Making the
Most of Life
Chapter
6
Page
2

The Blessing of a Burden

 

Take what we call drudgery. Life is full of it. It begins in childhood. There is school, with its set hours, its lessons, rules, tables, tasks, recitations. Then, when we grow up, instead of getting away from this bondage of routine, this interminable drudgery, it goes on just as in childhood. It is rising at the same hour every morning, and hurrying away to the day’s tasks, and doing the same things over and over, six days in the week, fifty two weeks in the year, and on and on unto life’s end. For the great majority of us, there is almost no break in the monotonous rounds of our days through the long years. Many of us sigh and wish we might in some way free ourselves from this endless routine. We think of it as a sore bondage and by no means the ideal of a noble and beautiful life.

But really, much that is best in life comes out of this very bondage. A recent writer suggests a new beatitude: “Blessed be drudgery.” He reminds us that no Bible beatitude comes easily, but that every one of them is the fruit of some experience of hardness or pain. He shows us that life’s drudgery, wearisome and disagreeable as it is, yields rich treasures of good and blessing. Drudgery, he tells us, is the secret of all culture. He names as fundamentals in a strong, fine character, “power of attention; power of industry; promptitude in beginning work; method, accuracy, and dispatch in doing work; perseverance; courage before difficulties; cheer under straining burdens; self control; self denial; temperance”; and claims that nowhere else can these qualities be gotten save in the unending grind and pressure of those routine duties which we call drudgery. “It is because we have to go, morning after morning, through rain, through shine, through headache, heartache, to the appointed spot and do the appointed work; because, and only because, we have to stick to that work through the eight or ten hours, long after rest would be so sweet; because the school boy’s lessons must be learned at nine o’clock, and learned without a slip; because the accounts on the ledger must square to a cent; because the goods must tally exactly with the invoice; because good temper must be kept with children, customers, neighbours, no seven times, but seventy times seven; because the besetting sin must be watched today, tomorrow, next day; in short,… it is because, and only because, of the rut, plod, grind, humdrum in the work, that we get at last those self foundations laid,” which are essential to all noble character.

 

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Making the Most of Life: Contents