[A Dutch Boy Fifty Years After by Edward Bok]@TWC D-Link book
A Dutch Boy Fifty Years After

CHAPTER XX
11/21

Bok noticed as a curious fact that nearly every business man who told him he had made a mistake in his retirement, and that the proper life for a man is to stick to the game and see it through--"hold her nozzle agin the bank" as Jim Bludso would say--was a man with no resources outside his business.
Naturally, a retirement is a mistake in the eyes of such a man; but oh, the pathos of such a position: that in a world of so much interest, in an age so fascinatingly full of things worth doing, a man should have allowed himself to become a slave to his business, and should imagine no other man happy without the same claims! It is this lesson that the American business man has still to learn; that no man can be wholly efficient in his life, that he is not living a four-squared existence, if he concentrates every waking thought on his material affairs.

He has still to learn that man cannot live by bread alone.

The making of money, the accumulation of material power, is not all there is to living.

Life is something more than these, and the man who misses this truth misses the greatest joy and satisfaction that can come into his life--service for others.
Some men argue that they can give this service and be in business, too.
But service with such men generally means drawing a check for some worthy cause, and nothing more.

Edward Bok never belittled the giving of contributions--he solicited too much money himself for the causes in which he was interested--but it is a poor nature that can satisfy itself that it is serving humanity by merely signing checks.


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