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157 7. COURAGE THROUGH COMPANIONSHIP 161 I. COMPANIONSHIP WITH FRIENDS 162 II. SUCCESSFUL COMRADES 165 III. COMPANIONSHIP WITH THE PAST 171 IV. COMPANIONSHIP WITH NATURE 176 V. COMPANIONSHIP WITH GOD 183 VI. A CHAPTER OF--ACCIDENTS? 190 8. GOD THE SOURCE OF COURAGE 196 I. THAT'S FOR ME! 197 II. BANING ON GOD'S PROMISES 201 III. PRACTICAL PRECEPTS FROM PROVERBS 205 IV. GETTING CLOSE TO THE BIBLE 210 V. THE BIBLE AND ONE MAN 213 VI. OUT OF THE DEPTHS 218 THE BOOK OF COURAGE CHAPTER ONE _THE COURAGE OF SELF-CONQUEST_ THE highest courage is impossible without self-conquest. And self-conquest is never easy. A man may be a marvel of physical courage, and be a coward in matters of self-government. Failure here threatens dire disaster to his entire career. Alexander the Great conquered most of the world he knew, but he permitted his lower nature to conquer his better self, and he died a disappointed, defeated man. Before the days of Alexander there was a man named Nehemiah from whom the world-conqueror might have learned a few secrets. He was a poor exile in the service of a foreign ruler. That ruler sent him down to Jerusalem, the capital city of his own home land, with instructions to govern the people there. Now, in those days, it was a common thing for governors of cities to plunder the people unfortunate enough to be in their charge. Thus Nehemiah would have had ample precedent to fill his own coffers by injustice, profiteering and worse: he had the power. Possibly he was tempted to do something of the sort. But he had the courage to shut up tight all baser passions, and then to sit firmly on the lid. In the brief record of his service he referred to some of the self-seeking governors, and told of their rascally deeds. Then he added the significant words, "_So did not I._" That was certainly courage--the courage of self-conquest. As a young man Ulysses S. Grant was a brave soldier, but he nearly wrecked his life because of weak yielding to his appetite. His real career began only with self-conquest. When he found the courage to fight himself--and not until then--he became ready for the marvelous life of
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