if she
were a burden! They live in luxurious homes, but have never offered to provide
a home for the poor, old rheumatic mother, who for so many years slaved for
them. They put their own homes, stocks, and other property in their wives'
names, and while they pay the rent of their mother's meagerly furnished rooms
and provide for her actual needs, they apparently never think what joy it would
give her to own her own home, and to possess some pretty furnishings, and a few
pictures.
In many cases men
through thoughtlessness do not provide generously for their mothers even when
well able to. They seem to think that a mother can live most anywhere, and most
anyway; that if she has enough to supply her necessities she is satisfied. Just
think, you prosperous business men, how you would feel if the conditions were
reversed, if you were obliged to take the dependent, humiliating position of
your mother! Whatever else you are obliged to neglect, take no chances of
giving your mother pain by neglecting her, and of thus making yourself
miserable in the future. The time may come when you will stand by her bedside,
in her last sickness, or by her coffin, and wish that you had exchanged a
little of your money for more visits and more attentions and more little
presents to your mother; when you will wish that you had cultivated her more,
even at the cost of making a little less money.
There is no one else in
this world who can take your mother's place in your life. And there is no
remorse like that which comes from the remembrance of ill-treating, abusing, or
being unkind to one's mother. These things stand out with awful vividness and
terrible clearness when the mother is gone forever from sight, and you have
time to contrast your treatment with her long suffering, tenderness, and love,
and her years of sacrifice for you.
One of the most painful
things I have ever witnessed was the anguish of a son who had become wealthy
and in his prosperity neglected the mother, whose sacrifices alone had made his
success possible. He did not take the time to write to her more than twice a
year, and then only brief letters. He was too busy to send a good long letter
to the poor old lonely mother back in the country, who had risked her life and
toiled and sacrificed for years for him! Finally, when he was summoned to her
bedside in the country, in her last sickness, and realized that his mother had
been for years without the ordinary comforts of life, while he had been living
in luxury, he broke down completely. And while he did everything possible to
alleviate her suffering, in the few last days that remained to her on earth,
and gave her an imposing burial, what torture he must have suffered, at this
pitiful picture of his mother who had sacrificed everything for him! "The
regrets for thoughtless acts and indifference to admonitions now felt and
expressed by many living sons of dead mothers will, in time, be felt and
expressed by the living sons of living mothers," says Richard L. Metcalfe,
in the "Commoner." "The boys of to-day who do not understand the
value of the mother's companionship will yet sing—with those who already
know—this song of tribute and regret: "'The hours I spent with thee, dear
heart, Are as a string of pearls to me; I count them over, every one apart, My
rosary. "'Each hour a pearl, each pearl a prayer, To still a heart in
absence wrung; I tell each bead unto the end, and there A cross is hung.
"'O memories that bless—and burn! Oh mighty gain and bitter loss! I kiss
each bead and strive at last to learn To kiss the cross, Sweet heart, To kiss
the cross.'"
No man worthy of the
name ever neglects or forgets his mother. I have an acquaintance, of very poor
parentage, who had a hard struggle to get a start in the world; but when he
became prosperous and built his beautiful home, he finished a suite of rooms in
it especially for his mother, furnished them with all conveniences and comforts
possible, and insisted upon keeping a maid specially for her. Although she
lives with her son's family, she is made to feel that this part of the great
home is her own, and that she is as independent as though she lived in her own
house. Every son should be ambitious to see his mother as well provided for as
his wife. Really great men have always reverenced and cared tenderly for their
mothers. President McKinley provided in his will that, first of all, his mother
should be made comfortable for life. The first act of Garfield, after he was
inaugurated President, was to kiss his aged mother, who sat near him, and who
said this was the proudest and happiest moment of her life. Ex-President Loubet
of France, even after his elevation to the presidency, took great pride in
visiting his mother, who was a humble market gardener in a little French
village. A writer on one occasion, describing a meeting between this mother and
her son, says: "Her noted son awaited her in the market-place, as she drove
up in her little cart loaded with vegetables. Assisting his mother to alight,
the French President gave her his arm and escorted her to her accustomed seat.
Then holding over her a large umbrella, to shield her from the threatening
weather, he seated himself at her side, and mother and son enjoyed a long talk
together."
I once saw a splendid
young college graduate introduce his poor, plainly dressed old mother to his
classmates with as much pride and dignity as though she was a queen. Her form
was bent, her hands were calloused, she was prematurely old, and much of this
deterioration was caused by all sorts of drudgery to help her boy to pay his
college expenses. I have seen other college men whose mothers had made similar
sacrifices, and who were ashamed to have them attend their graduating
exercises, ashamed to introduce them to their classmates. Think of the
humiliation and suffering of the slave mother, who has given all the best of
her life to a large family, battling with poverty in her efforts to dignify her
little home, and to give her children an education, when she realizes that she
is losing ground intellectually, yet has no time or strength for reading, or
self-culture, no opportunity for broadening her mental outlook by traveling or
mingling with the world! But this is nothing compared to the anguish she
endures, when, after the flower of her youth is gone and there is nothing left
of her but the ashes of a burned-out existence, the shreds of a former superb
womanhood, she awakes to the consciousness that her children are ashamed of her
ignorance and desire to keep her in the background.
From babyhood children
should be taught to look up to, not down on their mother. For that reason she
should never appear before them in slovenly raiment, nor conduct herself in any
way that would lessen their respect. She should keep up her intellectual
culture that they may not advance beyond her understanding and sympathies. No
matter how callous or ungrateful a son may be, no matter how low he may sink in
vice or crime, he is always sure of his mother's love, always sure of one who
will follow him even to his grave, if she is alive and can get there; of one
who will cling to him when all others have fled.
It is forever true, as
Kipling poignantly expresses it in his beautiful verses on "Mother
Love":
"If I were hanged on highest hill,
Mother o' mine, O mother o' mine!
I know whose love would follow still,
Mother o' mine, O mother o' mine!
If I were drowned in the deepest sea,
Mother o' mine, O mother o' mine!
I know whose tears would come down to me,
Mother o' mine, O mother o' mine!
If I were cursed of body and soul,
Mother o' mine, O mother o' mine!
I know whose prayer's would make me whole!
Mother o' mine, O mother o' mine!"
One of the saddest
sights I have ever seen was that of a poor, old, broken-down mother, whose life
had been poured into her children, making a long journey to the penitentiary to
visit her boy, who had been abandoned by everybody but herself. Poor old mother!
It did not matter that he was a criminal, that he had disgraced his family,
that everybody else had forsaken him, that he had been unkind to her—the
mother's heart went out to him just the same. She did not see the hideous human
wreck that crime had made. She saw only her darling boy, the child that God had
given her, pure and innocent as in his childhood. Oh, there is no other human
love like this, which follows the child from the cradle to the grave, never
once abandons, never once forsakes him, no matter how unfortunate or degenerate
he may become.
"So your best girl
is dead," sneeringly said a New York magistrate to a young man who was
arrested for attempting suicide. "Who was she?" Without raising his
eyes, the unfortunate victim burst into tears and replied, "She was my
mother!" The smile vanished from the magistrate's face and, with tears in
his eyes, he said, "Young man, go and try to be a good man, for your
mother's sake." How little we realize what tragedy may be going on in the
hearts of those whom we sneeringly condemn!
What movement set on
foot in recent years, deserves heartier support than that for the establishment
of a national Mothers' Day? The day set apart as Mothers' Day by those who have
inaugurated this movement is the second Sunday in May. Let us unite in doing
all we can to make it a real Mothers' Day, by especially honoring our mothers;
in the flesh, those of us who are so fortunate as to have our mothers with us;
in the spirit, those who are not so fortunate. If away from her, write a good,
loving letter, or telephone or telegraph to the best mother who ever lived—your
mother. Send her some flowers, an appropriate present; go and spend the day
with her, or in some other way make her heart glad. Show her that you
appreciate her, and that you give her credit for a large part of your success.
Let us do all we can to make up for past neglect of the little-known,
half-appreciated, unheralded mothers who have had so little credit in the past,
and are so seldom mentioned among the world's achievers, by openly, and
especially in our hearts, paying our own mothers every tribute of honor,
respect, devotion, and gratitude that love and a sense of duty can suggest. Let
us acknowledge to the world the great debt we owe them by wearing, every one of
us, boy and girl, man and woman, on Mothers' Day, a white carnation—the flower
chosen as the symbol and emblem of motherhood. Happily chosen emblem! What
could more fittingly represent motherhood with its whiteness symbolizing
purity; its lasting qualities, faithfulness; its fragrance, love; its wide
field of growth, charity; its form, beauty! What an impressive and beautiful
tribute to motherhood it would be for a whole nation to unite one day in
wearing its chosen emblem, and in song and speech, and other appropriate
exercises, to honor its mothers!
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