God rarely gives us strength for imaginary troubles;
He gives it for present duties.
The following reflection captures that reality with uncommon clarity and a memorable personal example of how fear strangely disappeared when real crisis demanded action.
“There is one thing which seems to me to have always and invariably hampered and maimed me, whenever I have yielded to it, and I have often yielded to it; and that is Fear.
It can be called by many names, and all of them ugly names—
anxiety, timidity, moral cowardice.
I can never trace the smallest good in having given way to it.
Face to face with it, it has a strength, a poignancy, a paralyzing power, which makes it seem like a personal and specific ill-will,
issuing in a sort of dreadful enchantment or spell, which renders it impossible to withstand.
Yet, strange to say, it has not exercised its power in the few occasions in my life when it would seem to have been really justified.
Let me quote an instance which will illustrate what I mean.
I was called upon once in Switzerland to assist with two guides in the rescue of an unfortunate woman who had fallen from a precipice, and had to be brought down, dead or alive.
We hurried up through the pine-forest with a chair, and found the poor creature alive indeed, but with horrible injuries—
an eye knocked out, an arm and a thigh broken, her ulster torn to ribbons, and with more blood about the place in pools than I should have thought a human body could contain.
She was conscious; she had to be lifted into the chair, and we had to discover where she belonged; she fainted away in the middle of it, and I had to go on and break the news to her relations.
If I had been told beforehand what would have had to be done,
I do not think I could have faced it;
but it was there to do,
and I found myself entirely capable of taking part, and even of wondering all the time how it was possible to act.”






