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 176 Bird - Lore

examples. These men wrote down the simple daily doings of the time, without intent to do anything but tell the truth and without any suspi- cion that they were doing a great thing. These same journals are to- day among the most treasured sources of authentic history in the world.

I have written and spoken of this before. and have had more than once to defend the keeping of journals. Several somewhat scornful critics have asked: HAre there not enough commonplace records of com: monplace things, why should you set a new army of scribblers to work?"

I reply, HNo man can daily write the simple truth of what he sees in nature and leave a commonplace or valueless record It will. of course. be limited by his limitations. but every one. sooner or later, gets a chance to observe something that no one else ever did—an opportunity that happens but once in an age comes to him. and the opportunity is not lost if he has the habit of record.”

How that record is to be of beneﬁt can be illustrated thus:

There was once a vast and priceless mosaic inscription that contained the Truth, the one essential of human happiness. It was shattered to a million pieces and scattered to the corners of creation. The pieces are imperishable. Human happiness depends on the reconstruction of the inscription. Every one who ﬁnds a little fact, however small, ﬁnds a scrap of that mosaict If he honestly brings it. just as he found it, to those in charge. he is helping by that much. If he attempts to chisel that fact to make it ﬁt into one or two others that he may have found. he is by that much hindering the ultimate restoration of the lost in, scription. When enough are brought together. no matter how ragged. they will ﬁt each other#the right ones always ﬁt. the wrong ones never Clo—and when they are put together they will surely spell TRUTH.

Now it is given to every one who uses his eyes to find some of these fragments. and the best way to preserve them untooled is in a sincere journal.

Those who made such journals and such records a hundred years .ago were really providing material for Darwin and Pasteur, making them possible; and those who do it to-day are in like manner prepar— ing material for some other prophet. whose message to mankind is sure .to be yet more important. Each of these men took the accumulated fragments, put them together and restored for us a section of the great mosaic; and the latest restored part will be most important because that much nearer the whole design. No one knows or can know who the new prophet is to be. or when he is to come, any more than what will .be the new restoration; but we do know that his work must be founded on the daily observation of many observers. and will be great in propor— tion as these are abundant and sincere. for he is only the master-builder and can do no more than his best with the material provided.