be the golden age of life, full-blooded and strong-minded,
with clear vision and great purpose and high hope,
all justified by some definite achievement. A
man’s prime is great as his earlier years have
been well directed and concentrated. In the early
years the ground is prepared and the seed sown for
the splendid period of full development. So it
is with the nation: we must prepare the ground
and sow the seed for the rich ripeness of maturity;
and bearing in mind that the maturity of the nation
will come, not in one generation but after many generations,
we must be prepared to work in the knowledge that
we prepare for a future that only other generations
will enjoy. It does not mean that we shall work
in loneliness, cheered by no vision of the Promised
Land; we may even reach the Promised Land in our time,
though we cannot explore all its great wonders:
that will be the delight of ages. But some will
never survive to celebrate the great victory that
will establish our independence; yet they shall not
go without reward; for to them will come a vision
of soul of the future triumph, an exaltation of soul
in the consciousness of labouring for that future,
an exultation of soul in the knowledge that once its
purpose is grasped, no tyranny can destroy it, that
the destiny of our country is assured, and her dominion
will endure for ever. Let any argument be raised
against one such pioneer—he knows this
in his heart, and it makes him indomitable, and it
is he who is proven to be wise in the end. He
judges the past clearly, and through the crust of
things he discerns the truth in his own time, and puts
his work in true relation to the great experience
of life, and he is justified; for ultimately his work
opens out, matures, and bears fruit a hundredfold.
It may not be in a day, but when his hand falls dead,
his glory becomes quickly manifest. He has lived
a beautiful life, and has left a beautiful field;
he has sacrificed the hour to give service for all
time; he has entered the company of the great, and
with them he will be remembered for ever. He
is the practical man in the true sense. But there
is the other self-styled practical man, who thinks
all this proceeding foolish, and cries out for the
expedient of the hour. Has he ever realised the
promise of his proposals? No, he is the most
inefficient person who has ever walked the earth.
But for a saving consideration let him go contemplate
the wasted efforts of the opportunist in every generation,
and the broken projects scattered through the desert-places
of history.