Winnie Childs The Shop Girl
WINNIE CHILDS THE SHOP GIRL BY C.N. & A.M. WILLIAMSON GROSSET & DUNLAP PUBLISHERS NEW YORK Made in the United States of America 1914, 1916, by C.N. & A.M. WILLIAMSON
Most of the best and noblest of the Greeks held what was called the
Pythagorean philosophy. This was one of the many systems framed by the
great men of heathenism, when by the feeble light of nature they were,
as St. Paul says, 'seeking after God, if haply they might feel after
Him', like men groping in the darkness. Pythagoras lived before the time
of history, and almost nothing is known about him, though his teaching
and his name were never lost. There is a belief that he had traveled in
the East, and in Egypt, and as he lived about the time of the dispersion
of the Israelites, it is possible that some of his purest and best
teaching might have been crumbs gathered from their fuller instruction
through the Law and the Prophets. One thing is plain, that even in
dealing with heathenism the Divine rule holds good, 'By their fruits ye
shall know them'. Golden Deeds are only to be found among men whose
belief is earnest and sincere, and in something really high and noble.
Where there was nothing worshiped but savage or impure power, and the
very form of adoration was cruel and unclean, as among the Canaanites
and Carthaginians, there we find no true self-devotion. The great deeds
of the heathen world were all done by early Greeks and Romans before yet
the last gleams of purer light had faded out of their belief, and while
their moral sense still nerved them to energy; or else by such later
Greeks as had embraced the deeper and more earnest yearnings of the
minds that had become a 'law unto themselves'.
The Pythagoreans were bound together in a brotherhood, the members of
which had rules that are not now understood, but which linked them so as
WINNIE CHILDS THE SHOP GIRL BY C.N. & A.M. WILLIAMSON GROSSET & DUNLAP PUBLISHERS NEW YORK Made in the United States of America 1914, 1916, by C.N. & A.M. WILLIAMSON